Government projects came and went, offering promises of revival but rarely delivering. A factory here, a new school there—but poor planning and entrenched inequality meant little progress was made. The Delta’s wounds ran deep.
Image: Lange, Dorothea, photographer. Mississippi Delta Negro children. Mississippi United States, 1936. July. https://www.loc.gov/item/2017763019
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The small towns that dotted the region became pockets of poverty, where unemployment soared and access to basic services remained scarce.
The mechanization that had started the exodus only deepened the despair, leaving a trail of rusting equipment and abandoned homes. The people were on their own.
Image: An image of the 1960s cotton pickers
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