The news in this publi cation is released for the press on receipt. OCTOBER 26, 1927 THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA NEWS LETTER Published Weekly by the University of North Caro lina for the University Ex tension Division. CHAPEL HILL, N. C. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS VOL. xm. No. 50 Edilori.l Board. E. C. Brannon. S. H. Hobbs. Jr., P. W. Wager, L. R. Wilson. E. W. Knight. D. D. Cirroll. H. W. Odum. Entered as aecond-claaa matter November 14. 1914. at the Postofiice at Chapel Hill, N. C.. under the act of August 24. 1912. progress among negroes j^egro extension work According to a recent bulletin of the United States Department of Agricul ture entitled A Decade of Negro Ex tension Work, liome ownership is the largest factor in the solution of the so- called Negro / Froblem. Cooperative extension work, especially since the comprehensive organization of negro extension agents, ha's been one of the greatest influences in encouraging and helping negroes to become landowners and to succeed with land investments. Energetic negroes soon learn thrift and have the ability to become good demon strators. • Farmers’ cooperative demonstration work was begun in 1903. At first, all forage crops, with tobacco, sweet po tatoes, Irish potatoes, melons, berries, and truck crops. Unusual significance may be attached to the livestock demon strations of negro farmers. The large number of cows, hogs, and chickens owned by them indicates increased land ownership by negroes. Likewise, it means progress when negro boys and girls cared for 102,070 high-class farm animal^ in their club enterprises in 1924. The progress and the benefits of home demonstration work among negroes have been no less significant than those of farm demonstration work. Large numbers of negro women and girls have been demonstrators in gardening,' food i preparation and preservation, home demonstration agents were white men ! furnishing and and women, but in 1906 farm and home j projects, demonstration work for negroes was | ^j^oget^er, the extension work among begun. The first negro farm demonstraj^^^^^^^ witnessed a AT HIS BEST The negro is, in my opinion, naturally a farmer, and he is at his very best when he is in close contact with''the soil. There is something in the atmosphere of the farm that de velops and strengthens the negro’s natural common sensd. As a rule, the negro farmer has a rare gift of getting at the sense of things and of stating in picturesque language what he has learned. The explanation of it is, it seems to me, that the negro farmer studies nature. In his own way he studies the soil, the develop ment of plants and animals, the streams, the birds and" the changes of the seasons. He h^ a chance of gettipg at first-hand the kind of knowledge that is'valuable to him. — Booker T. Washington. tors were appoinled that year and | development. Its influence l first negro home demonstration "geht i bound to be tremendous. There is no in 191ii.. The work among the i ggij gj where greater good ers of this section do not emulate their example and grow the things needed at home. In addition to these staple crops, the Thompsons grow quite a quantity of hogs, some chickqns, some truck and other products that contribute to swell ing the cofYers of the family. —Manu facturers Record. NEGRO FARM TENANCY The tabje which appears in this issue gives the farmers i ern states in 1910 and in 1926. It also North Carolina. There appears also bi have been a migration f^rom the Gulf states westward into the newer cotton areas in Oklahoma and Texas. C&uses and Effects The causes of the shifting of negro population are easier to explain than the consequences. The boll weevil has been an expulsive force; the negro farmers have tried to advance ahead of it. Again the negroes generally find it to their economic advantage to migrate from areas with a high negro number of negro tenant j-atio to areas with lower negro ratios— each of fourteen South- other words to spread out. Possibly the migration has been prompted in indicates in each ease the ratio of prospect of better schools, tenants to the total number of negro farmers. The table was limited to those states in which there is a facilities, better beauty or our national strength, we know of none comparable with tfie painting of this picture. We ^ downward^' lift our hand in salute to t.ne vi.sion and tlie courage of the man who first con ceived the map of these great States as his canvas, and then dared to sweep- upon it such a glorious com- owes mdeb of its success to the high | by earnest, devot- quality of negro leadership developed ; working along right lines. at the Hampton and 'luskegee Insti* j tutes. In fact, the influence of these two I I major institutions has affected-all the] HOSENWALB SCHOOLS i schools and colleges where negro agents | xhe most beautiful pictufe in America j this.’’-Literary Digest, have bean educated. Every southern |jg that whi^ the Julius Rosenwald |^ state now has a group of efficient negro i fund is painting across the map of the i agents, whose numbers are increasing. ' Southern state?, says The Christian To be specific, the number of negro' (Century (Nondenominational) enthusi- j ^ agents in the fourteen states mentioned | astically. It is only fifteen years since better institutional race relations. An increase of 15,189 nejiro tenant relatively large number of negro farmers in North (Jarolina in fifteen farmers. The states are ranked on years can hardly be an .unmitigated the basis of negro tenancy ratios. In blessing. The addition of these land- Virginia only 38.8 percent of the negro jggg hordes from region.^ further south farmers are, tenants; in Mississippi introduces serious problems—both eco- 87.1 percent are tenants. Ihe other ; nomic afld sociiRl. The presence of new Southern states lie between these two | hinders the economic extremes. advance of our native farm tenants, More significant, perhaps, than - the | and makes a reduction in farm tenancy nresent tenancy ratio i.s the trend. Is‘more difficult. The influx of thousands Our com-j of homeless negroes, unacquainted and putations reveal tiiat in ten stales the i unadjusted, ’ makes for social dis- ratios were higher in 1926 than in 191U, turbances. There is an increase in and in four states the opposite was ! crime, race friction, and social malad- ' true. Incidentally, North Carolina’s: ^'ustments of every sort.— Paul W. ; negro tenancy ratio increased from ; Wager. , '67.7 CO 72.7, not a very encouraging; A NEOHO FARMER commentary. Only in Texas was the increase greater. Florida witnessed the greatest reduction, its tenancy in this week’s table has increased from j in 1916 to 293 in 1924 The COSt of i this modest, retiring Jewish mer chant” established the fund for the en- Thompson came to Augusta, , .n n ^ ao o rp ,- -_ f T- • u ■ f i ratio fa ling from 49.7 to 42.8, Taking some 3o years ago from Union Point' , . . . and started work as a drayman on Cot ton Row. Long years of service have the- negro extension work in these ! eouragement of adequate rfucation for igg^pacitated him for further work, but negro children, especially in the South, Charles carries on, and Harold, but its results are already writ large. ig the farmer of the The Roserrwald fund provides part of augmented by his mother, Ann „ . , the money, wherever a southern state, -j-hompson, who started the family out Negroes are especially responsive to jg t^er with a local negro community, | . .yriggUure remainder necessary tor states has increased from -$31,689 '1916 to $416,248 in 1924. Negroes Responsive the demonstration method, because of their faith, confidence, and optimism. Demonstrations have reached the most ignorant and thtr arose needy better than any form of academic instruction, because demonstrators must be doers be fore they become teachers. The demon stration method has proved to be not only the best for the ignorant, but also for the intelligent. The negro .farmers want usable knowledge about specific things. Many negro agents seem to have the ability to encourage their demonstrators and magnify the influence of their work. Negroes are very sus ceptible to commendation and praise. It means a lot to a man, woman, boy, or girl, who has started out on a demonstration program, to receive recognition from his pastor, his neigh bors, and especially from the leading white citizens. Whenever a county paper calls attention to the outstanding results obtained by a negro farmer, he immediately measured up to the added responsibility and goes forward on the path of improvement. Whenever there is a considerable number of demonstra tors of that kind, it is easy to do organization work along agricultural and home-economics lines, in fact, negroes who have demonstrated that kind of enterprise and dependability are ready for cooperative marketing, or other welfare organization. The great task that is before the negro ex tension force is to multiply the numbers of good demonstrators. Results Encouraging According to the bulletin on which these paragraphs are based, there were in 1924, 3,669 negro farmers who under took demonstrations with cotton and 3,072 carried the work to completion and submitted reports. These demon strations represented a total of 23,043 acres. In addition, 2,630 junior club members planted an acre or more of cotton and 1,734 of them completed the work and submitted reports. Many of these boys cleared more than $100 each on their acres and some more than $200. This is not bad for boys who attend •school regularly. Corn has always been a favorite crop ^or demonstrations by both adults and juniors in the South, because it is used so much for food and feed and because it responds so well to special attention. Demonstrations in corn in 1924 covered 26,442 acres and involved 12,336 demon strators. Each demonstration was prob ably observed by several neighboring families, hence the numbersiof people influenced was large. Thousands of demonstrations were provides the the building of schools of modern type, in which an adequate education may be given. The negro community involved must give a sum equal to or greater than that given by the fund. One or more rooms, we read further, must be dedicated to industrial education in every Rosen-wald school, and there must be at least two acres of ground v for agricultural instruction. When com pleted, the schools ' become public- school property. Statistics are usually tiresome things, says The Christian Century; But to-those who look with fore boding on the race question in the United States some statistics as to the present status of education for negroes in the South will prove worth noting. There were ^6,610 schoolhouaes' of all kinds in the fourteen Southern states in 1924, when the federal Bureau of Education compiled its latest figures. On July la year ago there were 24,- 079 schools for negroes. The simple, Harold began his work as a mere youth and rented land a short time un til he bargained to buy a farm, the Taylor Hill place down the river, con sisting of some SOO acres of land, and when this was settled for he bought, with the assistance of other members of the family, the Lombard and Holmes tracts, comprising another 400 acres, and has under lease at present 160 acres more of land, or a total of about 1600 acres. Last year upward of 10,000 bushels of corn was grown, more than 16,000 bales of hay, more than 30 bales of cotton, and oats galore. He has sold thousands of bushels of oats, Fulgbum seed oats, one Aufeustan buying 2000 bushels and M. M. Daniels of Millen buying 2000 bushels. On the farm today are more than 300 acres of the finest oats imagin able, oats that make 60 or 76 bushels per acre. The farm is equipped with tractors, power pre'sses and other modern sup- tbe entire fourteen states the negro tenancy ratio increased from 76.0 in 1910 to 76.6 in 1925. While any increase in tenancy is to be deplored it is worthy of notice that the increase among negroes was less than among whites in the same area. , A Numerical Decrease A RURAL PROBLEM Education of negroes in the United States is mainly a rural problem. A recent study by the U. S. Bureau of Education indicates that 93.4 percent of the negro schools in fourteen southern states are in rural communities. In other words, there are 22,494 rural schools and 1,686 urban schools. The average length of the school term in the rural schools was in 1926-26 about six months. The range was from 8.7 Numerically seven states showed an | months in Maryland to 4.7 months in increase in negro tenancy in the fif- I Alabama. Of the 801 negro high schools teen-yesr period and seven a decrease.'m the fourteen states, 200 are four- Taking the entire group of states the i Y^ar accredited high schools. The total number of negro farm tenants de-1 enrollment in the high schools m 1925- creased from 667,913 in 1910 to 636,6)2 26 was 68,606 and the number of four- in 1925. In the same period the num-1 Year graduates was 6,436. ber of negro farm owners decreased in ' one-teacher type of school made I plies that make farming in the Savan- up 63.8 percent of these negro schools; | nah River 'Valley a success. The story the two-teacher school, 18.8 percent; j is one remarkable in that it shows what the three-teacher school, 7.1 percent, : can Be done in farming around Augusta, and the four-teacher and larger, 10.3 ; and there is no question but that some ; percent of all rural negro schools in I day every acre of fertile valley land of the South. The influence of the Rosen-, this seotion will be utilized for agncul- wald fund is even more clear when it is | tural purposes, and it is certain that said that only 6.0 percent of the one-1 two blades of grass, or even five or six, teacher schools are Rosenwald schools, i will be made to grow where only one while 29.3 percent of the two-teacher, has grown heretofore. 31.2 percent of the three-teacher, and l The lesson of these colored farmers these states from 210,116 to 193,638. In other words, there was an exodus of negro farmers from the South rather than any appreciable passing from tenancy into ownership. A study of the table reveals that the number of negro tenant farmers in creased slightly in Virginia, Maryland, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana, and increased phenomenally in Texas and North Carolina. On the other hand, there were slight decreases in Florida, Kentucky, Tennessee, South Carolina and Mississippi, and phenomenal de creases in Alabama and Georgia. It is evident that there has been a steady migration of negroes from the South Atlantic states northward, with a con siderable number of them stopping.in IN VARIED OCCUPATIONS An increasing number of colored business women find employment as insurance agents and real estate agents and nearly 200 haye qualified as under takers. Fully 2,5Q0 are clerks and saleswomen in stores, and others are making a livelihood and gaining busi ness experience as commercial travel ers, decorators, drapers, and window dressers, as demonstrators and floor walkers in stores, and as employment office keepers. We have several opti cians and nearly 400 female hucksters and peddlers, a number of junk dealers, and a dozen or more dealers in rags. All of which indicates a decided im provement in the economic status of our race.—Columbian Press Bureau, quoted in The Southern Workman. 31.7 percent of the four-teacher and larger schpols for negroes have been helped by this fund. These Rosen wald schools provide 27.4 percent of the pupil capacity for the total rural enrolment of negro children.” Negro High Schools There are now 209 four-year ac credited negro high schools, North Carolina leading with 49 and Texas coming second with 26. There are, in addition, 692 non-accredited schools do ing from two to four years of high- school work. The total enrolment m these schools, when these figures were gathered a year ago, was 68,606, and 6,436 young negroes had graduated that year at the completion of a full four-year course. It will be seen that | Itetourenrolmenrrstayin'^ m high j Anybody who has some 8000 school long enough to graduate a fine showing. is one that ought to be iifspirational throughout; this entire section, and a visit to the. plaice, six or seven miles down the Savannah River road, will show the public what is being done there and what can be done elsewhere around Augusta. With the construction of immens dams above Augusta tor water-power purposes, the flood control of the Savannah River would be well-nigh per fect. With this done, a vast acreage could be opened up with a reasonable degree of safety from any overflow and farming on an extensive scale could be carried on from every viewpoint around Augusta. It is worth considering and means great things for those w intd the proposition and pursue the NEGRO TENANT FARMERS IN THE SOUTH Number and Ratio, 1910 and 1925 The following table shows the number of negro tenant farmers in each o£ the Southern states in 1910 and in 192,6. It also indicates in'each ease what percent of the total number of negro farmers the tenants represent. The table is based on United States Census statistics. It will be noticed that the absolute number of negro tenant farmers in creased in seven states and decreased in seven states. The tenancy ratios ncreased in ten states and decreased in four. Mississippi has the largest number of negro tenants, as well as the highest tenancy ratio; nevertheless the number has decreased by nearly twenty thousand since 1916. North Carolina witnessed the greatest increase numerically, and Texas the greatest relative increase. There appears to be a gradual movement of negro farmers north- ward and westward. Paul W. Wager Department of Rural Social-Economics, University of North Carolina 1926 Rank State Negro ten ant farmers Percent of all negro farmers Negro ten ant farmers of fine corn and 1U,UUU bales ot cnoici native hay to sell at this season hai ..D . ™ hack to the picture. S little to worry about in making a sue- s.™ • days. Thompson family. 1 Virginia .... 16,691 32.6. 2 Maryland y 2,334 36.6. 3 Florida 7,311 •- 49.7. 4 Kentucky 6,763 49.1 5 Oklahoma 8,370 63.4. j 6 North Carolina .... 43,676 67.7. ^ 7 Tennessee 27,661 72.0. : 8 Texas . ,.48,664 69.6. Percent of all negro farmers .33.8 .37.3 .42.8 ,.53.6 likewise made with leguminous and | among all the colored, is doing ippemng in “‘r-- " g^'to demonstrate the possibilities Some things big with portent for the muen^^^^ ^ future are b”eing undertaken. But in farming, and it is a 8^^“^ Pi*Y our thousands of beta white and black farm- contributions to South Carolina 76,285.. Alabama 93,288.. Arkansas 48,872.. Louisiana 44,062.. Georgia m733.. 14 Mississippi 139,433.. 6,148.. • 6,747... 11,348 56.6 58,865 72.T 26,412 73.3 61.840 76.7 72,179 79.7 84.6..-. 70,539 82.7 76.9 52,181 73.8 80.4 49,913 83.9 87.1 72,206 86.9 84.8 130,796 87.1