Mennonites
Norwegian immigrants settled in Kansas and Wisconsin and brought wheat strains that flourished in the American Midwest.
In the Middle Colonies
The states that make up the wheat belt are parts of Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Nebraska, and Colorado. Parts of Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota and Minnesota are also states in the wheat belt.
a whale of a good time
kansas is the biggest wheat producing state in the U.S. "The great wheat-producing countries of the world are the United States, China, and Russia; extensive wheat growing is carried on also in India, W Europe, Canada, Argentina, and Australia. In the United States the wheat belt covers the Ohio Valley, the prairie states, and E Oregon and Washington; Kansas leads the states in production. Large-scale mechanized farming and continued planting of wheat without regard to crop rotation have exhausted the soil of large areas. High-yield wheat, one of the grains resulting from the Green Revolution, requires optimal growth conditions, e.g., adequate irrigation and high concentrations of fertilizer." (Columbia Encyclopedia) http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/sci/A0861938.html
i really dont know.... sorry
The Mennonites brought it
Mennonites
Many different farmers settled in Kansas starting in 1854. Mennonites came from Russia and brought wheat farming techniques with them, for example, and former slaves move to West Kansas, especially in Graham County. However, by the end of the 1800s, the largest group of immigrants were German-speaking people from Germany and Russia.
Norwegian immigrants settled in Kansas and Wisconsin and brought wheat strains that flourished in the American Midwest.
Iowa's got some of the best corn crop in the U.S. and Kansas has best wheat.
111140 (Wheat Farming)
First of all the use of fire to cook food Then the farming of wheat.
Kansasalthough the Dakotas both also produce a great deal of wheat, not as much as KansasKansasalthough the Dakotas both also produce a great deal of wheat, not as much as Kansas
wheat, wheat, wheat, wheat, wheat and wheat
Kansas is famous for its wheat
Kansas is the leading producer of wheat in the United States.