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Congressional District NC-08 Cotton Production
2005 Crop Year by County
Alexander Alleghany Anson Ashe Avery Beaufort Bertie Bladen Brunswick Buncombe Burke Cabarrus Caldwell Camden Carteret Caswell Catawba Chatham Cherokee Chowan Clay Cleveland Columbus Craven Cumberland Currituck Dare Davidson Davie Duplin Durham Edgecombe Forsyth Franklin Gaston Gates Graham Granville Greene Guilford Halifax Harnett Haywood Henderson Hertford Hoke Hyde Iredell Jackson Johnston Jones Lee Lenoir Lincoln Macon Madison Martin Mcdowell Mecklenburg Mitchell Montgomery Moore Nash New Hanover Northampton Onslow Orange Pamlico Pasquotank Pender Perquimans Person Pitt Polk Randolph Richmond Robeson Rockingham Rowan Rutherford Sampson Scotland Stanly Stokes Surry Swain Transylvania Tyrrell Union Vance Wake Warren Washington Watauga Wayne Wilkes Wilson Yadkin Yancey Alamance

 Production Detail for Congressional District NC-08
Crop Year:
Production:
Planted Acreage:
Average Price:
Value of Crop:

3-yr Avg Production:
10-yr Avg Production:  
2005
94,285 bales 1,2
53,288 acres
45.80 cents per pound
$ 20.73 million

88,535 bales (2005 - 2003)
96,573 bales (2005 - 1996)
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Anson
Cabarrus
Cumberland
Hoke
Montgomery
Richmond
Scotland
Stanly
Union

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 Current Congressional Contacts
Representative
NC-08 Larry Kissell (D) 202-225-3715 Online contact form
Senators
NC Richard Burr (R) 202-224-3154 Online contact form
NC Kay Hagan (D) 202-224-6342 Online contact form

  1. USDA's National Agricultural Statistics Service does not report production for some counties for various reasons, including the limited number of producers in these counties. Hence, district and county estimates may not sum to state totals.
  2. USDA only provides production data by county. District totals are calculated by adding the totals for all counties within a particular district. For counties that span multiple districts, production is divided equally among the districts. So, if a county produces 90,000 bales and spans three Congressional districts, each district is assigned 30,000 bales of production (90,000 / 3).