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Journal Article
Agricultural History (2013) 87 (2): 170–193.
Published: 01 April 2013
...Elizabeth A. Herbin-Triant Abstract In 1913 Clarence Hamilton Poe, editor of the agricultural journal the Progressive Farmer , launched an unsuccessful campaign to segregate North Carolina's countryside. Poe was driven by the desire to help struggling white farmers, and he believed...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2013) 87 (1): 93–114.
Published: 01 January 2013
...Andrew C. Baker Abstract In 1913 Clarence Poe, the editor of the Progressive Farmer , launched his infamous campaign to racially segregate rural North Carolina. Historians of comparative race relations have used Poe's proposal as an example of the intellectual exchanges between South Africa...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2003) 77 (2): 258–292.
Published: 01 April 2003
... Service, segregated in 1915. The "Negro" division gave black farmers access to information about USDA programs, but it emphasized their subordinate position relative to white farmers. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 did not reverse decades of racial discrimination. Instead, USDA officials relied...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2007) 81 (1): 1–35.
Published: 01 January 2007
... commitment to reform and rehabilitation through planning and paternalism, and the employer’s drive to segregate and racialize labor under a pastoral ideal. Yet the village schemes foundered; weakened by employers’ lack of commitment to worker welfare and fears of rural sedition, by the inconsistencies...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2009) 83 (3): 323–351.
Published: 01 July 2009
... particular cultural practices and social forms; and the commitment by those with political power to gain local support. These assumptions undergirded acceptance of racial segregation and the criteria used to select new settlers. Alternatives could only become visible through political or legal action...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2019) 93 (3): 452–476.
Published: 01 July 2019
..., inequities in health care, and school segregation. Her family’s work on the farm also helped sustain her activism. The Town and Country Roots of Modjeska Monteith Simkins s Activism ADRIENNE MONTEITH PETTY This essay analyzes how Modjeska Monteith Simkins s unique roots in the city and hinterland of Columbia...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2022) 96 (4): 645–647.
Published: 01 November 2022
...LeeAnn B. Lands While there are already a number of scholarly works examining housing segregation in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Threatening Property makes several important contributions to the subfield. Herbin-Triant shows that property segregation was an evolving...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2016) 90 (3): 405–406.
Published: 01 July 2016
.... 208 pp., $39.95, hardback, ISBN 978-1-62534-155-6. What happened at the crossroads of America s best idea (national and state parks) and the nation s worst (segregation)? In Landscapes of Exclusion, William E. O Brien, a professor of environmental design and planning, explores this question by telling...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2016) 90 (3): 406–408.
Published: 01 July 2016
... Agricultural History Summer equation was black activism. In 1948 the NAACP Legal Defense Fund moved beyond demanding equalization (truly equal if separate facilities) to a wholesale legal assault on segregation, including in public parks. Officials in some southern states responded to NAACP suits by creating...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2016) 90 (3): 404–405.
Published: 01 July 2016
...: University of Massachusetts Press, 2015. 208 pp., $39.95, hardback, ISBN 978-1-62534-155-6. What happened at the crossroads of America s best idea (national and state parks) and the nation s worst (segregation)? In Landscapes of Exclusion, William E. O Brien, a professor of environmental design and planning...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2018) 92 (4): 646–647.
Published: 01 October 2018
... History Society 2018 646 Agricultural History nie Shellenbarger s chapter on the African American summer resort Lincoln Hills Country Club in her High Country Summers: The Early Second Homes of Colorado, 1880 1940 (2012), Young s discussion over the history of segregation provides a much-needed entry...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2015) 89 (4): 599–600.
Published: 01 October 2015
... black Houstonians social and physical proximity to their rural roots. But the intraregional character of this migration also meant that participants escaped neither de jure segregation nor disenfranchisement. While acknowledging the negative impact of segregation, particularly on access to housing...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2018) 92 (4): 644–646.
Published: 01 October 2018
... by suburban development, Meinecke s model became standard across the nation, and remains how many Americans camp today. In perhaps the book s most thought-provoking chapter, Young pivots away from automobiles to cover the struggle over racial segregation within the Great Smoky Mountains and Shenandoah...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2015) 89 (4): 600–602.
Published: 01 October 2015
.... But the intraregional character of this migration also meant that participants escaped neither de jure segregation nor disenfranchisement. While acknowledging the negative impact of segregation, particularly on access to housing, Pruitt emphasizes that overall, black Houstonians made good use of their segregated...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2023) 97 (4): 616–621.
Published: 01 November 2023
... touching on many major themes and events in American history. Since then, I have continued to use local agricultural history and history of the LGU system to explore issues such as gender, segregation, dispossession, knowledge creation and dissemination, human and nonhuman animal relationships, and theory...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2022) 96 (3): 474–475.
Published: 01 August 2022
... the deep racism and segregation prevalent throughout the state (5). In Better Living by Their Own Bootstraps, Jones-Branch skillfully navigates five decades of these women's achievements, their struggles, and the evolution of their work. The book's main focus, as the title suggests, is on the women...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2022) 96 (3): 468–470.
Published: 01 August 2022
... in 1900. Charles and other poor Black migrants alternately thrived and survived in the back of the town on the marshy periphery that became more important as racial segregation limited the mobility of Black residents through the so-called Metropolis of the South. Prince argues that Black New Orleans...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2019) 93 (1): 204–205.
Published: 01 January 2019
... the segregation or economic boycotts they found on the West Coast. Over time, the border policies of both nations became the primary tool for producing clearly delineated racial identities. With Mexico serving as the preferred route for Chinese laborers looking to enter the United States, a growing immigration...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2008) 82 (1): 114–115.
Published: 01 January 2008
... and, con comitantly, self-sufficient.The segregated settlements survived because resi dents worked hard, but also because of complex alliances forgedwith white relatives and racists alike. FreedomColonies focuseson social connectionsthathelped residents secure land between the 1870s and the 1910s, scrape...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2020) 94 (4): 679–681.
Published: 01 October 2020
... for African American communities to encourage food security and transgress segregation. George Washington Carver s agricultural pamphlets, written at Tuskegee Institute, encouraged Black farm families to cultivate food when white landowners discouraged the practice in favor of cash crops. Zafar connects...
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