The history of the agrarian reform movement in Texas, its origin and its activities, reveals a minimal participation of the Negro. The relationship of the white farmer and the Negro in Texas with regard to agrarian reform demonstrates what they had in common and why the black did not choose to embrace agrarian reform
Black farmers in America have had a long and arduous struggle to own land and to operate independent...
In the early years of the twentieth century, newcomer farmers and migrant Mexicans forged a new worl...
The relationship of Populism and ideology has been the subject of a great deal of recent historical ...
African American Farmers and Land Loss in Texas, surveys the ways that discrimination at the local,...
This study explores the complex, triangular relationship among Mexicans, Blacks and Anglos in rural ...
This article examines a small community of former slaves in Texas's leading sugar-producing county a...
This dissertation develops and utilizes a methodology for combining data drawn from the manuscript c...
The purpose of this thesis is to trace certain important aspects of the Negroes' activity in Texas H...
The plantation system of Texas was not an isolated and separated institution; it was a part of a mod...
Address by Cully A. Cobb at a conference of African-American agricultural leaders and farmers at Pra...
The economic and social well-being of people of an area is largely determined by the amount and natu...
This study is limited to Negro farmers living and operating farms in Austin County. In this report, ...
Histories of African Americans in the postbellum rural South tend to depict sharecroppers and tenant...
Statement of the Problem 1. To determine the types of farming practiced by fifty Negro farmers in Wa...
Between June 19, 1865, when slavery was abolished in Texas, and March 30, 1870, when Congress readmi...
Black farmers in America have had a long and arduous struggle to own land and to operate independent...
In the early years of the twentieth century, newcomer farmers and migrant Mexicans forged a new worl...
The relationship of Populism and ideology has been the subject of a great deal of recent historical ...
African American Farmers and Land Loss in Texas, surveys the ways that discrimination at the local,...
This study explores the complex, triangular relationship among Mexicans, Blacks and Anglos in rural ...
This article examines a small community of former slaves in Texas's leading sugar-producing county a...
This dissertation develops and utilizes a methodology for combining data drawn from the manuscript c...
The purpose of this thesis is to trace certain important aspects of the Negroes' activity in Texas H...
The plantation system of Texas was not an isolated and separated institution; it was a part of a mod...
Address by Cully A. Cobb at a conference of African-American agricultural leaders and farmers at Pra...
The economic and social well-being of people of an area is largely determined by the amount and natu...
This study is limited to Negro farmers living and operating farms in Austin County. In this report, ...
Histories of African Americans in the postbellum rural South tend to depict sharecroppers and tenant...
Statement of the Problem 1. To determine the types of farming practiced by fifty Negro farmers in Wa...
Between June 19, 1865, when slavery was abolished in Texas, and March 30, 1870, when Congress readmi...
Black farmers in America have had a long and arduous struggle to own land and to operate independent...
In the early years of the twentieth century, newcomer farmers and migrant Mexicans forged a new worl...
The relationship of Populism and ideology has been the subject of a great deal of recent historical ...