“Putting Lights in Hen Houses,” from the Cherokee Scout, Murphy, N.C., on June 8, 1923. The Mazda
lamp had a brighter, whiter light than other incandescent bulbs of the time.
The illustration is from a 1917 ink blotter, and it was not used in the Cherokee
Scout.
Practical Tests
Clearly Show That More Eggs Result With Artificial Illumination…Prolong Hens’
Activity…On One Farm More Eggs Were Produced This Way Every Month in the Year
Except April and May
Keeping the hens awake by placing electric lights in the hen
house has been tested in actual use so long that it can now be described as an
accepted practice among many poultrymen. There are reports by this time that
show a decided increase in egg production during the winter—the period of
shorter days for all creatures—as a direct result of illuminating the chicken
houses.
The sleeping hours of hens, it has been observed, stretch
unbrokenly from sunset to sunrise. Doubtless that is the way primitive man used
to live before artificial light was invented to prolong his waking hours.
Without light to see by it wasn’t worth while to ignore sleep, for who would
want to stay awake in the dark?
Mazda Lamps Used
So with the hens, and hence progressive chicken farmers
began to experiment with artificial lights in the hen houses. Electric
incandescent lights of the Mazda type were used. It was found that if the light
was free from glare and evenly diffused it would imitate daylight and keep the
hens active. The length of the feeding day was increased so that the hens had a
longer period of exercise, obtained a larger supply of food nutrients and
therefore had a greater quantity of egg-producing ingredients.
Comparative Test
On one chicken farm this method was tried successfully on a
three-hour basis—that is, the electric lights were kept on from 6 to 9 o’clock
every evening.
The results showed that during September the eggs laid by
hens in the electrically lighted hen house were twice as many as those produced
by the hens in hen houses without electric lights. It was also found that only
in April were more eggs produced by the “daylight hens” than by the “electric
light hens.”
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