sharecropping
On a typical farm under this economic arrangement, each family obtained supplies, seed, and food on credit from the landowner. They planted the seeds, tended the farm, and picked the crop. Once the crop was harvested, the landowner decided on a price and paid the family, but first the landowner deducted the amount they owed for the supplies, seed, and food purchased on credit. Sharecropping farmers typically received a fraction of the actual returns on their labor, depending on the contract. Even in ideal scenarios, the farmer's share might not cover total expenses. The result was dependency and debt for many sharecroppers. Because African Americans were prevented from serving on juries or voting, they had little opportunity for fair treatment in the legal system and thus had no effective way to challenge this economic practice. The sharecropping system did allow formerly enslaved people a degree of freedom and autonomy greater than they had previously experienced under slavery. For the first time, some Black families could divide their time between housework and fieldwork in keeping with their own priorities. But for many formerly enslaved people, some of whom worked the same land and under supervision of the same overseers as they had under slavery, sharecropping was like "slavery under another name."
See D. E. Conrad,
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2025, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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