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By EVERETT OERTEL(1)
BEEKEEPING IN THE UNITED STATES
AGRICULTURE HANDBOOK NUMBER 335
Revised October 1980
(1) Retired, formerly apiculturist, U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
The honey bee (Apis mellifera L.) is not native to the
Western Hemisphere. Stingless bees (Meliponids and Trigonids)
are native to the West Indies, as well as Central and South America.
Wax and small amounts of honey were obtained from stingless bee
nests by the early Indians of these areas.
Information available indicates that colonies of honey bees were
shipped from England and landed in the Colony of Virginia early
in 1622. One or more shipments were made to Massachusetts between
1630 and 1633, others probably between 1633 and 1638. The author
was not able to find any records of importing honey bees into
other Colonies, but it is reasonable to assume that they were
brought by the colonists to New York, Pennsylvania, Carolina,
and Georgia.
Records indicate that honey bees were present in the following
places on the dates shown: Connecticut, 1644; New York (Long
Island), 1670; Pennsylvania, 1698; North Carolina, 1730; Georgia,
1743; Alabama (Mobile), 1773; Mississippi (Natchez), 1770; Kentucky,
1780; Ohio, 1788; and Illinois, 1820 (Oertel 1976). By
1800, honey bees were widely distributed from the Atlantic Ocean
to the Mississippi River.
Honey bees may have been taken to Alaska in 1809 and to California
in 1830 by the Russians, according to Pellett (1938),
but no records are available as to whether they survived. In
the 1850's, bees were shipped from the Eastern States to California.
A few hives were taken over land, but most of the hives were
sent by ship to Panama, by land across the Isthmus, and then
by ship to California. Probably, the bees reached Oregon and
Washington from California in natural swarms or in hives taken
there by settlers. There are no dependable records that describe
how bees spread westward from the Mississippi River into the
Mountain States. It seems likely, however, that bees moved into
these areas the same way they did into Oregon and Washington;
that is, in natural swarms or in hives carried by the early settlers.
Development of Modern Equipment
For thousands of years, colonies of honey
bees were kept in wooden boxes, straw skeps, pottery vessels,
and other containers. Honeycomb built in such hives could not
be removed and manipulated like the movable combs of today. No
doubt the first hives used in the American Colonies were straw
skeps (fig. 1). Later the abundance of cheap lumber and lack
of trained people to make straw hives caused a fairly rapid shift
to box hives made of wood. Log gums, that is, sections of bee
trees containing colonies of bees, occasionally were sawed out
and used as hives. A few gums may be in use even now, particularly
in wooded, isolated areas (figs. 2 and 3). Some ingenious farmers
built wood hives with easily removable tops (caps) so that chunks
of honey could be removed without killing the colonies. Affleck
(1841) showed caps (now called supers) in his illustrations,
but he did not give any details such as when they were first
used.
FIGURE 1.-The straw skep was
used widely in Europe, but very little in North America.
In 1852, L. L. Langstroth, a Congregational
minister from Pennsylvania, patented a hive with movable frames
that is still used today. The principle upon which Langstroth
based his hive is the space kept open in the hive to allow bees
passage between and around combs. This space is about three-eighths
of an inch wide; space that is less than this is sealed with
propolis and wax, while space wider is filled with comb. Before
this time hives were either Greek bar hives or leaf hives that
allowed the beekeeper to inspect the comb (fig. 4). Langstroth
is called "the father of modern beekeeping."
FIGURE 2.-An unusually tall bee gum.
FIGURE 3.-Bee gum with glass
jar on top for honey storage.
In the period between the importation
of honey bees by the early colonist and invention of the movable
frame hive by Langstroth, beekeepers had little capability for
managing their colonies. They increased their number of colonies
each spring by capturing swarms and killed them in the fall by
burning sulfur at the entrance of the hive so that the honey
and beeswax could be removed. The comb, then, was crushed to
squeeze out the honey.
Honey generally was obtained (1) by cutting bee trees and taking
what honey was available, (2) by killing colonies and taking
the honey within the hive, or (3) by taking whatever honey was
stored in a crude super or cap that was placed on the hive during
the summer.
Modern methods of beekeeping came very rapidly following Langstroth's
patent. Other inventions soon followed that made large-scale,
commercial beekeeping possible. Wax-comb foundation, invented
in 1857, made possible the consistent production of straight,
high-quality combs of predominantly worker cells. Pellett (1938)
gives a detailed account of the development of wax-comb foundation.
The invention of the centrifugal honey extractor in 1865, and
its subsequent improvements, made possible large-scale production
of extracted honey. The bee smoker, as now used by beekeepers,
evolved from a pan used to contain some burning, freely smoking
material, the smoke of which could be blown across the open hive
to control the bees. The all-important bee veil gradually evolved
from pieces of coarse cloth that were wrapped about the head
of the beekeeper.
FIGURE 4.-Book hive with hinged frames used by Francois Huber
in Switzerland, who published his observations in 1792.
Introduction of Italian Stock
No one knows how many colonies or hives
of honey bees were brought to the American Colonies by the first
settlers. Nor do we know from what countries they came: England,
Holland, France, Spain, or perhaps somewhere else? It is likely
that after the early imports all increase was by natural swarming.
Since we do not know how many colonies were brought to the east
coast, we cannot determine the degree of inbreeding.
In the 1850's, the superior merits of the Italian race of honey
bees became known to a few leaders of American beekeeping and
they attempted to import queen bees from Italy. Accounts of these
first efforts are confusing, but according to Pellett (1938),
the first known successful importation of Italian queen bees
was made in 1860.
During the last part of the 19th century, some queen bees of
other races were brought into this country. They were imported
from Egypt, Cyprus, the Holy Land, Syria, Hungary, and Tunisia,
according to Pellett (1938). None of those races, or selections,
was of lasting use in the United States, however. Carniolan and
Caucasian queen bees also were imported and still are used to
a limited extent. The bee journals and the trade catalogs from
about 1870 until after World War I carried advertisements for
imported queen bees or their progeny, largely Italian stock.
Today, the American version of the Italian race is widely used
throughout this country.
Imported Italian queen bees were advertised for sale by L. L.
Langstroth and Sons, Oxford Ohio, in 1866, but no prices were
given. Those interested were advised to write for a price list.
In 1867, Adam Grimm, Jefferson, Wis., advertised imported Italian
queen bees for sale at $20 each. He promised to sell medium-sized
colonies of bees, with imported queens, in movable comb hives
for $30 each in 1868. Others who advertised Italian queen bees
for sale in 1867 were C. B. Bigelow, Vermont; A. Gray, Ohio;
Ellen S. Tupper, Iowa; William W. Cary, Massachusetts; and K.
P. Kidder, Vermont. This last group did not quote prices. Egyptian
queen bees were offered for sale by Langstroth and Sons and A.
Gray, but no prices were quoted. Charles Dadant, Illinois, offered
imported Italian queen bees for sale at $12 each.
The originally introduced dark bees of northern Europe predominated
throughout much of the United States and Canada during the 1800's
and into the 1900's. Strains present toward the end of that era
tended to be irritable and nervous, running readily over the
combs and hive. These strains were also subject to European foulbrood
disease. Queen bees were shipped from Europe in large numbers
from the 1880's to 1922, when a law was passed prohibiting further
imports. The purpose of this law was to prevent introduction
of the acarine mite, which was causing serious problems in Europe,
into the United States.
As queen rearing developed into a large-scale commercial enterprise
in the Southern States and Italian queens from Europe were used
extensively in the breeding program, a strong, Italian-type bee
predominated. Before the end of the 1920's, however, after years
of persistent requeening with southern queens, northern beekeepers
largely replaced the black bees with a less nervous, Italian-type
bee that resisted European foulbrood.
Queen Bee Rearing
As the number of colonies owned and operated
by individual beekeepers increased, a market developed for young
queen bees. In 1861 Henry Alley, William Carey, and E. L. Pratt,
all of Massachusetts, began producing queens for sale. These
early producers used narrow strips of comb containing eggs and
larvae which they fastened to the top bars or partial combs.
When these materials were added to swarm boxes that were queenless,
queen cells formed. The queen cells were distributed individually
to queenless colonies for mating.
G. M. Doolittle, Onondaga, N.Y., in 1889 developed a comprehensive
system for rearing queen bees that is the basis of bee production
today. His system, essentially, was making wax cups and placing
worker bee larvae into them from which the queen-rearing bees
formed the queen cells. This same system, or some modification
of it, is used today by all commercial queen rearers.
Since 1886 queen bees have been sent in the mail, which has benefited
both buyers and sellers (Pellet 1938). Losses in transit
have been reported from time to time, but on the whole, shipment
by mail has been satisfactory. Post offices will accept either
single queen cages or several cages stapled together. About a
million queen bees are sent in the mail annually. Most of these
bees are mailed to places in the United States and Canada, but
some are sent to other countries.
Recent developments include the crossing of selected inbred lines
to produce hybrid bees, and as of 1977, the direct sale of artificially
inseminated queens. This step marks the beginning of a new era
in bee breeding, in that male and female lines can now be controlled
in a commercial breeding program.
Commercial Beekeeping
From the beginning of beekeeping in the
1600's until the early 1800's, we assume that honey was largely
an article of local trade. Many farmers and villagers kept a
few colonies of bees in box hives to supply their own needs and
those of some friends, relatives, and neighbors (fig. 5). According
to Pellett (1938), Moses Quinby of New York State was
the first commercial beekeeper in the United States as his sole
means of livelihood was producing and selling honey. Quinby (1864)
described the box hives that he built so that combs of honey
could be removed without first killing the colonies. Quinby writes
of his financial returns as: "In particularly favorable
seasons, hives will yield a profit of one or two hundred percent
- in others, they hardly make a return for trouble." Quinby,
after experimenting with a few movable comb hives, gradually
replaced his box hives with the movable comb-type and advised
others to do likewise.
FIGURE 5.-Box hive used widely
in the United States before movable frame hives became available.
Other beekeepers in Quinby's
neighborhood used his methods and began to produce honey on a
commercial scale. As the use of movable comb hives, comb foundation,
and improved honey extractors became more widespread, commercial
beekeeping spread into other States. Poor roads and the use of
horse-drawn vehicles restricted the size of the area in which
a beekeeper could operate and the number of colonies that could
be managed profitably. After World War I, however, with better
highways and increased use of motor vehicles and more efficient
methods of colony management and honey handling, commercial beekeepers
throughout the United States were able to expand the size of
their businesses. By 1957 Anderson (1969) estimated that
1,200 professional beekeepers operated 1,440,000 colonies in
the United States. By that time, hobbyists had a few colonies, the
part-time beekeepers kept from 25 to 300 colonies, and the commercial
beekeeper had up to several thousand colonies. Some U.S. beekeepers
have owned as many as 30,000 colonies.
Comb or Section
The term "section" used here
describes the honey produced in small wooden frames or sections.
The production of section honey is, to coin a phrase, "the
fanciest product of the beekeeper's art." Probably, section
honey was first produced in the 1820's. Moses Quinby produced
section honey in the 1830's and 1840's and did not claim that
the method originated with him. Honey was produced by cutting
large holes in the top of a box hive, setting a shallow cap on
the hive, and filling the cap with wooden sections that might
have small comb starters fastened to them. A cover was placed
over the hive. The sections, which were of various sizes, might
contain up to 4 pounds of honey when filled. Some beekeepers
inverted glass containers over the holes in the box hive, and
if they were lucky had honey stored in them.
The crude method of section honey production was gradually abandoned
as more and more beekeepers began to use movable comb hives.
The large homemade section boxes were replaced with smaller,
factory-made ones. Supers especially fitted to hold the sections
were developed. Manufacturers sold 45 million to 55 million sections
annually in the years just before World War I. Between about
1875 and 1915, approximately one-third of the honey produced
in New England, New York, Pennsylvania, the Midwest, and a few
Western States was in the form of section honey. Generally, the
nectar flow in the Southern States was not suitable for section
honey production.
Increase in Production of Extracted
Honey
The amount of section honey produced
declined rapidly after World War I. The product was fragile and
difficult to ship; shelf life was short and combs were likely
to leak or granulate. Production of section honey required a
heavy nectar flow of several weeks' duration, and a great deal
of hand labor for cleaning, weighing, and grading. In addition,
beekeepers were unable te provide the intensive colony management
needed in outyards miles from their homes. The Pure Food Law
of
1906 gave buyers more confidence in the purity of extracted honey,
thereby increasing demand for it. During the sugar-short period
of World War I, the demand for honey increased and, as the price
was high, production of extracted honey increased rapidly.
Large amounts of liquid honey were shipped in wooden barrels
in the last part of the 19th century. Then 60-pound metal cans
came into general use. Today, most bulk honey is sold in steel
drums.
Development of Honey-Packing Plants
As commercial honey producers increased
the size of their operations, they found it difficult to pack
and sell the crop on the retail market and specialized honey-packing
plants developed in the 1920's. Packing plants now are very sophisticated
in packing liquid or smoothly crystallized honey.
Beeswax
Beeswax was an article of commerce soon
after it became available in the Colonies. It was widely used
in candles at home and abroad. The wax was melted, poured into
molds, and then transported to market. North Carolina in 1740
and Tennessee in 1785 permitted taxes to be paid in beeswax because
of the shortage of money (Oertel 1976). Informa-tion is
not available about how much beeswax was produced or used in
the Colonies in the 1600's and the first part of the 1700's.
Beeswax was an article of export in the 18th century, particularly
from the ports of Philadelphia, Charleston, Pensacola, and Mobile.
In 1767, a total of 35 barrels of beeswax were exported from
Philadelphia and 14,500 pounds from Charleston in 1790. Beeswax
was listed in articles exported from the British Continental
Colonies in 1770:(2) Value 6,426 pounds
sterling; 128,500 pounds weight; 62,800 pounds to Great Britain;
50,500 pounds to Southern Europe; 10,000 pounds to Ireland; and
the rest to the West Indies and Africa. Honey was not mentioned.
(2) Taken from Historical Statistics
of the United States, 2 parts, 1975, Bureau of the Census,
U.S. Department of Commerce.
Bee Supply Manufacturers
No doubt, before the invention of the
movable comb hive, beekeepers made their own box hives. Movable
comb hives and frames must be cut to exact measurements, so machine
methods gradually took over from manufacture by hand. As metal
honey extractors came into general use, companies began to offer
them for sale. C. P. Dadant began to sell bee hives and frames
to his neighbors in 1863 and comb foundation in 1878.(3) By 1884, Dadant and Sons had sold 60,000 pounds
of comb foundation throughout the United States.(3) In 1867, C. B. Bigelow of Vermont advertised
that he sold the Langstroth bee hive (fig. 6). In 1868, J. Tomlinson,
Wisconsin, had honey boxes and frames for sale. In the same year,
the National Bee-Hive Company, Illinois, sold bee hives, frames,
honey boxes, and honey extractors.
A. I. Root and Moses Quinby started to sell bee supplies in 1869.
In 1870, Henry Alley, Massachusetts, sold the Langstroth hive,
and A. V. Conklin, Ohio, sold the Diamond bee hive. Later on
in the 1870's, Alley offered the Bay State hive for sale, claiming
that this was the "best hive in use." Edward Kretchmer,
Iowa, began to manufacture and sell supplies in 1874. The W.
T. Falconer Co., New York State,
started its bee supply business in 1880. At about this same time,
P. L. Viallon, Louisiana, began to manufacture and sell bee hives.
Today's beekeeper, who is used to large colonies of bees, would
be amused or puzzled if he could see the small hives used in
the American Colonies, and even in the States until about 1900
to 1920. The small hives meant small colonies of bees, small
crops of surplus honey, and many swarms. Several old books the
author consulted stated that a beekeeper should be well pleased
if a colony contained 10,000 to 25,000 bees. Even Moses Quinby,
a leading beekeeper in the mid-1880's, stated that a 12- by 12-
by 14-inch hive (excluding the cap or super) was large enough
for use in New York State and an even smaller hive probably would
be adequate in warm climates. Quinby thought that 25 pounds of
honey was sufficient to last a colony from October 1 to the following
April. Charles Dadant, on the other hand, advocated large hives
and strong colonies of bees. Over the years, other beekeepers
became convinced that a colony must have a large population at
the beginning of the nectar flow, an accepted practice today.
(3)
Personal communication from Dadant & Sons, Inc., Hamilton,
Ill.
FIGURE 6.-Model of Langstroth's
original movable-frame hive, with the front removed to show the
frames.
Twentieth Century
During the 20th century, the dimensions
of bee hives and frames became more standardized, thus eliminating
the various sizes that were so confusing 100 or more years ago.
The 10-frame movable comb hive is now used throughout the world
wherever beekeeping is seriously practiced. Most beekeepers use
full-depth standard hive bodies for brood chambers; some also
use them for honey supers, while others use shallow or half-depth
bodies. Development of strong colonies for major nectar flows
rests upon such fundamentals as hive room, adequate stores, and
high-quality queen bees. Commercial and part-time beekeepers
control swarming in their colonies, but beginners still have
difficulties. Drugs (antibiotics) are now available for the control
of foulbrood and nosema disease. Artificial insemination of queen
bees, that is, controlled mating, is being used commercially
to a limited extent.
The rental of colonies for the pollination of certain crops has
increased markedly in this century, although management of colonies
for such purposes needs to be improved.
The wax moth (Galleria mellonella) has been a serious
pest of stored combs and weak hives. A limited survey by Williams
(1976) showed that in recent years annual losses caused
by the wax worm ranged from $48,000 in Louisiana to $1,016,000
in Florida. Such early writers as Affleck (1841), Langstroth
(1862), and Miner (1859), gave much space to the
damage caused by this pest and how it might be controlled. A
number of patents were issued in the 1840's and 1850's for various
devices that were supposed to keep wax moths from entering bee
hives. None was effective. Chemicals have been used with some
success, and the feasibility of using biological control methods
is being studied.
Research Sponsored by U.S. Department
of Agriculture
A full description of apicultural research,
as conducted by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, needs much
more space than can be devoted to it here. Consequently, only
a brief outline is given. In 1860 William Bruckisch, a German
immigrant, suggested that the U.S. Government should conduct
investigations in beekeeping, and money was set aside to start
such research in 1885. Those who have had responsibility for
guiding this program are listed below:
N. W. McLain - 1885-87, discontinued because of lack of
funds.
Frank Benton - 1891-1907, work suspended in 1896-1897;
no funds. Spent much of his time locating and shipping stock
from Europe.
E. F. Phillips - 1905-06, acting; 1907-24
J. I. Hambleton - 1924-58
C. L. Farrar - 1958-61
F. E. Todd - 1961-65
S. E. McGregor - 1965-69
M. D. Levin - 1969-75
E. C. Martin - 1975-79
The following did some of their research while employed in the
USDA's Division of Bee Culture. Their names were well known in
the earlier part of this century.
James A. Nelson - author of The Embryology of the
Honey Bee. 1915.
R. E. Snodgrass - author of Anatomy and Physiology
of the Honeybee. 1925.
G. F. White - basic bulletins on bee disease, 1906-20.
References
AFFLECK, T. H.
1841. BEE BREEDING IN THE WEST.
70 p. E. Lucas, Cincinnati.
ANDERSON, E. D.
1969. AN APPRAISAL OF THE BEEKEEPING
INDUSTRY. 38 p. U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service ARS 41-150. (Series
discontinued; Agricultural Research Service is now Science and
Education Administration - Agricultural Research.)
BAILEY, M. E., E. A. FIEGER, AND E.
OERTEL.
1954. PAPER CHROMATOGRAPHIC ANALYSES
OF SOME SOUTHERN NECTARS. In Gleanings
in bee culture 82(7 and 8).
DOOLITTLE, G. M.
1889. SCIENTIFIC QUEEN-REARING.
169 p. T. G. Newman & Son, Chicago.
LANGSTROTH, L. L.
1862. THE HIVE AND THE HONEY
BEE. 409 p. C. M. Saxton, New York.
MINER,
T. B.
1859. THE AMERICAN BEEKEEPER'S MANUAL. Ed. 4, 349 p. A. D. Moore & Co., New York.
ORETEL, E.
1976. EARLY RECORDS OF HONEY
BEES IN THE EASTERN UNITED STATES. American Bee Journal 116,
5 parts, Feb.-June.
1971.
HONEY PRICES SINCE 1880. American Bee Journal 111(2):50-51.
PELLETT, F. C.
1938.
HISTORY OF AMERICAN BEEKEEPING. 393 p. Collegiate Press, Ames,
Iowa.
QUINBY, M.
1864. MYSTERIES OF BEEKEEPING
EXPLAINED. Ed. 8, 393 p. C. M. Saxton,
New York.
WILLIAMS, J. L.
1976. STATUS OF THE GREATER WAX MOTH, "GALLERIA MELLONELLA,"
IN THE UNITED STATES BEEKEEPING INDUSTRY. American Bee Journal
116(11): 524-526.
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