There's Something Special About These 13 Alabama Farms From The Past
By Jennifer Young
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Published December 20, 2015
Farming has always been important in America, especially many decades ago. After all, without farmers, we wouldn’t survive. The following 13 photos reflect what farming was like in Alabama during the 1930s-40s.
1. An Alabama tenant farmer and his children working in a cotton field. (Anniston, Alabama - 1936)
2. Lucille Burroughs in the cotton fields. (Hale County, Alabama -1936)
3. This farmer's corn is almost dried out. (Eutaw, Alabama - 1936)
4. An Alabama plow girl. (Eutaw, Alabama - 1936)
5. A farmer plowing at Gee's Bend. (Wilcox County, Alabama - 1937)
6. Joe Handley standing outside his barn with his beautiful horses. (Walker County, Alabama - 1937)
7. An Alabama homesteader with a few of the baby chicks he's been raising. (Bankhead Farms, Alabama - 1937)
8. An Alabama sharecropper plowing a field. (Montgomery County, Alabama - 1937)
9. This repaired barn and two mares belong to George Johnson, a tenant purchase client. (Pike County, Alabama - 1939)
10. Mr. and Mrs. George Johnson and their hogs. (Pike County, Alabama - 1939)
11. Part of George Cowley's family looking over their pigs. (Pike County, Alabama - 1939)
12. Mr. Tillery's wife and children with a few of their chickens and pigs. (Pike County, Alabama - 1939)
13. A herd of cattle grazing in the Black Prairie regions. The cabin in the background belongs to a sharecropper. (Hale County, Alabama - 1941)
Judging from these photos, do you believe farming was much different many years ago compared to today? Share your thoughts below!
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