The Collapse of Cotton Tenancy

Summary of Field Studies and Statistical Surveys, 1933-1935

By Charles S. Johnson, Edwin R. Embree, W. W. Alexander

The Collapse of Cotton Tenancy

Approx. 93 pp., 5.5 x 8

  • Paperback ISBN: 978-1-4696-0930-0
    Published: March 2013

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The cotton farmers, although adding a billion dollars annually to the wealth of the world, are the most impoverished and backward of all the large groups of producers in America. Their status demands complete dependence; it requires no education and demands no initiative since the landlord determines the choice of crop, the method of cultivation, and the method of sale. The authors discuss the declining market of cotton and suggest a re-homesteading project as a solution for the tenant farmers. Originally published in 1935.

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