
New Books in History Rebecca Sharpless, "People of the Wheat: Culture and Cultivation in North Texas" (U Texas Press, 2026)
Mar 7, 2026
Dr. Rebecca Sharpless, a historian of Texas food and agricultural life, digs into North Texas’s forgotten wheat belt. She traces why wheat thrived there, the rise of mills and bakers, mechanization from plows to combines, and how storage, milling, and industrial shifts remade towns and kitchens. Short, vivid stories reveal how grain shaped work, communities, and regional culture.
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Great Hanging Included A Miller
- North Texas had internal divisions over secession, with incidents like the Great Hanging in Cook County where alleged Unionists were executed.
- One executed man was a miller, showing community status didn't protect dissenters.
Mechanization Reduced Labor But Raised Barriers
- Mechanical reapers, threshers, and later combines dramatically reduced harvest labor but raised capital barriers for small farmers.
- Wealthy operators bought combines and charged neighbors in cash or a share of grain, concentrating mechanized harvesting.
Protect Grain With Proper Storage
- Store grain in fireproof, pest-resistant structures to avoid drowning hazards and volatile grain dust explosions.
- Early fixes moved from corrugated tin silos to reinforced concrete elevators and head houses with gravity-fed systems.


