COMMERCIAL GEOGRAPHY
PART I. INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER I
WHEAT
If one should follow a handful of wheat from the yellow field,
by wagon and freight car or ship, to the flouring mill, the pro-
vision merchant, the bake oven, and the loaf of bread, he would
understand one of the chief themes and acquire many of the
principles of commercial geography. Food is the first need of
man, and wheat, which has been called the ‘international
grain,” is perhaps the most important of foods. We therefore
study wheat for itself and for its general illustration of the laws
of production and exchange.
Ll. History of wheat. Wheat, like other cereals, belongs to
the order of grasses. It has been modified from some wild
grass, but the time when this improvement took place is beyond
the memory of man, and the wheat plant as we know it has
never been found growing in a wild state. Some scholars think
it had its beginning in western Asia and spread eastward to
China and westward to Egypt and the countries of Europe.
The Swiss lake dwellers raised wheat before the days of writ-
ten history, and it grew in the valley of the Nile from ancient
times to the classic days when “corn ” ships sailed from Alex-
andria to Rome. Wheat growing has now spread over Europe
Wherever the climate permits, and the grain was brought in
the sixteenth century to North America. As new lands have