Poor but Proud: Alabama's Poor Whites.By J. Wayne Flynt Wayne Flynt is Professor Emeritus in the Department of History at Auburn University. He has won numerous teaching awards and been a Distinguished University Professor for many years. , Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press The University of Alabama Press is a university press that is part of the University of Alabama. External link
The hardest task for a historian is to give a voice to those who created few, if any, documents--the poor. Wayne Flynt accepted this challenge, and in Poor but Proud: Alabama's Poor Whites he helps them to sing. Conducting the voices by skillfully blending melodic oral histories with the pounding bass of government documents, Flynt offers the most extensive study to date on the subject. Early Alabama settlers found abundant land available for fields and open woods for livestock foraging, allowing these farmers the possibility of upward mobility upward mobility n. The state of being upwardly mobile. upward mobility Noun movement from a lower to a higher economic and social status . Land became scarcer as statehood state·hood n. The status of being a state, especially of the United States, rather than being a territory or dependency. developed, farms were divided into smaller lots, the price of cotton dropped and generating enough income to support a family proved increasingly difficult. The Civil War and its aftermath plunged thousands of Alabama yeomen into poverty. With the destruction of farm animals, crops, and homes, added to the great loss of life among working age men, many families were unable to retain their property and turned to tenancy and its downward spiral of yearly increasing debt. The percentage of Alabama farmers caught in this system grew from 45.8 percent in 1880 to 64.7 percent in 1930. Hopelessness forced waves of poor from rural areas into the developing urban centers of the state. These took with them a way of life that included the family wage system; children worked on the factory floor along with their mothers and fathers as they had in the fields. In the textile industry, 25 percent of the workers were under the age of sixteen in 1900. Workers in all the main occupations--farmers, textile workers, coal miners, timber workers, and ironworkers--faced economic difficulties. Attempts to unionize had little effect. Threats of firings kept union activities to a minimum. Poor whites, bombarded with white supremacy white supremacist n. One who believes that white people are racially superior to others and should therefore dominate society. white supremacy n. rhetoric, rarely joined with blacks, who suffered the same economic depression, to protest conditions. The Populist Party Populist party, in U.S. history, political party formed primarily to express the agrarian protest of the late 19th cent. In some states the party was known as the People's party. had the most success organizing the workers in the late 1800s, but ultimately they too failed to reform the economic system. In learning to cope with the indignities and agonies brought on by poverty, many turned to the church for solace. They believed in a fundamental Christianity that "proclaimed all persons equal in the sight of God" (p. 233). Bivocational pastors who had little or no educational training for the ministry often served the Baptist and Methodist churches the poor attended. In church, the poor found a sense of community; often the socials and Sacred Harp
Song #95 from The Sacred Harp, performed by New Harp of Columbia Song #186 (Sherburne) from The Sacred Harp, performed by the Alabama Sacred Harp Singers Poor but Proud, which received the Lillian Smith Lillian Smith may be either
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