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Thomas Jefferson Key

Thomas Jefferson Key

Male 1831 - 1908  (76 years)

Personal Information    |    Notes    |    Sources    |    All    |    PDF

  • Name Thomas Jefferson Key 
    Birth 17 Jan 1831  Hardeman County, TN Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Gender Male 
    Death 1905/1908  Nashville, Davidson County, TN Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Person ID I54645  Bob Juch's Tree
    Last Modified 31 Dec 2022 

    Father Chesley Daniel Key,   b. 5 Jan 1795   d. 1871, near Corinth, MS Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 75 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Mother Narcissus Bailey,   b. 1803, Albemarle County, Virginia, USA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 10 Jul 1845, Hopkins County, KY Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 42 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Family ID F19027  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Helen Palmer 
    Marriage 1852  [1
    Children 
     1. Emma Key  [natural]
     2. Chesley P. Key  [natural]
     3. Cleburne Key  [natural]
     4. Julia Key  [natural]
     5. Pearle Key  [natural]
    Family ID F19026  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 31 Dec 2022 

  • Notes 
    • THOMAS JEFFERSON KEY
      First Editor of the Southern Agriculturist

      Sixty-one years ago a young Confederate soldier started a little farm paper in Corinth, Mississippi. He was then only three years removed from the battlefield, where he had seen his full share of hardship, done his full share of fighting, and received his full share of honors. He had come home to find Southern farming demoralized, a new era of confusion in the place of the old orderly beauty of plantations and homes, hopelessness and loss and unexampled privation where there had been happiness and plenty.

      The old order had been overturned. New plans must be made. Men who had never thought much about their soils and crops except for the pleasure they got out of them had to turn their minds to farming for a living. It was all that was left them to do. And they didn't know how.

      Having served his country to the best of his ability in one way, he saw, with characteristic foresight, how to serve it still better, in a greater and more enduring way. He would print a paper which should be a real teacher of farming. He would take this broken and hesitating South that he loved, and help it back to wealth and happiness through its one great resource, the soil.

      "MODEL FARMING" IS ESTABLISHED

      In the spring of 1868, "Model Farming" was established at Corinth by the young soldier and student, Major Thomas J. Key. His whole fiery heart and crusading soul went into it. Armored by his own great vision, he set his face determinedly toward the only future of hope he could see for his beloved land.

      From its first issue something of this spirit got into the pages of the little farm paper. Its readers began to have more faith in themselves, and in the years to come, just because Major Key had this faith, and because his careful good sense was finding out practical ways of justifying it. The bruised South took heart, and turned to its fields and its pitiful remnants of stock with new hope.

  • Sources 
    1. [S1410] Mrs. Julian C. Lane, Key and Allied Families, (Name: Macon, GA: The J.W. Burke Company. 1931.;), 98, R929.2 K44.