View of the Arlington Experimental Farm, on the southern bank of the Potomac River, October 1907Kymington cultivar developed by
Lyster Dewey at Arlington, growing there in 1917
Arlington Experimental Farm was a former federal agricultural research farm in
Alexandria, Virginia that opened in 1900.[1] It was established by an Act of Congress, moving the Department of Agriculture's main research from the
National Mall to Arlington.[2][3] It grew
hemp beginning in 1903 (under the cultivation of
Lyster Dewey[1]), or 1914.[4] In 1928, it was the largest United States Department of Agriculture experiment station in the Washington, D.C. area.[5] USDA researcher
Vera Charles also worked at the station, collecting Cannabis seeds from across America and studying pests and pathogens that could diminish hemp crop productivity.[6] Cultivars developed at Arlington include Arlington, Chington, Ferramington, Kymington and Arlington; Chington and Kymington[a] were adopted "extensively" by seed farmers producing
hemp in Kentucky.[9] The seeds were probably destroyed by the government in the 1980s.[10]