History and Origin of Potatoes
Potatoes have been cultivated for food for more than 2,000 years.
In South America
- Peru's Inca Indians, it is believed, had cultivated potatoes by
3000 B.C. The Incas had many uses for potatoes, which ranged
in size from a small nut to an apple and in color from red and
gold to blue and black. They placed raw potato slices on broken
bones, carried them to prevent rheumatism and ate them with
other foods to prevent indigestion.
The Incas also used potatoes
to measure time by correlating units of time
with how long it took potatoes to grow.
- The Spanish conquistadores discovered the
potato in 1537 and took potatoes with them on
their return trip to Europe.
In Europe
- Potatoes were thought to be poisonous or evil,
were believed to cause leprosy and syphilis and
were even regarded as a dangerous aphrodisiac.
- Several prominent Europeans helped popularize
the potato.
- Germany's King Frederick William ordered peasants to
plant and eat potatoes - or have their noses sliced off!
- A Frenchman named Antoine Parmentier was an
apprentice pharmacist-turned-soldier during the Seven
Years War between France and Germany during the mid-
1700s. As a German prisoner of war, he was forced to
subsist on potatoes. In later years, he reportedly
introduced potato soup and other potato dishes to King
Louis XIV, Marie Antoinette and Benjamin Franklin as well
as the general population.
- England's Sir Walter Raleigh was given land in Ireland by
Queen Elizabeth I to grow potatoes and tobacco.
According to one story, Raleigh presented potatoes to the
Queen but a bewildered cook served the leaves and threw
away the tubers.
In North America
In Idaho
 |
| Henry Spaulding planted the first potatoes in Idaho. His first potato crop was planted near Lapwai, Idaho in 1837. |
- Potatoes were first introduced into Idaho not
by a farmer but by a Presbyterian missionary
named Henry Harmon Spalding. He established a
mission in 1836 at Lapwai, in the state's northern
panhandle, to bring Christianity to the Nez Perce
Indians. He wanted to show the Nez Perce how to
provide food for themselves through agriculture
rather than hunting and gathering.
- The Indians were probably the ones who
made the first commercial sale of Idahogrown
potatoes when they traded fresh
potatoes for clothing and other goods to
settlers traveling west in the wagon trains.
- Even though Spalding's and
the Nez Perce Indians' potato
crop was eventually
successful, potatoes are no
longer farmed in the Lapwai
area.