56_anhydrous

Dedication Year: 2011

Locations: Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS and Delta Research & Extension Center, Stoneville, MS

Plaque Wording: In 1932, J. O. Smith, Agricultural Engineer at Delta Branch Experiment Station in Stoneville, MS, attached a small anhydrous ammonia cylinder to a plow in such a manner that the NH3 was released in the soil.  The plow, a Georgia Stock, was pulled by a gray mule named Ike.  This was the first known use of anhydrous ammonia as a soil-applied crop fertilizer.  The crude apparatus and the anhydrous ammonia it applied provided a much needed source of nitrogen for the otherwise rich alluvial soils of the Mississippi Delta.  Agricultural engineer Felix Edwards and agronomist W. B. Andrews renewed application research in 1943, leading to the development of the anhydrous ammonia fertilizer industry.  Their work established safe application techniques and equipment.  It has resulted, through economical fertilization, in improved yield and quality of food and fiber crops throughout the world.  Anhydrous ammonia remains a leading source of nitrogen for crops in the United States.