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词条 African-American history of agriculture in the United States
释义

  1. History

     Eighteenth century  Nineteenth century  Twentieth century  Twenty-first century 

  2. In popular culture

  3. See also

  4. References

  5. External links

The role of African Americans in the agricultural history of the United States is extremely important. Given that the majority of blacks were employed in agriculture in the United States, particularly during the 19th and early 20th century, represents a major part of their history and the economic progress of the nation.

History

Eighteenth century

Plantation owners brought mass supplies 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.

Nineteenth century

African Americans were freed due to the emancipation proclamation. However, African Americans still were prohibited the right to own land of their own. The State of Georgia had one of the most complete statutory schemes of prohibiting African American the right of land ownership. The legislature of Georgia, in 1818, passed a law prohibiting persons of color from owning real property. This closed any establishment for African American to own any property in the state of Georgia.[2] This was occurring across the southern United States. Cotton farming became a major area of racial conflict in the history of the United States, particularly during the nineteenth century. 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.[3][4] 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 blacks 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.[5]

Black cotton farmers were very important to entrepreneurs which emerged during industrialization in the United States, particularly Henry Ford.[6] 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."[7]

Sharecropping became widespread in the South during and after the Reconstruction Era.[8][9]

Twentieth century

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."[10] However, discrimination towards blacks 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.[11][12] Yet the cotton industry continued to be very important for blacks 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.[13] 3 out of every 4 black farm operators earned at least 40% of their income from cotton farming during this period. Studies conducted during the same period indicated that 2 in 3 black women from black landowning families were involved in cotton farming.[14]

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.[15] 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.[15] 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.[15] 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 blacks moved to northern American cities in the 1940s and 1950s during the "Great Migration" as mechanization of agriculture was introduced, leaving many unemployed.[16] The Hopson Planting Company produced the first crop of cotton to be entirely planted, harvested and baled by machinery in 1944.[16]

Twenty-first century

{{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 a 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.[17] 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.[18]

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.[19]

In popular culture

"Cotton picking" 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.[16] Lord Buckley once sang a song titled "Black Cross", pertaining to an educated black farmer murdered by a mob comprising white men.[20]

See also

  • George Washington Carver
  • Black land loss in the United States

References

1. ^{{cite book|last=Foley|first=Neil|title=The White Scourge: Mexicans, Blacks, and Poor Whites in the Cotton Culture of Central Texas|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KwQ_e24VVMoC&pg=PA32|accessdate=3 June 2013|year=1997|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=978-0-520-91852-8|page=32}}
2. ^{{Cite journal|last=Copeland|first=Roy W.|date=2013|title=In the Beginning: Origins of African American Real Property Ownership in the United States|jstor=24572860|journal=Journal of Black Studies|volume=44|issue=6|pages=646–664}}
3. ^{{cite book|last=Mccartney|first=John|title=Black Power Ideologies: An Essay in African American Political Thought|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=agdHG9QxseoC&pg=PA27|accessdate=3 June 2013|date=20 July 1993|publisher=Temple University Press|isbn=978-1-56639-145-0|page=27}}
4. ^{{cite book|last=Barnes|first=Donna A.|title=The Louisiana Populist Movement, 1881-1900|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SFu8K-wfKn4C&pg=PA1851|accessdate=3 June 2013|date=18 May 2011|publisher=LSU Press|isbn=978-0-8071-3935-6|page=1851}}
5. ^{{cite book|last1=Walker|first1=Melissa|last2=Dunn|first2=Jeanette R.|last3=Dunn|first3=Joe P.|title=Southern Women at the Millennium: A Historical Perspective|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nGrEFL1ej3IC&pg=PA52|accessdate=3 June 2013|date=1 January 2003|publisher=University of Missouri Press|isbn=978-0-8262-6456-5|page=52}}
6. ^{{cite book|last=Skrabec|first=Quentin R.|title=The Green Vision of Henry Ford and George Washington Carver: Two Collaborators in the Cause of Clean Industry|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=32Fa9lCDjSwC&pg=PA116|accessdate=3 June 2013|date=11 March 2013|publisher=McFarland|isbn=978-0-7864-6982-6|page=116}}
7. ^{{cite web|url=http://blackagriculture.com/ |title=Freedom's Eve |publisher=Black Agriculture |accessdate=June 5, 2013 }}
8. ^{{cite book|author=Sharon Monteith, ed.|title=The Cambridge Companion to the Literature of the American South|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DPMAXuWaArgC&pg=PA94|year=2013|publisher=Cambridge U.P.|page=94}}
9. ^Joseph D. Reid, "Sharecropping as an understandable market response: The post-bellum South." Journal of Economic History (1973) 33#1 pp: 106-130. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/2117145 in JSTOR]
10. ^{{cite book|last=Lawson|first=Steven F.|title=Black Ballots: Voting Rights in the South, 1944 - 1969|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RqFOuIhndtYC&pg=PA20|accessdate=3 June 2013|date=1 January 1999|publisher=Lexington Books|isbn=978-0-7391-0087-5|page=20}}
11. ^{{Cite web|url=https://snccdigital.org/events/herbert-lee-murdered/|title=Herbert Lee Murdered|last=|first=|date=|website=SNCC Digital Gateway|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=January 4, 2019}}
12. ^{{cite book|last=Green|first=Ruthie|title=A Chain of Events: A Black Woman's Perspective on Our Rise to Prominence from Slavery to the White House|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_SD9g5NeH1YC&pg=PA104|accessdate=3 June 2013|date=August 2012|publisher=iUniverse|isbn=978-1-4697-7390-2|page=104}}
13. ^{{cite book|last=Myrdal|first=Gunnar|title=Black and African-American Studies: American Dilemma, the Negro Problem and Modern Democracy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EujEQ6qVJOUC&pg=PA233|accessdate=3 June 2013|year=1995|publisher=Transaction Publishers|isbn=978-1-4128-1510-9|page=233}}
14. ^{{cite book|last=Sharpless|first=Rebecca|title=Fertile ground, narrow choices: women on Texas cotton farms, 1900-1940|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1DorTRKHOloC&pg=PA163|accessdate=3 June 2013|year=1999|publisher=UNC Press Books|isbn=978-0-8078-4760-2|page=163}}
15. ^{{cite book|last=Edgar|first=Walter|title=South Carolina: a history|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EFSbwGk2szgC&pg=PA485|accessdate=3 June 2013|year=1998|publisher=Univ of South Carolina Press|isbn=978-1-57003-255-4|page=485}}
16. ^{{cite web|url=http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-qujGtayDb7g/UO3zEIP35SI/AAAAAAAACdM/fXHmm9GaDg4/s1600/029.JPG|title=Cotton Pickin' Blues|publisher=Mississippi Blues Commission|accessdate=3 June 2013}}
17. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.bet.com/news/national/2013/03/18/black-farmers-still-waiting-for-money-from-1-2-billion-settlement.html |title=Black Farmers Still Waiting for Money From $1.2 Billion Settlement |last=Whaley |first=Natelege |date=March 18, 2013 |newspaper=BET }}
18. ^Black Farmers Lawsuits are closed Black Farmers Lawsuit Update – Part II {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402112127/http://greenecountydemocrat.com/?p=8555 |date=April 2, 2015 }}, Greene County Democrat, October 30, 2013. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
19. ^{{cite web|title=USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service - Highlights|url=https://www.agcensus.usda.gov/Publications/2012/Online_Resources/Highlights/Black_Farmers/Highlights_Black_Farmers.pdf|website=USDA National Agricultural Statistics|publisher=United States Department of Agriculture|accessdate=10 December 2016}}
20. ^{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qweH8U5CBoQC&pg=PA46 |pages=46– |title=Highway 61 Revisited: Bob Dylan's Road from Minnesota to the World |last=Swiss |first=Thomas |year=2009 |publisher=U of Minnesota |isbn=9780816660995 }}

External links

  • Black Farmers and Agriculturalists Association Inc.
{{Agriculture in the United States}}

4 : African-American history|History of agriculture in the United States|African-American farmers|American farmers

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