Inside the Depression-era national and cosmopolitan consciousness, white farmers appeared to be sliding down the agricultural ladder at an alarming rate, creating a peasantry of which Secretary of Agriculture Henry Wallace wrote in 1936 after his first trip through the South, “’I have never seen among the peasantry of Europe poverty so abject as that which exists in this favorable cotton year in the great cotton States’” (quoted in Baldwin 1968:164).[6]
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Mother washing feet and cleaning up daughters in sharecropper's shack. Southeast Missouri Farms. Russell Lee, May 1938. LC-USF34- 031184-D
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Arthur Rothstein, Aug. 1935. Sharecropper's child suffering from rickets and malnutrition, Wilson cotton plantation, Mississippi County, Arkansas. LC-USF33- 002002-M2 |
We began to get an inkling that the trouble ran deeper when we came across these telegrams and memos to Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the National Archives' FDR library in Hyde Park, New York, which we visited after the ASFS/AFHVS conference in Hyde Park, New York, in 2004. They were letters and telegrams protesting the removal of African Americans from the Transylvania FSA project near Lake Providence, Louisiana. |
Click on the thumbnail to see the full memo.
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