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#15693 by Craig Maxim
Mon Nov 19, 2007 8:10 am
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Thanksgiving By The Numbers




3

Number of places in the United States named after the holiday's traditional main course. Turkey, Texas, was the most populous in 2006, with 489 residents; followed by Turkey Creek, La. (363); and Turkey, N.C. (270). There also are nine townships around the country named Turkey, three in Kansas.



8


Number of places and townships in the United States that are named Cranberry or some spelling variation of the red, acidic berry (e.g., Cranbury, N.J.), a popular side dish at Thanksgiving. Cranberry township (Butler County), Pa., was the most populous of these places in 2006, with 27,509 residents. Cranberry township (Butler County), Pa., was next (6,900).



28


Number of places in the United States named Plymouth, as in Plymouth Rock, the landing site of the first Pilgrims. Plymouth, Minn., is the most populous, with 70,102 residents in 2006; Plymouth, Mass., had 55,516. Speaking of Plymouth Rock, there is just one township in the United States named “Pilgrim.” Located in Dade County, Mo., its population was 135.



13.1


The quantity, in pounds, of turkeys consumed by the typical American in 2005, with a hearty helping devoured at Thanksgiving time. Per capita sweet potato consumption was 4.5 pounds.



99


Cost in cents per pound of a frozen whole turkey in December 2006.



144,086


Number of certified organic turkeys on the nation’s farmland, as of 2005. Most of these turkeys were in Michigan (56,729) or Pennsylvania (48,815).



841,280


Weight in tons, of the 2007 contracted production of snap (green) beans in major snap (green) bean-producing states. Of this total, Wisconsin led all states (310,200 tons). Many Americans consider green bean casserole a traditional Thanksgiving dish.



9.5 million


The amount, in dollars, of U.S. imports of live turkeys during the first half of 2007—99.5% from Canada. Our northern neighbor accounted for all of the cranberries the United States imported ($2.2 million). When it comes to sweet potatoes, however, the Dominican Republic was the source of 63% ($1.7 million) of total imports ($2.7 million). The United States ran a $4.9 million trade deficit in live turkeys during the period but had surpluses of $9.4 million in cranberries and $15.3 million in sweet potatoes.



46 million


The preliminary estimate of turkeys Minnesota expects to raise in 2007. The Gopher State is tops in turkey production. It is followed by North Carolina (39 million), Arkansas (31 million), Virginia (21.5 million), Missouri (21 million), and California (16.8 million). These six states together will probably account for about two-thirds of U.S. turkeys produced in 2007.



114.4 million


Number of households across the nation—all potential gathering places for people to celebrate the holiday.



272 million


The preliminary estimate of turkeys raised in the United States in 2007. That’s up 4% from 2006. The turkeys produced in 2005 together weighed 7.2 billion pounds and were valued at $3.2 billion.



690 million


The forecast, in pounds, for U.S. cranberry production in 2007, essentially unchanged from 2006 and 11% more than 2005. Wisconsin is expected to lead all states in the production of cranberries, with 390 million pounds, followed by Massachusetts (180 million). New Jersey, Oregon, and Washington are also expected to have substantial production, ranging from 18 million to 52 million pounds.



1 billion


Total weight, in pounds, of pumpkin production of major pumpkin-producing states in 2006. Illinois led the country by producing 492 million pounds of the vined orange gourd. Pumpkin patches in California, Ohio, and Pennsylvania also provided plenty of pumpkins: Each state produced at least 100 million pounds. The value of all the pumpkins produced by major pumpkin-producing states was $101 million.

If you prefer cherry pie, you will be pleased to learn that the nation’s forecasted tart cherry production for 2007 totals 294 million pounds. Of this total, the overwhelming majority (230 million) will be produced in Michigan.



1.6 billion


The total weight, in pounds, of sweet potatoes—another popular Thanksgiving side dish—produced by major sweet potato producing states in 2006. North Carolina (702 million pounds) produced more sweet potatoes than any other state. It was followed by California (381 million pounds). Mississippi and Louisiana also produced large amounts: at least 200 million pounds each.



1.8 billion


The total volume, in bushels, of wheat—the essential ingredient of bread, rolls, and pies—produced in the United States in 2006. Kansas and North Dakota accounted for about 30% of the nation's wheat production.



3.6 billion


The amount, in dollars, of turkeys shipped in 2002. Arkansas led the way in turkey shipments, with $581.5 million, followed by Virginia ($544.2 million) and North Carolina ($453 million). In 2002, poultry businesses whose primary product was turkey totaled 35 establishments, employing about 17,000 people.



3.86 billion


Estimated amount, in dollars, of 2007 receipts to farmers from turkey sales. This exceeds the total receipts from sales of products such as rice, peanuts, and tobacco.



Happy Thanksgiving!

#15707 by Starfish Scott
Mon Nov 19, 2007 4:52 pm
Nice post, Craig. Very entertaining!!

#15724 by Craig Maxim
Mon Nov 19, 2007 7:31 pm
Captain Scott wrote:Nice post, Craig. Very entertaining!!



Thanks. Not so entertaining as informative. LOL
#15761 by fisherman bob
Tue Nov 20, 2007 5:43 am
reminds me why Thanksgiving is my absolute favorite holiday. I can stuff my face all day, take a long nap, watch football games, drink a few beers and then go fishing all day on Friday, come home and stuff my face with more turkey, take a long nap, drink a few beers, and then go fishing all day on Saturday, come home and stuff my face, well you get the picture. My idea of holiday heaven, fisherman bob style. Later...
#15764 by Craig Maxim
Tue Nov 20, 2007 6:31 am
fisherman bob wrote:reminds me why Thanksgiving is my absolute favorite holiday. I can stuff my face all day, take a long nap, watch football games, drink a few beers and then go fishing all day on Friday, come home and stuff my face with more turkey, take a long nap, drink a few beers, and then go fishing all day on Saturday, come home and stuff my face, well you get the picture. My idea of holiday heaven, fisherman bob style. Later...



I like the way you think. LOL

#15774 by Paleopete
Tue Nov 20, 2007 12:47 pm
One thing bugs me...

Cranberry township (Butler County), Pa., was the most populous of these places in 2006, with 27,509 residents. Cranberry township (Butler County), Pa., was next (6,900).


Two Cranberry townships in Butler County PA?

Has to be a typo...that or you're smokin' better stuff than I am :D

#15788 by Craig Maxim
Tue Nov 20, 2007 9:08 pm
Paleopete wrote:One thing bugs me...

Two Cranberry townships in Butler County PA?

Has to be a typo...that or you're smokin' better stuff than I am :D



LMAO! Good eye!

Sadly, no, I'm not smoking anything as good as you are! LOL

Instead, it's the all too familiar snafu of the federal government. I copied those stats verbatim, from the Census Burea website!

#15871 by Paleopete
Thu Nov 22, 2007 4:17 pm
Yikes!! I knew there was a reason I never trusted the goverment.

Interesting read anyway...

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