These 15 Rare Photos Show Arkansas’s Farming History Like Never Before
By J.B. VanDyke|Published February 14, 2017
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J.B. VanDyke
Author
J.B. Weisenfels has lived in rural Arkansas for three decades. She is a writer, a mom, and a graduate student. She is also an avid collector of tacky fish whatnots, slightly chipped teapots, and other old things. In her spare time she enjoys driving to the nearest creek to sit a while. If you were to visit her, she'd try to feed you cornbread.
Arkansas has a rich agricultural heritage, for sure. We’re basically famous for our rice and poultry these days, but the advancements in agriculture have certainly changed what that industry looks like today. Below you’ll find fifteen pictures taken in the 1930s that show the faces, landscapes, and technologies of Arkansas’s agriculture way back in the day. These pictures will have today’s farmers thanking the good Lord for how far we’ve come.
1. In 1935 the practice of sharecropping was still ongoing, and families struggled.
2. Plantations were still in existence in the 1930s too, like the Stortz Cotton Plantation in Pulaski County. Pictured here is the lunch break of the field workers on that plantation.
7. Most of our harvesting processes are helped along by machines now, so homemade knee pads are no longer a necessity for those in the agricultural industry.
For more cool historic pictures from Arkansas’s past, click here. To read all about why the Delta is one of the coolest places in the Natural State, try this one.
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