Sunday, October 25, 2015

Farmers Met in Rosenwald Schools


Picture courtesy of the LOC and photogrammar.yale.edu: 1940 photo taken by Marion Post Wolcott, FSA photographer, in Caswell County, NC


Recently, I was looking through the thousands of Farm Security Administration images available from the Library of Congress and Yale's photogrammar.yale.edu website. Although my focus was on selecting images of sharecroppers at work for my current documentary, I came across this wonderful image.  It shows an important intersection of community building and historic African American schools.  

The farmers are meeting in a schoolhouse for, Ms. Wolcott's caption tells us, "a neighborhood land use planning committee."  By the time of this meeting in1940, soil conservation programs had been underway for almost a decade.  The goal of these programs was to combat erosion through improved management practices.  Financial incentive was also provided for planting trees on depleted cropland. These payments were supposed to benefit everyone who was impacted, but in reality few landowners shared the money and many tenant farmers were pushed off of the land.  It is impossible to say with certainty whether the farmers in this picture are landowners or tenant farmers, but their well dressed appearance and the fact that they are attending a land planning meeting argues for them being owners.

Taking note of their surroundings, one can see the windows are large and have three panes across. This fact, along with the attractive beadboard and the patent desks, leads me to conclude that they were probably meeting in one of Caswell County's six Rosenwald schools.  The space is conducive to learning and discussion, and the farmers are listening attentively.  Note also the poised leader of the meeting, and the young lady taking notes. 

This was not an accidental meeting, but rather the confluence of sacrifice for education and powerful intentions on the part of both the community and the Rosenwald Fund. Between 1924 and 1931, Caswell County, NC communities organized to match grants and built six Rosenwald schools. The schools were designed not just to improve education in the rural South, but also to provide African American communities with their first public meetings spaces outside of churches.  In this photo of such a meeting, we get a rare glimpse of one of the myriad ways Rosenwald schools benefited communities in addition to providing space for teaching.

In planning for better land use, these African American farmers were also planning for the future of their community. Better crops meant a higher standard of living, and would also have made it possible for them to continue to make donations to their children's schools.  Well into the 1950s, African American families paid their taxes and then also had to raise money for education basics such as books and buses.  

For example, one story that I heard from several people locally was also documented by Dr. Melton A. McLaurin in his book The Black Marines of Montford Point (2009, UNC Press).  Apparently, the African American families who lived on the eastern side of Pender County were told they must raise money for a bus if they wanted their children to have transportation to one of the two African American high schools in the county.  After the families raised money and obtained a new bus, someone at the county bus garage tried to switch it with an old bus and give the new one to white students.  In the end the African American families prevailed, but only after a struggle.

Farming and sharecropping were the economic backdrop against which most Rosenwald schools were constructed. We can develop a better understanding of Rosenwald school history by pausing to contemplate the larger agenda the Rosenwald Fund had for these school buildings, that they would uplift the whole community.  In this image we can also see a combination of hope and gravity on the part of farmers, most of whom probably attended one the six Rosenwald schools in Caswell County, as they meet and make a cooperative plan.



Saturday, September 5, 2015

Of Country Roads and Rosenwald Schools



One of my favorite things to do is drive out on country roads to see old farm houses and farm buildings. Working on my current documentary, which is about sharecropping, gives me the perfect excuse to spend time photographing these humble structures before they are lost to time.  Above is an old farm house in northern Pender County, which was built for a landowner's family but was later occuppied by tenant farmers.  Sharecropping and tenant farming was the backdrop against which most Rosenwald schools were built (see Stack's Rosenwald school documentaries).  

There should be a name for this fascination with the structures that tell the stories of our ancestors.  Well, "fascination" is a gentle way to put it.  It segues easily into obsession.  At any rate, I am on a mission to document the lives of early 20th century farmers, particularly sharecroppers and tenant farmers.  They did not own their land and sometimes were barely able to eke out a living.  Yet if you talk with my 80-something year old friends today, you won't hear any self-pity.  Rather, they take pride in their resilience. 

There is an element of faith that is central to most of their stories.  The widowed mother/sharecropper praying over the sick mule.  The boy who checks his rabbit boxes with trembling hands, hoping against hope to find something he can contribute to the family table.  As they tell it there was an ease and a naturalness to their appeals.  They had conviction, then and now, that God walks with them in their hardship.  They know we weren't promised anything except grace.  Somehow it was enough.   





Tuesday, March 31, 2015

NEW!!! Under the Kudzu & Carrie Mae: An American Life Now Available for Streaming on Vimeo

Under the Kudzu, the story of two Rosenwald schools, and Carrie Mae: An American Life are now available for streaming ($3.99) on Vimeo.  Here is the link to my page with the trailers and the option for streaming:

Friday, February 20, 2015

April 10th, 2015 UNCW Rosenwald School Conference

Leading into the June, 2015 NTHP Rosenwald School Conference in Durham, UNC Wilmington will host a one day conference on Friday, April 10, 2015.  Keynote speaker is Carole Boston Weatherford, and the day will include a screening of my new film "Carrie Mae: An American Life," a panel discussion with former Rosenwald school teachers, and much more!  Lunch is included for the modest $20 registration ($15 for seniors).  Link below for more information and for registration!

Sunday, February 15, 2015

The 1,000 Year Old Yesterday

"Jim Crow's not around today.  A thousand years ago, yeah."

-Rush Limbaugh, as quoted on his website rushlimbaugh.com (accessed 2/15/15) 


As chance would have it, in the same week that Rush Limbaugh was asserting that Jim Crow was in the distant past-- a thousand years, in his mind-- I was beginning interviews for my new film "Sharecrop."  This film will bring to light the stories of individuals, both African American and white, who farmed as sharecroppers from Reconstruction into the 1960s.  

Last week I had lunch with an African American man, a Ph.D. in English literature.  He recalled the way he had to argue to get out of an agriculture elective and into a foreign language class that he knew he needed to meet college entrance requirements.  He spoke of some of the humiliations and obstacles, both large and small, that affected his family.  For example, even though his mother was a respected teacher in the community, the family could not make an appointment to see a doctor.  If they needed medical care they simply had to go to the doctor's office and wait in a back room until the doctor decided to fit them in.  "It was an all day affair."

More damaging still was the constant threat of reprisal against African American families who appeared to step out of line.  His family purchased a plot of land in an area where the families were mostly white.  For several years they pretended NOT to be the owners for fear someone would set fire to their house and barns.

A woman I know used to ask her mother why the bookmobile didn't stop at their house, and why they couldn't use the public library.  Instead of stating the bald truth, that only white children could access the books, her mother (who was a very faithful woman), would hug her and say "There's going to be a better day."  

To suggest that the humiliations and dangers of segregation are ancient history is to belittle my neighbors' experiences.  Anyone who takes time to listen to American citizens of color will learn that far from being "A thousand years ago," in historical terms segregation and its impacts were barely yesterday.






Monday, January 26, 2015

"Sharecrop" Documentary Begins



For the past month I have been immersed in background research for my new film "Sharecrop."  This documentary will bring to the foreground what was implicit in both of my Rosenwald school documentaries-- namely that the economic setting for the rural Rosenwald schools was largely that of sharecropping.  Of course, family members might have also worked as laborers, for example here in Pender County some men worked for a lumber company.  Even for those families, farming was usually also part of the mix.  In my new film I will highlight the experiences of several families as they worked to 'make' their crops, stay out of debt to the landowner, and respond to changing markets.

This photograph is of the late Leo Kea, one of my inspirations for this film.  As was often the case, he went to work for tenant farmers and landowners when his family did not need him at home to work their own crops.  When I asked him how he described sharecropping, he said "Sharecrop means three baskets of peas for you, one for me."