For the Black men and women whose ancestors had labored on this land, it was another kind of displacement, another blow to an already precarious existence. Southern whites, who had once worked relentlessly to keep Black labor tethered to the South, found themselves indifferent to their departure now that machines could do the work.
The trains heading north began to fill.
Image: Lange, Dorothea, White sharecropper family near Cleveland, Mississippi. Cleveland Mississippi, 1937 June.
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Those trains heading north carried those who had toiled in the Delta fields for decades, their belongings packed into battered suitcases and cardboard boxes. For the Black families leaving, the journey was both a rupture and a rebirth, a departure from the familiar rhythm of the fields for the uncertain promise of Northern cities.
Image: Lange, Dorothea Lange, On MS Hwy 1 between Greenville and Clarksdale. Black American family being moved from AR to MS by white tenant. 1938. June.
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