An Arkansas Planter

An Arkansas Planter
Author: Percival Opie Read
Publisher: IndyPublish.com
Total Pages: 196
Release: 2009-01-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781437886696

An Arkansas Planter

An Arkansas Planter
Author: Opie Percival Read
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Total Pages: 303
Release: 2006-01-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1465508015

Arkansas

Arkansas
Author: Writers' Program of the Work Projects Administration in the State of Arkansas
Publisher:
Total Pages: 564
Release: 1941
Genre: African Americans
ISBN:

On the Laps of Gods

On the Laps of Gods
Author: Robert Whitaker
Publisher: Crown
Total Pages: 418
Release: 2009-06-23
Genre: History
ISBN: 0307339831

They Shot Them Down Like Rabbits . . . September 30, 1919. The United States teetered on the edge of a racial civil war. During the previous three months, racial fighting had erupted in twenty-five cities. And deep in the Arkansas Delta, black sharecroppers were meeting in a humble wooden church, forming a union and making plans to sue their white landowners. A car pulled up outside the church . . . What happened next has long been shrouded in controversy. In this heartbreaking but ultimately triumphant story of courage and will, journalist Robert Whitaker carefully documents–and exposes–one of the worst racial massacres in American history. On the Laps of Gods is the story of the 1919 Elaine massacre in Hoop Spur, Arkansas, during which white mobs and federal troops killed more than one hundred black men, women, and children; of the twelve black men subsequently condemned to die; of Scipio Africanus Jones, a former slave and tenacious black attorney; and of Moore v. Dempsey, the case Jones brought to the Supreme Court, which set the legal stage for the civil rights movement half a century later.

Mean Things Happening in this Land

Mean Things Happening in this Land
Author: H. L. Mitchell
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Total Pages: 423
Release: 2014-10-22
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0806186070

A rare firsthand chronicle of one of the most racially progressive unions in twentieth-century America When, during the Great Depression, tenant farmers and sharecroppers were pushed off the land they had worked but never owned, many sought power in numbers by organizing unions. In 1934, seven black men and eleven white men organized the Southern Tenant Farmers Union. Socialist Harry Leland Mitchell was one of those men. Mean Things Happening in This Land is his autobiographical account of SFTU struggles—against poverty, New Deal agencies, communists, and above all, the southern planter class—to achieve economic justice in the cotton fields. In addition to its original foreword, by renowned socialist intellectual Michael Harrington, this edition contains a new preface by Samuel Mitchell and the author’s posthumous corrections and additions.