Cotton was king, and the lives of sharecroppers and tenant farmers revolved around its harvest. It was backbreaking work, with little reward and fewer options for escape. For generations, they remained, not by choice but by circumstance, trapped in the feudal economics of sharecropping and the relentless grip of Jim Crow laws and the vicious coercion it spawned.
Image: 11-year-old girl picking cotton in Oklahoma, 1916.
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But by the 1940s, the sounds of the fields began to change—-for the Delta was not static, even if it seemed eternal. The old order was cracking. Tractors & mechanical cotton pickers crept in—- metallic clattering replacing the murmur of voices. These machines were coldly efficient—-replacing entire crews of field hands with the push of a lever. They didn’t need breaks. They didn’t rebel against low wages. And they didn’t dream of freedom.
Image: M12H cotton harvester.
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