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African-American history of agriculture in the United States

The role of African Americans in the agricultural history of the United States includes roles as the main work force when they were enslaved on cotton and tobacco plantations in the Antebellum South. After the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863-1865 most stayed in farming as very poor sharecroppers, who rarely owned land. They began the Great Migration to cities in the mid-20th century. About 40,000 are farmers today.

Black cotton-farming family (c. 1890s).
Black cotton-working convicts (1911).
African-American farmer in corn field, Alachua County, Florida (1913)
Black sharecropper picking cotton (1939).
Rice plantation

History edit

Eighteenth century edit

Plantation owners brought a mass of slaves from Africa and the Caribbean and Mexico to farm the fields during cotton harvests.[1] Black women and children were also enslaved in the industry.[2] The growth of Slavery in the United States is closely tied to the expansion of plantation agriculture. The contributions of enslaved people on early American agriculture has largely been discounted and ignored, mainly because of the lack of records not created by the slaveholder, often writing to justify enslavement[3]

However, many plantation owners relied on the agricultural knowledge that Africans brought over from across the Atlantic. The slaves had experience with farming and they used the knowledge they had with growing food and the owners needed them to use the skills they learned from their country before they became slaves. Perhaps the best example of this is rice cultivation in South Carolina, relying on indigenous West African knowledge of growing Oryza glaberrima. This specific knowledge was invaluable in transforming South Carolina into a rice producing powerhouse.[4]

While enslaved, African Americans on plantations found ways to supplement their meager food rations by cultivating slave gardens.[5] These slave gardens were usually near the slave cabins or remote areas of the plantation, and provided slaves with three benefits: nourishment, financial independence, and medicinal uses. These slave gardens allowed enslaved people some level of autonomy and agency; when they grew more than they could consume, they were able to sell.[6]

Nineteenth century edit

Antebellum South edit

The great majority of black farmworkers before 1865 were enslaved workers on Southern farms and plantations. Smaller numbers were free employees or farm owners. In South Carolina there were about 400 free black farmers in the rural parishes surrounding Charleston. As farmers their strategies, production, and rural lives resembled the poor white neighbors. Survival was a high priority and involved establishing economic self-sufficiency through concentration on food crops for their own families, and then by cultivating social advantages such as having a rich white patron.[7]

Virginia had a large free black element. By 1860, there were 58,000 free Black people living in Virginia; 80 percent in rural areas. Most lived on the Eastern Shore. One out of eight Black people in the state was free and the rest were enslaved in 1860. There were severe legal restrictions and terms of nonvoting, not testifying in court, not attending schools. Newly manumitted ex-slaves had to leave the state. However the same property laws were applied, allowing free Black people to own and operated 1202 small farms in 1860. They were patronized by some wealthy white landowners, who would hire them for cash wages from time to time. They were especially needed at harvest time, and when it was necessary to replant the small tobacco plants. It was a political movement in 1853 to expel all free Black people from Virginia, but key White landowners intervened to block the proposal; they appreciated and often needed the labor of the free Black people. From the point of view of the free Black people, the small amounts of cash were useful; probably even more useful it was to be paid with old clothes, used tools, or young animals in lieu of cash wages. Above all, it was essential to their survival to be useful and available to politically powerful white neighbors.[8]

After emancipation edit

After emancipation and the passage of the thirteenth amendment, Black slaves were legally freed, but most of them lacked any kind of material wealth and were thus led into other oppressive relationships.[9] Many Black agriculturists were subjugated to land tenure agreements and working as sharecroppers, tenant farmers, and within the crop-lien system.[10] Southern black cotton farmers faced discrimination from the north. Many white Democrats were concerned about how many of African Americans were being employed in the US cotton industry and the dramatic growth of black landowners.[11][12] They urged white farmers in the south to take control of the industry, which from time to time resulted in strikes by black cotton pickers; for instance Black people led by the Colored Farmer's Association (CFA) strikers from Memphis organized the Cotton pickers strike of 1891 in Lee County in September, which resulted in much violence.[2]

Black cotton farmers were very important to entrepreneurs which emerged during industrialization in the United States, particularly Henry Ford.[13] The United States Emancipation Proclamation came into power on January 1, 1863, allowing a "new journey for people of African ancestry to participate in the U.S. Agriculture Industry in a new way."[14]

Sharecropping became widespread in the South during and after the Reconstruction Era.[15][16]

Twentieth century edit

 
A woman and 3 young girls picking cotton in a field (1937)

The conditions for black cotton farmers gradually improved during the twentieth century. Ralph J. Bunche, an expert in Negro suffrage in the United States, observed in 1940 that "many thousands of black cotton farmers each year now go to the polls, stand in line with their white neighbors, and mark their ballots independently without protest or intimidation, in order to determine government policy toward cotton production control."[17] However, discrimination towards Black people continued as it did in the rest of society, and isolated incidents often broke out. On 25 September 1961 Herbert Lee, a black cotton farmer and voter-registration organizer, was shot on the head by white State legislator E. H. Hurst in Liberty, Mississippi.[18][19] Yet the cotton industry continued to be very important for Black people in the southern United States, much more so than for whites. By the late 1920s around two-thirds of all African-American tenants and almost three-fourths of the croppers worked on cotton farms.[20] 3 out of every 4 black farm operators earned at least 40% of their income from cotton farming during this period.[20] Studies conducted during the same period indicated that 2 in 3 black women from black landowning families were involved in cotton farming.[21] In 1920, 24% (218,612) of farms in the nation were Black-operated, less than 1% (2,026) were managed by Black people, and 76% (705,070) of Black farm operators were tenants.[22]

The cotton industry in the United States hit a crisis in the early 1920s. Cotton and tobacco prices collapsed in 1920 following overproduction and the boll weevil pest wiped out the sea island cotton crop in 1921. Annual production slumped from 1,365,000 bales in the 1910s to 801,000 in the 1920s.[23] In South Carolina, Williamsburg County production fell from 37,000 bales in 1920 to 2,700 bales in 1922 and one farmer in McCormick County produced 65 bales in 1921 and just 6 in 1922.[23] As a result of the devastating harvest of 1922, some 50,000 black cotton workers left South Carolina, and by the 1930s the state population had declined some 15%, largely due to cotton stagnation.[23] However, it wasn't the collapse of prices or pests which resulted in the mass decline of African-American employment in agriculture in the American south. The mechanization of agriculture is undoubtedly the most important reason why many Black people moved to northern American cities in the 1940s and 1950s during the "Great Migration" as mechanization of agriculture was introduced, leaving many unemployed.[24] The Hopson Planting Company produced the first crop of cotton to be entirely planted, harvested and baled by machinery in 1944.[24]

Twenty-first century edit

In 2010, the United States Department of Agriculture vowed to pay some forty thousand black farmers $1.2 billion in total, as compensation for years of undue discrimination. Though funds were intended to be distributed by the end of 2012, the black farmers had yet to receive the designated remuneration by March 2013.[25] In all, farmers in Pigford I who filed timely claims had received over $1 billion in payments. More than 60,000 farmers submitted late claim petitions in Pigford I. Late claimants in Pigford I were able to receive $1.1 billion in payments in the Pigford II claims process. 33,000 Black farmers in Pigford II received decision letters dated August 30, 2013, resulting from the late claims process that closed on May 11, 2012. About 18,000 Pigford II claims were eventually decided in favor of the farmers and 15,000 claims were denied.[26]

As of 2012, there were 44,629 African-American farmers in the United States. The vast majority of African-American farmers were in southern states.[27]

In 2021, the Biden Administration proposed the American Rescue Plan, which will support agriculture, and of this, $10.4 billion will be allocated to "disadvantaged" farmers; Black farmers make up a quarter of these farmers. While the plan is associated with the administration's COVID-19 stimulus relief packages, it is the first wave of relief for Black farmers since the extent of the debt-relief Pigford v. Glickman was to offer.[28]

In popular culture edit

 
James Hopkinsons Plantation slaves planting sweet potatoes (c. 1862)

Picking cotton was often a subject which was mentioned in songs by African-American blues and jazz musicians in the 1920s–1940s, reflecting their grievances. In 1940, jazz pianist Duke Ellington composed "Cotton Tail" and blues musician Lead Belly wrote "Cotton Fields". In 1951, Big Mama Thornton wrote "Cotton Picking Blues." A number of blues and jazz musicians had worked on cotton plantations. Blues pianist Joe Willie "Pinetop" Perkins for instance had once been a tractor driver on a Mississippi plantation before enjoying a successful career with Muddy Waters.[24] Lord Buckley once sang a song titled "Black Cross", pertaining to an educated black farmer murdered by a mob comprising white men.[29]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Foley, Neil (1997). The White Scourge: Mexicans, Blacks, and Poor Whites in the Cotton Culture of Central Texas. University of California Press. p. 32. ISBN 978-0-520-91852-8. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  2. ^ a b Walker, Melissa; Dunn, Jeanette R.; Dunn, Joe P. (1 January 2003). Southern Women at the Millennium: A Historical Perspective. University of Missouri Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-8262-6456-5. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  3. ^ WISECUP, KELLY, "Foodways and Resistance", Dethroning the Deceitful Pork Chop, University of Arkansas Press, pp. 3–16, doi:10.2307/j.ctt1ffjdh9.7, retrieved 2022-04-12
  4. ^ Carney, Judith A. (2021-03-24), "From Hands to Tutors: African Expertise in the South Carolina Rice Economy", Agriculture, Resource Exploitation, and Environmental Change, Routledge, pp. 189–218, doi:10.4324/9781315263113-11, ISBN 9781315263113, S2CID 233075860, retrieved 2022-04-26
  5. ^ Ball, Charles (1854). Slavery in the United States. A narrative of the life and adventures of Charles Ball, a black man, who lived forty years in Maryland, South Carolina and Georgia, as a slave. OCLC 640002486.
  6. ^ Eisnach, Dwight (2019). "Slave Gardens in the Antebellum South: The Resolve of a Tormented People". The Southern Quarterly. 57 (1): 11–23 – via Project Muse.
  7. ^ Dangerfield (2015). "Turning the Earth: Free Black Yeomanry in the Antebellum South Carolina Lowcountry". Agricultural History. 89 (2): 200–224. doi:10.3098/ah.2015.089.2.200. JSTOR 10.3098/ah.2015.089.2.200.
  8. ^ Luther Porter Jackson, "The Virginia Free Negro Farmer and Property Owner, 1830-1860." Journal of Negro History 24.4 (1939): 390-439 Online.
  9. ^ "5. After Slavery: Freedmen", Invisible Romans, Harvard University Press, pp. 170–195, 2011-12-31, doi:10.4159/harvard.9780674063280.c5, ISBN 9780674063280, retrieved 2022-04-12
  10. ^ Green, John J. Cultivating Food and Justice: Race, Class, and Sustainability.
  11. ^ Mccartney, John (20 July 1993). Black Power Ideologies: An Essay in African American Political Thought. Temple University Press. p. 27. ISBN 978-1-56639-145-0. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  12. ^ Barnes, Donna A. (18 May 2011). The Louisiana Populist Movement, 1881-1900. LSU Press. p. 1851. ISBN 978-0-8071-3935-6. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  13. ^ Skrabec, Quentin R. (11 March 2013). The Green Vision of Henry Ford and George Washington Carver: Two Collaborators in the Cause of Clean Industry. McFarland. p. 116. ISBN 978-0-7864-6982-6. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  14. ^ "Freedom's Eve". Black Agriculture. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
  15. ^ Sharon Monteith, ed. (2013). The Cambridge Companion to the Literature of the American South. Cambridge U.P. p. 94. ISBN 9781107036789.
  16. ^ Joseph D. Reid, "Sharecropping as an understandable market response: The post-bellum South." Journal of Economic History (1973) 33#1 pp: 106-130. in JSTOR
  17. ^ Lawson, Steven F. (1 January 1999). Black Ballots: Voting Rights in the South, 1944 - 1969. Lexington Books. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-7391-0087-5. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  18. ^ "Herbert Lee Murdered". SNCC Digital Gateway. Retrieved January 4, 2019.
  19. ^ Green, Ruthie (August 2012). A Chain of Events: A Black Woman's Perspective on Our Rise to Prominence from Slavery to the White House. iUniverse. p. 104. ISBN 978-1-4697-7390-2. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  20. ^ a b Myrdal, Gunnar (1995). Black and African-American Studies: American Dilemma, the Negro Problem and Modern Democracy. Transaction Publishers. p. 233. ISBN 978-1-4128-1510-9. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  21. ^ Sharpless, Rebecca (1999). Fertile ground, narrow choices: women on Texas cotton farms, 1900-1940. UNC Press Books. p. 163. ISBN 978-0-8078-4760-2. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  22. ^ "USDA - National Agricultural Statistics Service - Census of Agriculture". www.nass.usda.gov. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
  23. ^ a b c Edgar, Walter (1998). South Carolina: a history. Univ of South Carolina Press. p. 485. ISBN 978-1-57003-255-4. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  24. ^ a b c "Cotton Pickin' Blues". Mississippi Blues Commission. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  25. ^ Whaley, Natelege (March 18, 2013). "Black Farmers Still Waiting for Money From $1.2 Billion Settlement". BET.
  26. ^ Black Farmers Lawsuits are closed Black Farmers Lawsuit Update – Part II April 2, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, Greene County Democrat, October 30, 2013. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  27. ^ "USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service - Highlights" (PDF). USDA National Agricultural Statistics. United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 10 December 2016.
  28. ^ "Relief bill is most significant legislation for Black farmers since Civil Rights Act, experts say". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
  29. ^ Swiss, Thomas (2009). Highway 61 Revisited: Bob Dylan's Road from Minnesota to the World. U of Minnesota. pp. 46–. ISBN 9780816660995.

Further reading edit

  • Alston, Lee J., and Joseph P. Ferrie. "Social Control and Labor Relations in the American South Before the Mechanization of the Cotton Harvest in the 1950s" Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics (1989): 133-157 Online.
  • Brown, D. Clayton. King Cotton: A Cultural, Political, and Economic History since 1945 (University Press of Mississippi, 2011) 440 pp. ISBN 978-1-60473-798-1
  • Davis, Allison. Deep South: A Social Anthropological Study of Caste and Class (1941) classic case study from the late 1930s
  • Gibbs, Robert M. (2003). "Reconsidering the Southern Black Belt". The Review of Regional Studies. 33 (3): 254–263. doi:10.52324/001c.8429.
  • Johnson, Charles S. Statistical atlas of southern counties: listing and analysis of socio-economic indices of 1104 southern counties (1941). excerpt
  • Kirby, Jack Temple. Rural Worlds Lost: The American South, 1920-1960 (LSU Press, 1986) major scholarly survey with detailed bibliography; online free to borrow.
  • McDonald, Robin, and Valerie Pope Burnes. Visions of the Black Belt: A Cultural Survey of the Heart of Alabama (University of Alabama Press, 2015).
  • Ouzts, Clay. "Landlords and tenants: sharecropping and the cotton culture in Leon County, Florida, 1865-1885." Florida Historical Quarterly 75.1 (1996): 1-23. Online
  • Raper, Arthur F. Preface to peasantry: A tale of two black belt counties (1936, reprinted Univ of South Carolina Press, 2005), a classic study of Black Belt life excerpts; Online free to borrow.
  • Reynolds, Bruce J. Black farmers in America, 1865-2000: the pursuit of independent farming and the role of cooperatives (US Department of Agriculture . No. 1502-2016-130760. 2003) Online.
  • Rothman, Adam. Slave Country: American Expansion and the Origins of the Deep South (2007)
  • Sharpless, Rebecca. Fertile ground, narrow choices: Women on Texas cotton farms, 1900-1940 ( UNC Press Books, 1999).
  • Sumners, Joe A. and Amelia H. Stehouwer. "Politics and Economic Development in the Southern Black Belt" in The Oxford handbook of Southern politics ed. by Charles S. Bullock III and Mark J. Rozell. (2010).
  • U. S. Civil Rights Commission. The Decline of Black Farming in America (1982).
  • Vance, Rupert B. Regionalism and the South (UNC Press Books, 1982).
  • Whayne, Jeannie. "Race in the Reconstruction of Rural Society in the Cotton South since the Civil War." in Race and Rurality in the Global Economy ed by Michaeline A. Crichlow, et al. (2018): 247–284.
  • Wimberley, Dale W. "Quality of life trends in the Southern Black Belt, 1980-2005: a research note." Journal of Rural Social Sciences 25.1 (2010) Online.
  • Winemiller, Terance L. "Black Belt Region in Alabama" Encyclopedia of Alabama (2009) online

External links edit

  • Black Farmers and Agriculturalists Association Inc.

african, american, history, agriculture, united, states, role, african, americans, agricultural, history, united, states, includes, roles, main, work, force, when, they, were, enslaved, cotton, tobacco, plantations, antebellum, south, after, emancipation, proc. The role of African Americans in the agricultural history of the United States includes roles as the main work force when they were enslaved on cotton and tobacco plantations in the Antebellum South After the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 1865 most stayed in farming as very poor sharecroppers who rarely owned land They began the Great Migration to cities in the mid 20th century About 40 000 are farmers today Black cotton farming family c 1890s Black cotton working convicts 1911 African American farmer in corn field Alachua County Florida 1913 Black sharecropper picking cotton 1939 Rice plantation Contents 1 History 1 1 Eighteenth century 1 2 Nineteenth century 1 2 1 Antebellum South 1 2 2 After emancipation 1 3 Twentieth century 1 4 Twenty first century 2 In popular culture 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory editEighteenth century edit Plantation owners brought a mass of slaves from Africa and the Caribbean and Mexico to farm the fields during cotton harvests 1 Black women and children were also enslaved in the industry 2 The growth of Slavery in the United States is closely tied to the expansion of plantation agriculture The contributions of enslaved people on early American agriculture has largely been discounted and ignored mainly because of the lack of records not created by the slaveholder often writing to justify enslavement 3 However many plantation owners relied on the agricultural knowledge that Africans brought over from across the Atlantic The slaves had experience with farming and they used the knowledge they had with growing food and the owners needed them to use the skills they learned from their country before they became slaves Perhaps the best example of this is rice cultivation in South Carolina relying on indigenous West African knowledge of growing Oryza glaberrima This specific knowledge was invaluable in transforming South Carolina into a rice producing powerhouse 4 While enslaved African Americans on plantations found ways to supplement their meager food rations by cultivating slave gardens 5 These slave gardens were usually near the slave cabins or remote areas of the plantation and provided slaves with three benefits nourishment financial independence and medicinal uses These slave gardens allowed enslaved people some level of autonomy and agency when they grew more than they could consume they were able to sell 6 Nineteenth century edit Antebellum South edit The great majority of black farmworkers before 1865 were enslaved workers on Southern farms and plantations Smaller numbers were free employees or farm owners In South Carolina there were about 400 free black farmers in the rural parishes surrounding Charleston As farmers their strategies production and rural lives resembled the poor white neighbors Survival was a high priority and involved establishing economic self sufficiency through concentration on food crops for their own families and then by cultivating social advantages such as having a rich white patron 7 Virginia had a large free black element By 1860 there were 58 000 free Black people living in Virginia 80 percent in rural areas Most lived on the Eastern Shore One out of eight Black people in the state was free and the rest were enslaved in 1860 There were severe legal restrictions and terms of nonvoting not testifying in court not attending schools Newly manumitted ex slaves had to leave the state However the same property laws were applied allowing free Black people to own and operated 1202 small farms in 1860 They were patronized by some wealthy white landowners who would hire them for cash wages from time to time They were especially needed at harvest time and when it was necessary to replant the small tobacco plants It was a political movement in 1853 to expel all free Black people from Virginia but key White landowners intervened to block the proposal they appreciated and often needed the labor of the free Black people From the point of view of the free Black people the small amounts of cash were useful probably even more useful it was to be paid with old clothes used tools or young animals in lieu of cash wages Above all it was essential to their survival to be useful and available to politically powerful white neighbors 8 After emancipation edit After emancipation and the passage of the thirteenth amendment Black slaves were legally freed but most of them lacked any kind of material wealth and were thus led into other oppressive relationships 9 Many Black agriculturists were subjugated to land tenure agreements and working as sharecroppers tenant farmers and within the crop lien system 10 Southern black cotton farmers faced discrimination from the north Many white Democrats were concerned about how many of African Americans were being employed in the US cotton industry and the dramatic growth of black landowners 11 12 They urged white farmers in the south to take control of the industry which from time to time resulted in strikes by black cotton pickers for instance Black people led by the Colored Farmer s Association CFA strikers from Memphis organized the Cotton pickers strike of 1891 in Lee County in September which resulted in much violence 2 Black cotton farmers were very important to entrepreneurs which emerged during industrialization in the United States particularly Henry Ford 13 The United States Emancipation Proclamation came into power on January 1 1863 allowing a new journey for people of African ancestry to participate in the U S Agriculture Industry in a new way 14 Sharecropping became widespread in the South during and after the Reconstruction Era 15 16 Twentieth century edit nbsp A woman and 3 young girls picking cotton in a field 1937 The conditions for black cotton farmers gradually improved during the twentieth century Ralph J Bunche an expert in Negro suffrage in the United States observed in 1940 that many thousands of black cotton farmers each year now go to the polls stand in line with their white neighbors and mark their ballots independently without protest or intimidation in order to determine government policy toward cotton production control 17 However discrimination towards Black people continued as it did in the rest of society and isolated incidents often broke out On 25 September 1961 Herbert Lee a black cotton farmer and voter registration organizer was shot on the head by white State legislator E H Hurst in Liberty Mississippi 18 19 Yet the cotton industry continued to be very important for Black people in the southern United States much more so than for whites By the late 1920s around two thirds of all African American tenants and almost three fourths of the croppers worked on cotton farms 20 3 out of every 4 black farm operators earned at least 40 of their income from cotton farming during this period 20 Studies conducted during the same period indicated that 2 in 3 black women from black landowning families were involved in cotton farming 21 In 1920 24 218 612 of farms in the nation were Black operated less than 1 2 026 were managed by Black people and 76 705 070 of Black farm operators were tenants 22 The cotton industry in the United States hit a crisis in the early 1920s Cotton and tobacco prices collapsed in 1920 following overproduction and the boll weevil pest wiped out the sea island cotton crop in 1921 Annual production slumped from 1 365 000 bales in the 1910s to 801 000 in the 1920s 23 In South Carolina Williamsburg County production fell from 37 000 bales in 1920 to 2 700 bales in 1922 and one farmer in McCormick County produced 65 bales in 1921 and just 6 in 1922 23 As a result of the devastating harvest of 1922 some 50 000 black cotton workers left South Carolina and by the 1930s the state population had declined some 15 largely due to cotton stagnation 23 However it wasn t the collapse of prices or pests which resulted in the mass decline of African American employment in agriculture in the American south The mechanization of agriculture is undoubtedly the most important reason why many Black people moved to northern American cities in the 1940s and 1950s during the Great Migration as mechanization of agriculture was introduced leaving many unemployed 24 The Hopson Planting Company produced the first crop of cotton to be entirely planted harvested and baled by machinery in 1944 24 Twenty first century edit See also Pigford v Glickman In 2010 the United States Department of Agriculture vowed to pay some forty thousand black farmers 1 2 billion in total as compensation for years of undue discrimination Though funds were intended to be distributed by the end of 2012 the black farmers had yet to receive the designated remuneration by March 2013 25 In all farmers in Pigford I who filed timely claims had received over 1 billion in payments More than 60 000 farmers submitted late claim petitions in Pigford I Late claimants in Pigford I were able to receive 1 1 billion in payments in the Pigford II claims process 33 000 Black farmers in Pigford II received decision letters dated August 30 2013 resulting from the late claims process that closed on May 11 2012 About 18 000 Pigford II claims were eventually decided in favor of the farmers and 15 000 claims were denied 26 As of 2012 there were 44 629 African American farmers in the United States The vast majority of African American farmers were in southern states 27 In 2021 the Biden Administration proposed the American Rescue Plan which will support agriculture and of this 10 4 billion will be allocated to disadvantaged farmers Black farmers make up a quarter of these farmers While the plan is associated with the administration s COVID 19 stimulus relief packages it is the first wave of relief for Black farmers since the extent of the debt relief Pigford v Glickman was to offer 28 In popular culture edit nbsp James Hopkinsons Plantation slaves planting sweet potatoes c 1862 Picking cotton was often a subject which was mentioned in songs by African American blues and jazz musicians in the 1920s 1940s reflecting their grievances In 1940 jazz pianist Duke Ellington composed Cotton Tail and blues musician Lead Belly wrote Cotton Fields In 1951 Big Mama Thornton wrote Cotton Picking Blues A number of blues and jazz musicians had worked on cotton plantations Blues pianist Joe Willie Pinetop Perkins for instance had once been a tractor driver on a Mississippi plantation before enjoying a successful career with Muddy Waters 24 Lord Buckley once sang a song titled Black Cross pertaining to an educated black farmer murdered by a mob comprising white men 29 See also edit nbsp United States portal nbsp History portalGeorge Washington Carver Black Belt in the American South Black land loss in the United StatesReferences edit Foley Neil 1997 The White Scourge Mexicans Blacks and Poor Whites in the Cotton Culture of Central Texas University of California Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 520 91852 8 Retrieved 3 June 2013 a b Walker Melissa Dunn Jeanette R Dunn Joe P 1 January 2003 Southern Women at the Millennium A Historical Perspective University of Missouri Press p 52 ISBN 978 0 8262 6456 5 Retrieved 3 June 2013 WISECUP KELLY Foodways and Resistance Dethroning the Deceitful Pork Chop University of Arkansas Press pp 3 16 doi 10 2307 j ctt1ffjdh9 7 retrieved 2022 04 12 Carney Judith A 2021 03 24 From Hands to Tutors African Expertise in the South Carolina Rice Economy Agriculture Resource Exploitation and Environmental Change Routledge pp 189 218 doi 10 4324 9781315263113 11 ISBN 9781315263113 S2CID 233075860 retrieved 2022 04 26 Ball Charles 1854 Slavery in the United States A narrative of the life and adventures of Charles Ball a black man who lived forty years in Maryland South Carolina and Georgia as a slave OCLC 640002486 Eisnach Dwight 2019 Slave Gardens in the Antebellum South The Resolve of a Tormented People The Southern Quarterly 57 1 11 23 via Project Muse Dangerfield 2015 Turning the Earth Free Black Yeomanry in the Antebellum South Carolina Lowcountry Agricultural History 89 2 200 224 doi 10 3098 ah 2015 089 2 200 JSTOR 10 3098 ah 2015 089 2 200 Luther Porter Jackson The Virginia Free Negro Farmer and Property Owner 1830 1860 Journal of Negro History 24 4 1939 390 439 Online 5 After Slavery Freedmen Invisible Romans Harvard University Press pp 170 195 2011 12 31 doi 10 4159 harvard 9780674063280 c5 ISBN 9780674063280 retrieved 2022 04 12 Green John J Cultivating Food and Justice Race Class and Sustainability Mccartney John 20 July 1993 Black Power Ideologies An Essay in African American Political Thought Temple University Press p 27 ISBN 978 1 56639 145 0 Retrieved 3 June 2013 Barnes Donna A 18 May 2011 The Louisiana Populist Movement 1881 1900 LSU Press p 1851 ISBN 978 0 8071 3935 6 Retrieved 3 June 2013 Skrabec Quentin R 11 March 2013 The Green Vision of Henry Ford and George Washington Carver Two Collaborators in the Cause of Clean Industry McFarland p 116 ISBN 978 0 7864 6982 6 Retrieved 3 June 2013 Freedom s Eve Black Agriculture Retrieved June 5 2013 Sharon Monteith ed 2013 The Cambridge Companion to the Literature of the American South Cambridge U P p 94 ISBN 9781107036789 Joseph D Reid Sharecropping as an understandable market response The post bellum South Journal of Economic History 1973 33 1 pp 106 130 in JSTOR Lawson Steven F 1 January 1999 Black Ballots Voting Rights in the South 1944 1969 Lexington Books p 20 ISBN 978 0 7391 0087 5 Retrieved 3 June 2013 Herbert Lee Murdered SNCC Digital Gateway Retrieved January 4 2019 Green Ruthie August 2012 A Chain of Events A Black Woman s Perspective on Our Rise to Prominence from Slavery to the White House iUniverse p 104 ISBN 978 1 4697 7390 2 Retrieved 3 June 2013 a b Myrdal Gunnar 1995 Black and African American Studies American Dilemma the Negro Problem and Modern Democracy Transaction Publishers p 233 ISBN 978 1 4128 1510 9 Retrieved 3 June 2013 Sharpless Rebecca 1999 Fertile ground narrow choices women on Texas cotton farms 1900 1940 UNC Press Books p 163 ISBN 978 0 8078 4760 2 Retrieved 3 June 2013 USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service Census of Agriculture www nass usda gov Retrieved 2021 05 07 a b c Edgar Walter 1998 South Carolina a history Univ of South Carolina Press p 485 ISBN 978 1 57003 255 4 Retrieved 3 June 2013 a b c Cotton Pickin Blues Mississippi Blues Commission Retrieved 3 June 2013 Whaley Natelege March 18 2013 Black Farmers Still Waiting for Money From 1 2 Billion Settlement BET Black Farmers Lawsuits are closed Black Farmers Lawsuit Update Part II Archived April 2 2015 at the Wayback Machine Greene County Democrat October 30 2013 Retrieved 24 March 2015 USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service Highlights PDF USDA National Agricultural Statistics United States Department of Agriculture Retrieved 10 December 2016 Relief bill is most significant legislation for Black farmers since Civil Rights Act experts say Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2021 05 07 Swiss Thomas 2009 Highway 61 Revisited Bob Dylan s Road from Minnesota to the World U of Minnesota pp 46 ISBN 9780816660995 Further reading editAlston Lee J and Joseph P Ferrie Social Control and Labor Relations in the American South Before the Mechanization of the Cotton Harvest in the 1950s Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics 1989 133 157 Online Brown D Clayton King Cotton A Cultural Political and Economic History since 1945 University Press of Mississippi 2011 440 pp ISBN 978 1 60473 798 1 Davis Allison Deep South A Social Anthropological Study of Caste and Class 1941 classic case study from the late 1930s Gibbs Robert M 2003 Reconsidering the Southern Black Belt The Review of Regional Studies 33 3 254 263 doi 10 52324 001c 8429 Johnson Charles S Statistical atlas of southern counties listing and analysis of socio economic indices of 1104 southern counties 1941 excerpt Kirby Jack Temple Rural Worlds Lost The American South 1920 1960 LSU Press 1986 major scholarly survey with detailed bibliography online free to borrow McDonald Robin and Valerie Pope Burnes Visions of the Black Belt A Cultural Survey of the Heart of Alabama University of Alabama Press 2015 Ouzts Clay Landlords and tenants sharecropping and the cotton culture in Leon County Florida 1865 1885 Florida Historical Quarterly 75 1 1996 1 23 Online Raper Arthur F Preface to peasantry A tale of two black belt counties 1936 reprinted Univ of South Carolina Press 2005 a classic study of Black Belt life excerpts Online free to borrow Reynolds Bruce J Black farmers in America 1865 2000 the pursuit of independent farming and the role of cooperatives US Department of Agriculture No 1502 2016 130760 2003 Online Rothman Adam Slave Country American Expansion and the Origins of the Deep South 2007 Sharpless Rebecca Fertile ground narrow choices Women on Texas cotton farms 1900 1940 UNC Press Books 1999 Sumners Joe A and Amelia H Stehouwer Politics and Economic Development in the Southern Black Belt in The Oxford handbook of Southern politics ed by Charles S Bullock III and Mark J Rozell 2010 U S Civil Rights Commission The Decline of Black Farming in America 1982 Vance Rupert B Regionalism and the South UNC Press Books 1982 Whayne Jeannie Race in the Reconstruction of Rural Society in the Cotton South since the Civil War in Race and Rurality in the Global Economy ed by Michaeline A Crichlow et al 2018 247 284 Wimberley Dale W Quality of life trends in the Southern Black Belt 1980 2005 a research note Journal of Rural Social Sciences 25 1 2010 Online Winemiller Terance L Black Belt Region in Alabama Encyclopedia of Alabama 2009 onlineExternal links editBlack Farmers and Agriculturalists Association Inc Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title African American history of agriculture in the United States amp oldid 1180078611, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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