CpG30 T2.3C ■ YkV." Economic and social conditions of North Carolina farmers Taylor and Zimmerman •^ C6e Hibrarp of the (tlnftjergitp of J!3ort& Carolina Collection of iRortD Carolinians ©n&otoeti bg lofin feprunt MI of tbe oriasje of 1889 Cpb'so »»!Kffi:. N - C - A T CHAPEL 00017479211 This book is due on the last date stamped below unless recalled sooner. It may be renewed only once and must be brought to the North Carolina Collection for renewal. |tf?i»S ECONOMIC and SOCIAL CONDITIONS of NORTH CAROLINA FARMERS BASED ON A SURVEY OF 1000 NORTH CAROLINA FARMERS IN THREE TYPICAL COUNTIES OF THE STATE Prepared Under the Direction of a Committee Appointed by the State Board of Agriculture Consisting of Representatives from THE NORTH CAROLINA COLLEGE FOR WOMEN THE NORTH CAROLINA STATE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE AND ENGINEERING THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AND THE STATE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE IN CO-OPERATION WITH THE U. S. BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS Information Compiled and Collated by CARL C. TAYLOR C. C. ZIMMERMAN TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE The Area Surveyed: The People 8 The Laud Farmed 9 Farm Crop Practices 11 Livestock Practices 15 Family Food Supplies 17 Milk and Butter 19-20 Pork and Lard 20-21 Eggs and Poultry 22-23 Flour, Potatoes, Meal, and Molasses 23-25 Garden and Orchard Products 26 Cash Income 27 Credit i 28 Wealth and Equity 32 Tenure History 35 The Homes : Houses 39 Home Conveniences 43 Health and Sanitation...... 50 Contacts with Doctors 51-52 Expenditures for Drugs and Doctor Bills 53-54 Attendance at Births 55-5S Water Supply 59-62 Disposal of Waste and Garbage 63-64 Education 64 Papers and Magazines Taken 67-71 Books 72-73 Religion T4 Recreation ^6 Change of Residence S2 Per Cent Have Autos, Buggies, etc 83-84 Exchange of Work 84 Opinions on Community Problems 86-87 PREFACE This bulletin grew out of a resolution passed by the State Board of Agriculture at its annual meeting in December, 1921, as follows : "Whereas, the alarming increase in tenancy presents one of the most serious problems now confronting the farmers of our State and other States. In 1880 only one American farmer in four was a tenant, whereas now practically two out of five are tenants, and the percentage is higher in North Carolina than in the country as a whole. Our public men as well as our agricultural leaders are now becoming aroused to the seriousness of this evil, and there is general demand for a thorough investigation of the whole problem, with a view to discovering precise facts and suggesting definite remedies : Therefore, be it "Resolved by the North Carolina Board of Agriculture, That we hereby request four men in North Carolina who have given prolonged study to the question of tenancy and land ownership in this State and other States, and in foreign countries — namely, Mr. B. E. Brown, Direc- tor of our Division of Markets and Rural Organization; Dr. Carl C. Taylor, Head of the Division of Rural Economics, State College of Agriculture and Engineering; Professor E. C. Branson, Department of Rural Economics of our State University, and Dr. E. C. Lindeman, of a similar department of our State College for Women — together with two representatives of the Board of Agriculture, to come together and make plans for a thorough-going study and investigation of the whole subject of farm tenancy and proposed remedies, proceeding immediately with such studies and investigations as they are themselves prepared to carry out, and making plans for the cooperation of all these institu- tions in prosecuting such additional surveys and investigations as are deemed necessary." The committee thus appointed consisted at first of the above-named members, with Dr. Clarence Poe and Hon. C. C. Wright acting for the Board of Agriculture. At a later date, the 1ST. C. College for Women was represented by Dr. W. C. Jackson in the absence of Dr. Lindeman, and the University by Professor S. H. Hobbs, Jr., in the absence of Dr. Branson. At the first meeting of the committee in Greensboro in March, 1922, it was agreed that the four institutions — the North Carolina College for Women, the State University, the State College of Agriculture and Engineering, and the State Division of Markets — should cooperate and secure, if possible, the cooperation of the U. S. Bureau of Agricultural Economics. These arrangements were perfected, the survey made, and the bulletin written under them. 4 North Carolina Tenancy Commission The schedules were the joint work of Dr. Branson, Dr. Taylor, C. C. Zimmerman, and C. O. Brannen; the field work was carried on by W. R. Anderson, C. H. Warren and J. A. Dickey, under the direction of C. C. Zimmerman, in charge; the schedules were compiled by C. C. Zimmerman, A. J. Honeycutt and J. A. Dickey, under the direction of Dr. Taylor; and the bulletin has been written by Dr. Taylor and C. C. Zimmerman, under the general supervision of the whole com- mittee. B. F. Brown, Chairman, The Tenancy Commission. INTRODUCTION The information gathered in this study is so detailed and is compiled in such tabular form that it demands some generalization to be usable by the average person. For that reason these few brief statements are made by way of introduction and as a suggestion of the many facts contained in the tables, if the reader cares to study them. Since this is chiefly a study of the causes and effects of tenancy, it may seem that only the darker side of North Carolina rural life is por- trayed in these statements and the following tables. This is undoubtedly the case, but tenancy in many of its aspects creates a dark side of rural life. These conclusions, we believe, are justified from the facts as we found them, and are about the same as any one will draw who is willing to study the tahiilated data in detail. Many people will be surprised to learn that the average amount of land being cultivated is less than eighteen acres per family. This is a small acreage upon which to make a living unless the most intensive methods of cultivation are used and exactly the right choice of crops is guaranteed. That a wise choice of production is not being practiced, particularly for a long-time agricultural program, is indicated by the very great amount of exhaustive crops being planted in contrast to the very few improvement crops. Furthermore, it is clear from the data presented in the following tables that tenant farming is conducive to exhaustive crop farming more than owner-operator farming. The tenants and croppers in two of the three counties surveyed had over 99 per cent of all their land planted to crops which were strictly fertility-exhausting rather than soil-improving. The tenants and croppers are almost wholly cotton and tobacco grow- ers in the Piedmont and Coastal Plain counties. The landless farmers universally have fewer livestock than the landowners have. They pro- duce less of their home food supply, and in addition to this they have a lower cash income. They thus not only are practicing a system of agriculture which is ruinous for the future but are not making even personal gain while they are doing it. The crop lien is the curse of North Carolina agriculture. The land- lords and owner-operators are by no means universally free from the crop lien and chattel mortgage, but the landless farmers are farming under this handicap in three times as great numbers as are the landed. Furthermore, the tenants and croppers use a much greater per cent of their credit for living purposes than the landlords and owners do. Their credit is not so much for the sake of an investment as it is for the sake of a stake to tide them over from season to season. This is not a business use of eredit but a makeshift one year after another. 6 jNTorth Carolina Tenancy Commission The great number of tenants and croppers whose fathers were tenants and croppers and the few owners who rose to ownership unaided make it clear that it is not easy to attain the status of a farm-owner in modern agriculture, and probably indicates that our numbers of tenants will continue to increase unless some means is discovered with which to assist them to the ownership of farms. JSTo matter how much disagreement there may be among persons as to the cause of tenancy, the effects are too clear to dispute. This is just as true of the social effects as it is of the economic effects. The landless families live in poorer houses, they live under worse sanitary conditions, have poorer health, lose more of their children by death than the owners do. They are more illiterate, fail to reach as high grades in school, take less papers and magazines, have fewer books in I their homes, attend church and Sunday-school less, have fewer home \amusements, attend community affairs less often. Landless men may in many cases be accounted individually respon- sible for these differences, but the fact remains that our rural citizen- ship is less adequate because it is made up of people of this kind, and would be more adequate if these people could be made more prosperous and happy. The following outstanding disparaging facts are set forth in bold relief, not because there are no bright spots in these peoples' lives, but that we may know these facts and if possible set about to remedy them. Only .4 per cent of the crops grown by the black croppers of the Coastal Plain county are improvement crops. There is only one cow for every 138 tilled acres among the white croppers and one cow for every 277 tilled acres among the black crop- pers of the Coastal Plain county. The black croppers produce only 32.9 gallons of milk per year per family. This is but .07 of a quart per individual per day. Only 9 per cent of them produce milk at all. The cash income of the white tenants and croppers of the Mountain county is less than 10 cents per day per individual. Over 75 per cent of all the landless farmers surveyed used short- time credit to carry on their farming operations. The equity holdings per family of the black croppers in the Piedmont county is $36. Thirteen per cent of all the farm lands included in this survey are being farmed by insolvent men. Seventy-five per cent of the landless farmers are sons of landless fathers. Two per cent of all families surveyed are living in one-room houses. If the territory covered by the survey is typical, this means that some- thing over 6,000 rural families in this State are living in one-room houses. If we include two-room houses, then over 42,000 rural families Fabji Economic and Social Conditions 7 of the State are found to be living in these types of houses. Almost one-fifth of all the landless families surveyed are living in one- or two- room houses. There is not a negro family or a white tenant or cropper family in the whole area surveyed that has an indoor toilet or bath tub. Over 31 per cent of the fathers and mothers in the landless families can neither write nor read. The average cropper had attained a school status of only third grade. The average negro had attained less than full first-grade education. Over sixty-five per cent of all landless families surveyed take no papers or magazines whatsoever. Less than seven per cent of them take daily papers. The average landless family for all surveyed attended less than two recreational events during the year of 1922. THE AREA SURVEYED This survey included 1,014 farm families. Representative areas in three typical counties in the three major geographic sections of the State were covered. The areas were in Edgecombe County, in the Coastal Plain section; Chatham County, in the Piedmont section; and, Madison County, in the Mountain section. A fifteen-page schedule was used in the survey. Each family was interviewed personally and asked more than 700 questions about farm production, farm ownership, and farm life. The items contained in the following tables are as specific and as accurate as the persons interviewed could give. Because the volume of information is great, the tables are presented with the mini- mum of interpretation. THE PEOPLE The number of persons and the number of families surveyed is relatively unimportant in this study. Tables I to III are presented to show the scope of the survey and as basic tables from which all other data are interpreted. Table I — Families and Persons by Tenure (For surveyed area) Coastal Plain Piedmont Mountain ( Total Total Landed Land- less Landed Land- less Landed Land- less Landed Land- less All Number of Families 78 261 181 154 231 109 490 524 1014 Per cent of 23.2 76.8 54.1 45.9 68.0 32.0 48.4 51.6 Number of Per- sons at Home. 419 1316 856 834 1160 538 2435 2688 5123 Per cent of Per- sons at Home- 24.2 75.8 50.7 49.3 68.3 31.7 47.6 54.4 .. . Average Persons at Home per Family.. . 5.37 5.05 4.17 5.42 5.02 4.94 4.97 5.14 5.05 Farm Economic and Social Conditions Table II — Families and Persons by Color (For surveyed area) Coastal Plain Piedmont Mountain Total Total White Black White Black White Black White Black All Number of 203 59.9 1003 57.8 4.95 136 40 1 732 42.2 5.02 190 56.8 860 50.8 4.53 145 43.2 830 49.2 5.72 340 733 72.3 3561 69.7 4.86 277 27.1 1562 30.3 5.65 1014 Per cent of Number of Per- sons at Home. Per cent of Per- 1698 5123 Average Persons at Home per Family 4.99 4.17 Table III — Per cent of Different Tenure and Racial Classes (For surveyed area) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 14.2 17.3 20.3 1.47 1.79 5.9 23.60 42.6 1.47 11.33 22.8 11.95 20.9 4.16 19.7 17.2 3.88 11.2 32.8 Piedmont Mountain 10.45 Total 17.25 1.08 25.72 4.28 18.78 7.98 9.94 14.97 THE LAND FARMED The landless families were tilling 48.5 per cent of all cultivated land under the plow. The croppers were tilling 23.1 per cent of it and the tenants were tilling 25.4 per cent of it. Tables IY to VII give the detailed information for the three counties. Table IV — Land in Farms by Tenure and Race (For territory surveyed) Per Tenure Per Race Landed Landless Totals White Black 54,281 86.53 8,947 51.45 18.2 8,439 13.47 8,437 48.55 16.1 62,720 100 17,386 100 17.1 54,731 87.28 12,476 717 17.0 7,989 12.72 4,910 28.3 17.4 10 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table V — Land in Farms per Different Tenure Types (For territory surveyed) Landlord Operators Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total Total acres 35,115 3,830 19,166 5,117 4,421 4,421 4,018 4,018 62,720 17,386 Table VI — Per cent of Tilled Acres Farmed by Each Tenure and Color Class (Per counties surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 19.80 22.35 32.22 1.63 1.60 5.84 23.73 47.83 1.840 11.82 .13 21.54 9.52 12.73 4.74 19.80 .60 14.87 3.24 5.80 29.74 Piedmont 7.94 .69 Total 26.01 .89 29.00 3.58 14.62 6.65 7.92 11.33 Landed Landless White Black 59.6 40.4 77.5 22.5 Table VII — Per cent of Tilled Acres Farmed by Different Classes (For territory surveyed) Per Tenure Per Race Landed Landless White Black 27.90 61.40 67.40 51.44 72.10 38.60 32.60 48.56 60.78 59.70 98.64 77.6 39.22 Piedmont 40.30 1.36 22.4 The outstanding facts apparent in Tables IV to VII are: 1. That all tenure classes are farming about the same amount of land per family — an average of just a little more than 17 acres. 2. Landless farmers have practically all the land under their direc- tion in cultivation. 3. Landless men are farming the greatest percentage of land in the Coastal Plain and least in the Mountain section. 4. Negro farmers were farming a larger per cent of the land in the Piedmont than in either of the other counties. Fabm Economic and Social Conditions 11 FARM CROP PRACTICES An attempt was made to discover what differences, if any, there were between the landed and landless farmers in their farm practices. Com- plete records were taken on all crops, crop yield, animals, and home supplies produced on the farms. Tables VIII to X give the detailed information. Table VIII — Amount of Exhaustive and Improvement Crops N (Per counties surveyed) Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 1,194 99 105 345.5 35.5 113 7 1,366 41 309 931 39 1,932 i-3 £5 Improvement Total Per cent of exhaustive Per cent of improvement.. 8 O 1,293 92.3 7.7 105 100 381.0 90.7 9.3 120 94.0 6.0 1,407 97.0 3.0 309 100 970 96.0 4.0 1,940 99.6 0.4 O Exhaustive . Improvement.- Total Per cent of exhaustive Per cent of improvement- 1,091 10S 76 10 1,242 29 601 33 503 7 1,058 4 169 5 426 Q H 1,199 91.05 S.95 86 88.4 11.6 1,271 97.7 2.3 634 95.0 5.0 510 98.6 1.4 1,062 99.2 O.S 174 97.4 2.6 426 100 g < Exhaustive Improvement Total 629 2,456 2,007 2,555 6.5 6. 866 353 46 9 440 114 59 o 3,085 20.4 79.6 4,562 44.0 56.0 12.5 52 48 1,219 71.1 2S.9 57 S4.2 15.8 554 79.5 20.5 66 Per cent of exhaustive Per cent of improvement- S9.4 10.6 The following lists are the crops as they were classified for constructing Table VIII : Improvement Crops Alfalfa Soy beans Cow peas Rye Hay Cultivated Pasture Exhaustive Crops Cotton Tobacco Corn Wheat Oats Peanuts Sorghum Potatoes Truck 12 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table IX — Amount and Per cent of Exhaustive Crops Per Tenure and Color Class (By county) COASTAL PLAIN PIEDMONT MOUNTAIN ■a 0) 03 c 03 i-l cd — s ■a a; -a a 03 13 a 03 CD IB 03 s -a CD -a CI 03 -a a 03 i-l a 03 3 Total acres exhaustive crops - Total crops -A- Per cent exhaustive 1757 1899 94.0 4538 4626 99.4 3836 4051 82.4 2459 2474 99.5 3010 3190 94.4 2156 2172 99.1 3005 3154 95.5 2161 2208 97.7 2642.5 7659.5 34.5 1413 1896 74.5 3942 9420 42.7 113.5 135.5 83.8 Total exhaustive Total crop acres Per cent exhaustive 6295 6525 96.5 5166 5362 94.6 4055.5 9555.5 42.9 The following facts are apparent in Tables VIII and IX : 1. The practice of using exhaustive crops is greatest among the croppers and least among the landlord operators. It runs as high as 99.6 per cent for the black croppers in the Coastal Plains and as low as 20.4 per cent for the landlord operators in the mountains. 2. The farmers of the Coastal Plain county are using 96.5 per cent of exhaustive crops and those of the Piedmont county are using 94.6 per cent exhaustive crops. Those of the Mountain county are using only 42.9 per cent exhaustive crops. 3. The landless farmers are following a system of farming which exhausts the soil to considerable degree greater than are the landed farmers. 4. The negro farmers are using a more exhaustive crop system than are the white farmers. Table X — Per cent of Tilled Land Planted in Cotton, Tobacco, and Com (By counties surveyed) COASTAL PLAIN PIEDMONT MOUNTAIN -§ u d 03 o c h ■t a OO 03 C CD h u a a O h U 73 o s 03 o fe £ a OO a 03 c CD H CD a a o C V 5 a 03 o S a OO c 03 c CD CD a a o O 7.55 3.34 7.24 2.62 1.46 2.75 10.50 4.97 9.60 20.36 8.57 14.64 4.64 1.45 17.75 6.17 1.61 18.56 6.52 1.64 15.05 2.23 1.18 4.59 Tobacco _ _- _ Corn _._ .. .39 6.93 .67 22.50 .22 10.68 .12 5.74 Totals 18.13 6.83 25.07 43.57 23.84 26.34 23.21 8.00 7.32 23.11 10.90 5.86 Combined percentage by counties... _._ _ 93 .60 81 .39 47.25 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 13 1. In considering crops which exhaust the soil it is generally assumed that such major crops as cotton, tobacco, and corn are the sole or only exhaustive crops. A comparison of Tables IX and X shows that the other minor exhaustive crops such as wheat, sorghum, and vegetables raise the per cent of all acres planted to exhaustive crops. 2. From Table X it is apparent that the use of exhaustive crops is highest in the county in which the tenancy rate is highest and lowest in the county in which the tenancy is lowest. 3. In the Coastal Plain county, where both the tenancy rate and exhaustive crops percentages are high, the landless farmers are leading in exhaustive crop farming. A study was made of comparative crop yields. Tables XI to XIII present the comparative data for tenure classes for the three counties surveved. Table XI — Average Production Per Acre of Leading Cash Crops for Different Classes of Farms (Coastal Plain County) COTTON TOBACCO 1 Negro Tenant 415 lbs. per i 2 Negro Cropper 383 lbs. per i 3 White Cropper 381 lbs. per - 4 White Owner .380 lbs. per i 5 Negro Owner 378 lbs. per ■ 6 White Tenant 367.5 lbs. per 1 White Tenant 823 lbs. per i 2 White Cropper .802 lbs. per i 3 Negro Tenant 752 lbs. per i 4 White Owner 751 lbs. per i 5 Negro Cropper 720 lbs. per i 6 Negro Owner... 535 lbs. per CORN 1 White Cropper 18.3 bu. per i 2 White Tenant 16.9 bu. per 3 Negro Tenant 16.7 bu. per i 4 Negro Cropper 14.3 bu. per i 5 Negro Owner 13.3 bu. per 6 White Owner 11.1 bu. per i 14 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table XII — Average Production Per Acre of Leading Cash Crops for Different Classes of Farms (Piedmont County) COTTON TOBACCO 1 White Owner 308.5 lbs. per i 2 Negro Owner .290 lbs. per i 3 White Cropper 286.5 lbs. per i 4 Negro Tenant 273.5 lbs. per i 5 White Tenant . ..270.5 lbs. per i 6 Negro Cropper 265.5 lbs. per i 1 White Owner 585 lbs. per i 2 White Tenant 462 lbs. per i 3 Negro Tenant 439 lbs. per < 4 Negro Owner 411 lbs. per i 5 Negro Cropper 409 lbs. per < 6 White Cropper 250.5 lbs. per CORN 1 White Owner 16.25 bu. per 2 White Tenant ...14.7 bu. per ■ 3 Negro Owner 14.2 bu. per ■ 4 White Cropper 14.1 bu. per 5 Negro Tenant 14.02 bu. per ■ 6 Negro Cropper 13.12 bu. per l Table XIII — Average Production Per Acre of Leading Cash Crops for Dif- ferent Classes of Farms (For Mountain County)* TOBACCO CORN 1 White Tenant 632 lbs. per 2 White Cropper 624 lbs. per 3 White Owner 517 lbs. per i 1 White Cropper 25.8 bu. per 2 White Tenant _._25.8 bu. per 3 White Owner 25.4 bu. per > "No cotton raised in this county. From Tables XI, XII, and XIII it is apparent that the landless men do not suffer by comparison with land-owners in crop yields. In the case of tobacco production in the Coastal Plain county it is the landless men who produce the best yield. This is true probably because of the careful supervision which they receive from the landlords and because they use their whole families to assist in producing and caring for the crop. The negro owner-operator falls below the negro tenant probably for the same reason. None of the landless classes ranks high in the Piedmont county where this careful supervision is absent. Farm Economic and Social Conditions 15 LIVESTOCK PRACTICES It is universally recognized that North Carolina needs more livestock on the farms of all sections of the State. The presence of animals indicate three significant things in farming and farm life. Work ani- mals lessen the amount of human manual labor. Dairy stock assist in solving the home food supply problem. Stock cattle, swine, sheep, and goats furnish the basis of mixed and diversified farming and help to maintain soil fertility. It is when we measure North Carolina farming in these terms that tenant- and cropper-farming show up at their worst. Tables XIV to XVII give the ownership of livestock rather than the presence of livestock and so make cropper-farming appear worse than it is. The landlord generally furnishes the work animals for his crop- pers. Even so, the absence of other types of livestock is tragic and the small amount of horse power used by croppers is striking. The white tenants in the Coastal Plain county have only about two-thirds as many livestock per acre as the landlords have and about four-fifths as many as the owner-operators have. Table XIV — Tilled Acres Per Farm Animal (Coastal Plain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 6.75 92.3 38.1 2.5 46.3 .397 6.55 52.5 35.0 1.88 11.2 4.75 38.1 .26 10.0 40.0 5.45 12.9 117.2 74.0 3.33 12.88 15.45 12.88 4.81 194.0 485.0 138.5 2.05 388.0 Bulls, calves and stock cattle Cows 970.0 277.0 4.1 .51 .04 .445 .44 .835 .33 .66 • Table XV — Tilled Acres Per Farm Animal (Piedmont County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 11.1 9.64 11.2 6.06 66.6 .23 7.15 14.30 10.6 7.84 .27 8.54 17.9 9.15 4.17 106. .215 8.8 17.6 12.2 7.45 .37 8.5 18.2 10.65 4.48 31.95 .24 10.74 23.1 12.65 9.25 34.7 21.7 8.28 21.3 Bulls, calves and stock cattle 6.1 19.4 10.93 .27 .35 .555 16 Xorth Carolina Tenancy Commission / Table XVI — Tilled Acres Per Farm Animal (Mountain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 27.05 10.0 22.8 16.95 13.05 .737 16.5 13.05 14.6 11.98 55.7 .535 11.18 27.10 11.71 7.65 152.5 .359 188.5 46.1 11.6 11.8 Bulls, calves and stock cattle . Cows Poultry .29 From Tables XIV, XV, and XVI the following facts are apparent : 1. That the landless farmers have a poorer livestock ratio than farm owners have. 2. That the croppers own practically no animals. This is due to the fact that practically all their w-ork stock are furnished by the landlords from whom they rent. Table XVII — *Total Farm Animals, Excluding Poultry, Per Crop Acre by Tenure Class (For the area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black .61 .465 314 .73 .429 .50 .531 .335 .31 .387 .41 .521 .345 .43 .323 .40 .198 .199 .25 .164 Total Landed Landless White Black .41 .415 .302 .65 .475 .300 .341 .329 .282 .474 .486 .31 .301 .314 *Pasture is included in crop acreage. If this were not so the Mountain county would show a much better animal ratio. Farm Economic and Social Conditions 17 The order in which, all classes rank in livestock production is as follows : Landlord operator Black Landlord operator White Owner operator.. White Tenant White Owner operator White Landlord operator White Tenant Black Landlord operator Black Tenant White Cropper White Owner operator Black Tenant White Owner operator White Tenant Black Landlord operator White Owner operator Black Cropper • Black Cropper White Cropper White Cropper Black Coastal Plain Coastal Plain Piedmont Piedmont Coastal Plain Piedmont Coastal Plain Piedmont Coastal Plain Coastal Plain Piedmont Mountain Mountain Piedmont Mountain Coastal Plain Coastal Plain Mountain Piedmont Piedmont .73 .61 .531 .521 .50 .465 .43 .429 .41 .40 .387 .335 .335 .323 .314 .31 .25 .199 .198 .164 HOME-PRODUCED FOOD SUPPLIES Farming should always he an enterprise the chief ohject of which is to make possible an adequate life for the families who farm. At many points in the Social Information will be found indexes to the standards of living of the families surveyed. The items of home-produced food supplies are presented here in order that they may be presented near the items of cash incomes. Farming is a combination of producing for the market and for home consumption. A detailed study was made of the chief items in the families food supplies. Only such items as sugar, salt, and spice were left out of the investigation. Tables XVIII to XXI present the basic and summarized information. Table XVIII — Living Raised and Bought Per Family (Coastal Plain County) - Operator ' Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black $ 400 56 $ 514 82 $ 386 131 $ 474 134 $ 323 93 S 200 113 $ 194 96 S 156 Value living — bought 110 % 456 87.7 12.3 S 596 86.2 13.8 $ 517 74.7 25.3 $ 608 78.0 22.0 $ 416 77.6 22.4 $ 313 63.8 36.2 S 290 66.9 33.1 $ 266 58.6 Per cent living — bought 41.4 18 Nokth Carolina Tenancy Commission Table XIX — Living Raised and Bought Per Family (Piedmont County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Value living — raised $ 517 71 $ 323 82 $ 467 154 $ 346 186 S 328 62 S 198 115 S 257 98 S 172 114 % 588 87.9 12.1 $ 405 79.7 20.3 % 621 75.2 24.8 S 532 65.0 35.0 S 390 84.2 15.8 $ 313 63.2 36.8 % 355 72.4 27.6 S 286 60.2 39.8 Table XX — Living Raised and Bought Per Family (Mountain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black S 627 13 $ 545 24 $ 475 28 $ 410 34 $ 640 98.0 2.0 $ 569 95.8 4.2 $ 503 94.44 5.56 $ 444 92.35 7.65 Per cent living — raised Per cent living — bought J Table XXI — Living Raised and Bought Per Family (Total area surveyed) Landed Landless White Black Total $ 481 70 $ 270 86 J 447 62 $ 213 121 $ 382 78 $ 551 87.3 12.7 $ 356 75.8 24.2 $ 509 87.8 ■ 12.2 $ 334 63.8 36.2 $ 460 83.0 17.0 1. The per cent of the total family food supply that is raised on the farm descends almost consistently from landlord to owner to tenant to cropper in all counties. 2. The per cent of total food produced at home is universally higher for the land-owning families than it is for the landless families and higher for the white families than for the negro families. Farm Economic and Social Conditions 19 3. The total value of food supplies for families averages ' highest in the Mountain county, next in the Coastal Plain and lowest in the Piedmont. Tables XXII to XLII present detailed analyses of different items of food supply. Table XXII — Average Number of Gallons of Milk Produced Per Year Per Family (For area surveyed) • Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 180.6 502 609.9 353 283.5 170.6 519.5 551.5 200 369 92.6 341 521.2 83.6 327.5 78.2 278 426.5 32.9 Piedmont .. . . Mountain... . 170.5 Total 482 316 549 352 308 177 222 65.3 Table XXIII — Per cent of Families Who Produce Milk (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 39.6 100. 92.7 60.0 83.3 40.0 98.7 99.8 20.0 89.5 20.8 92.5 100. 35.7 97.0 17.1 92.4 94.6 9.0 Piedmont 91.0 Total 80.2 72.6 94.3 81.2 66.0 86.1 55.6 28.6 Table XXIV — Quarts of Milk Per Day Per Individual (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black .393 .142 1.5 .438 .691 .432 ' 1.17 1.14 .33 .705 .203 .819 1.12 .152 .612 .179 .586 1.03 .0706 Piedmont .341 20 North Carolina Tenancy Commission J Table XXV — Average Number of Pounds of Butter Produced Per Family Per Year (Foi area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 55.8 148.6 125.1 73.0 95.8 30.5 165.9 134.9 52.0 115.6 24.99 110.6 115.4 16.79 114.4 18.46 84.7 117.5 10.45 72.5 Total 114.1 94.0 135.5 107.8 78.5 77.8 60.8 23.4 Table XXVI — Per cent of Families that Produce Butter (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain 37.5 94.8 95.6 60.0 66.6 40.0 92.1 98.6 20.0 100.0 20.8 87.5 98.6 35.7 92.5 13.8 75.8 94.8 7.1 74.5 Total 79.7 62.6 93.6 81.5 64.5 82.6 49.5 25.1 Table XXVII — Average Number Pounds of Pork Raised for Home Use (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 697 654 438 1025 502 912 532 438 580 412 597 360 347 328 368 375 405 282 337 201 Total 582 739 504 432 452 360 346 305 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 21 Table XXYIII — Per cent of Families Who Produce Pork (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 64.7 86.2 89.9 100.0 83.4 85.1 93.7 93.2 60.0 92.1 79.3 82.5 97.2 57.1 93.9 . 50.0 69.3 73.7 67.9 77.2 Mountain Total 81.7 90.9 92.7 88.4 86.8 87.6 60.6 70.2 Table XXIX — Average Number of Pounds of Lard Produced Per Family (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 150.0 91.0 73.5 350.0 51.7 176.0 65.5 66.4 160.0 51.8 121.5 44.9 59.7 66.0 37.6 73.8 52.0 43.1 59.1 24.6 Mountain Total 101.0 169.0 76.5 64.5 84.5 41.6 60.4 50.7 Table XXX — Per cent of Families 'Who Produce Lard (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 66.6 86.1 89.7 100.0 83.5 85.0 91.0 93.4 60.0 89.5 79.2 72.6 92.1 50.0 81.9 46.5 61.6 76.4 67.7 68.6 Total 82.1 91.0 91.1 86.1 84.6 76.2 58.7 72.0 22 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table XXXI — Average Number of Dozens Eggs Produced Per Family Per Year (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 104.5 78.9 88.6 83.0 60.0 86.9 33.8 71.4 148.0 32.7 106.5 64.8 70.0 48.5 41.3 90.0 42.6 66.6 41.5 Piedmont Mountain 29.4 Total 89.9 70.5 61.15 46.0 83.9 41.8 76.3 23 1 Table XXXII — Per cent of Families Who Produce Eggs (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 85.5 93.1 92.8 100.0 83.4 85.2 81.1 96.4 100.0 97.4 76.6 94.9 98.5 78.6 95.5 87.9 92.5 100.0 71.5 87.7 Mountain Total 91.0 91.0 90.6 96.6 85.9 92.5 92.5 74.9 J Table XXXIII — Average Number of Poultry Produced Per Family (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 72.7 49.1 56.5 54.0 30.0 48.0 50.9 47.3 54.0 32.9 62.5 33.2 43.2 23.6 27.2 53.5 20.4 44.3 27.5 20.3 Total --- 58.5 40.8 48.0 35.5 49.2 26.6 46.4 26.2 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 23 Table XXXIV — Per cent of Families Who Raise Poultry (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 85.5 93.1 94.1 100.0 83.4 85.2 92.4 99.7 100.0 97.4 86.0 94.9 100.0 ■ 78.9 97.0 87.9 89.7 97.2 71.9 94.4 Total 91.5 91.0 97.6 97.6 94.1 93.7 94.9 88.5 Table XXXV — Average Number of Barrels of Flour Produced Per Family (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 1.17 8.5 .17 1.11 2.6 .34 .35 1.9 .19 Mountain 2.2 Total 3.74 .14 • 1.92 .31 .79 .13 .77 Table XXXVI — Per cent of Families Who Produce Flour (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 25.8 62.4 16.6 15.2 56.2 18.4 7.5 46.5 7.6 Mountain 50.0 Total 33.2 .92 39.5 16.5 19.3 1.63 1.75 24 I^okth Carolina Tenancy Commission J Table XXXVII — Average Number of Bushels of Potatoes Produced Per Family (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain 40.1 29.2 19.9 28.0 26.5 40.9 24.2 21.8 49.2 23.5 30.2 18.8 18.8 25.6 12.1 6.91 10.6 15.8 19.1 8.96 Total 28.4 27.1 24.0 26.5 23.6 14.6 10.5 16.5 Table XXXVIII — Per cent of Families Who Produce Potatoes (Irish and Sweet) (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 81.2 89.9 92.5 60.0 83.3 85.0 91.2 100.0 100.0 89.5 70.1 87.5 100.0 71.6 92.5 72.4 61.5 94.7 75.7 68.6 Mountain Total 88.5 72.6 97.6 90.6 95.1 98.9 78.9 73.5 Table XXXIX — Average Number of Bushels of Meal Raised Per Family (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain. _ Piedmont . . - Mountain _- 9.15 8.91 21.7 13.9 7.2 5.31 8.15 9.05 24.1 12.0 8.1 6.75 4.7 21.7 4.92 8.9 7.11 1.69 22.3 5.6 3.76 Total 6.15 18.6 8.55 11.95 8.19 12.3 5.25 Farm Economic and Social Conditions Table XL — Per cent of Families Who Produce Ileal (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 73.0 77.6 95.5 60.0 66.6 65.2 82.5 97.2 60.0 65.7 62.5 45.0 100.0 42.7 51.5 63.6 23.0 100.0 46.3 40.0 Mountain Total 84.5 63.6 90.6 65.0 72.7 50.0 71.5 44.7 Table XLI — Average Number Gallons of Sorghum Molasses Produced Per Family (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black .104 3.48 11.45 .48 2.5 2.55 1.73 15.9 3.0 7.13 .572 3.05 16.2 1.82 7.02 .102 6.2 .625 .315 Total 5.7 3.53 10.5 6.64 6.5 5.84 2.2 .55 V Table XLI (a) — Per cent of Families Who Produce 2Iolasses (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 2.04 19.0 5.8 20.0 16.6 1.5 13.9 62.1 20.0 29.0 5.2 14.9 79.0 7.15 39.4 1.74 34.2 6.25 5.23 Total 2.97 18.3 4.41 27.9 35.0 33.7 12.8 6.1 26 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table XLII — Per cent of Families Who Raise Garden and Orchard Products (For area surveyed) . Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 87.5 93.2 92.6 100.0 83.5 95.0 97.4 98.1 100.0 100.0 100.0 97.5 100.0 78.7 100.0 89.7 92.1 100.0 89.0 91.0 Total. 91.1 91.0 98.5 100.0 99.7 96.3 97.5 89.3 In Tables XXII to XLIII the following general facts appear: 1. That the land-owning families are almost universally producing more home supplies than are the landless. 2. The order of priority generally runs landlord-operator, owner- operator, tenant, cropper. Where this order is violated it is most often because the owner-operator is out-producing the owner-landlord. 3. The Coastal Plain county is best in the production of pork, lard, poultry, eggs, and potatoes. 4. The Piedmont county is best in flour and about the same as the Mountain county in butter. 5. The Mountain county is best in milk, meal, and molasses, and about the same as the Piedmont county in butter. 6. Nevertheless the Mountain county farmers are producing the most home supplies, the Coastal Plain county next and the Piedmont county least. 7. The absence of milk is the most striking among all these items. The mountain farmers are the only ones that consistently produce more than a quart of milk per day per individual. This falls as low as .07 quart per day per individual for the negro croppers of the Coastal Plain county. This means less than three-tenths of a glass of milk per day per individual. This information is given in Table XXIV. 8. From Table XXVI it is seen that less than 50 per cent of the farmers of the Coastal Plain county produce butter. Over 92 per cent of the black croppers of this county do not produce butter and only three per cent of them buy butter. 9. The Coastal Plain county has an exceptionally good home produc- tion of pork and lard. 10. There are less than 50 head of all kinds of poultry per family for all families surveyed. 11. Home supplies should be considered in conjunction with cash in- come in order to gain an adequate appraisal of consumption habit. Farm Economic and Social Conditions 27 CASH INCOME The last section presented the facts concerning home supplies pro- duced by the different tenure classes. These facts, in conjunction with cash income, give a picture of the sources from which these people must get their food and other consumption goods. An appraisal of the con- sumption units of products produced on the farm for home consumption shows all of these people to be cash crop farmers. Tables XLIII to XLV show the amount of cash income these people get with which to purchase additional consumption goods. Table XLIII — Annual Cash Income Per Family (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black $2385.85 994.70 680.16 $1996.00 379.00 $1129.50 604.17 261.84 $1670.00 536.15 % 854.15 336.35 172.84 $ 711.07 374.24 $ 700.84 364.74 155.89 $ 640.59 Piedmont Mountain 208.60 Table XLIV — Annual Cash Income Per Individual (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black $ 452.65 252.55 154.88 $ 226.81 84.33 $ 253.82 124.27 49.49 $ 253.03 92.19 $ 174.45 73.92 33.62 $ 118.51 64.40 $ 143.13 64.74 34.24 $ 125.64 36.87 Table XLV — Daily Cash Income Per Individual (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black $ 1.255 .705 .424 $ .622 .23 $ .695 .34 .135 $ .694 .252 $ .478 .201 .092 $ .324 .176 $ .392 .177 .093 $ .344 .101 28 ]STorth Carolina Tenancy Commission From Tables XLHI, XLIV, and XLV it is apparent : 1. That landless farmers have a lower cash income than land-owners. This fact coupled with the fact that they almost universally produce a smaller amount of home supplies indicates the conditions under which they live. 2. The cash income is from three to five times as high in the Coastal Plain county as in the Mountain county. 3. The cash income per person of white tenants and white croppers of the Mountain county is less than 10 cents per day and that for the negro croppers of the Piedmont county is barely 10 cents per day. -J CREDIT The average farmer uses credit for three chief purposes : land pur- chases, operating funds, and store supplies. Tables XLYI to LIV show the per cent who use credit, the amount they used, the purpose for which they use it, and the sources from which they obtain it. Table XLVI — Amount and Use of Short-Time and Intermediate Credit (For Coastal Plain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 83.5 $723.00 50.1 49.9 100.0 $734.00 52.9 47.1 90.0 $422.00 62.8 37.2 100.0 $723.00 51.6 49.4 92.2 $455.00 55.5 44.5 78.6 $401.00 62.4 37.6 89.6 $360.60 68.6 31.4 97.4 Average credit per family Per cent for living Per cent for fertilizers, seed, etc... $314.00 66.9 33.1 Table XLVII — Amount and Use of Short-Time and Intermediate Credit (For Piedmont County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Per cent use credit Average credit per family Per cent for living Per cent for fertilizers, seed, etc... 34.5 $ 46.50 25.6 74.4 83.2 $173.00 28.5 71.5 58.2 $ 43.80 42.7 57.3 81.6 $124.00 43.2 56.8 82.0 $102.00 43.1 56.9 97.0 $128.00 51.0 49.0 61.6 $123.00 56.8 43.2 91.1 $110.00 49.8 51.2 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 29 Table XLVIII — Amount and Use of Short-Time and Intermediate Credit (For Mountain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 2.9 $ 15.95 54.6 45.4 8.02 $ 16.04 13.3 86.7 5.6 $ 5.00 100.0 15.8 S 6.21 95.8 4.2 Average credit per family... Per cent for fertilizers, tools, seed, Table XLIX — Source of Short-Time and Intermediate Credit (For Coastal Plain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 76.0 86.4 82.2 100.0 82.3 11.6 2.56 3.19 .35 93.4 6.5 .1 78.1 18.1 2.75 1.05 79.0 20 5 Per cent from landlord who is 21.1 2.9 13.6 16.6 1.2 Per cent from other sources .5 Table L — Source of Short-Time and Intermediate Credit (For Piedmont County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 95.8 0.7 62.0 20.8 17.0 62.6 18.7 25.8 66.2 Per cent from landlord who is 2.7 .8 18.7 8.0 30 Xorth Carolina Tenancy Commission • Table LI — Source of Short-Time and Intermediate Credit (For Mountain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Per cent from merchant 100.0 29.2 100.0 89.0 4.2 Per cent from landlord who is 10.4 60.4 6.8 Table LII — Source of Short-Time and Intermediate Credit (For area surveyed) Land Owners Landless Whites Blacks All Per cent from merchant 81.4 78.0 17.33 2.54 1.83 .3 79.7 7.3 1.3 9.4 2.3 78.4 17.9 2.2 1.2 .3 79.27 11.10 1.63 Per cent from bank Per cent from other sources... _. ... 14.7 3.9 6.40 1.60 Table LIII — Some Aspects of Short-Time Farm Credit Land Owners Landless 37.1 75.8 $137.50 $224.10 25.2 74.07 14.7 1.83 34.75 60.0 65.25 40.0 All Per cent use credit Average credit per family *Per cent "Restrictive" credit... Per cent from baak Per cent for living Per cent for fertilizers, tools, etc 58.2 $182.40 56.53 6.40 50.9 49.1 *"Restrictive Credit" is credit granted by some one who has power of restricting or controlling the activities of the ones to whom it is granted. Farm Economic and Social Conditions 31 Table LIV — Per cent of Farmers Who Produce Crops Under Crop Lien or Landlord Credit (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain ._ Piedmont _. . __ __ 15.9 46.4 78.0 96.60 9.7 29.3 5.2 27.7 69.5 48.16 37.0 96.6 97.7 68.25 70.7 14.4 98.4 90.7 Land Owners Landless White Black All Surveyed 25.2 74.07 37.3 90.1 56.53 Governor Bickett described the crop lien as "the boll weevil of North Carolina." A total of $185,000 of credit was used by the 1,014 families surveyed or an average of $182.40 per family for the year. More than a half (50.9 per cent) of this credit went for food, clothing, and home supplies. The remainder was used for fertilizer, tools, and stock feed. The landless used 62.4 per cent of their credit for living purposes as compared to 43.8 per cent used for this purpose by the land-owners. This means that a larger per cent of the credit of the tenants and crop- pers goes for consumption goods than for production goods. The Coastal Plain farmers use the vast majority of all credit — $436 to the family as compared to $93.50 for a Piedmont family and $10 for a Mountain family. In the Coastal Plain county only 7.7 per cent of all those surveyed did a cash business as compared to 25.4 per. cent in the Piedmont county and 41.8 per cent in the Mountain county. Of the entire landless group surveyed 24.2 per cent do cash business as compared to 62.9 per cent of the land-owners who finance themselves. Four-fifths (81 per cent) of all the credit comes from merchants, 11.1 per cent from landlords, 6.4 per cent from banks and 1.6 per cent from other sources — mainly neighbors and relatives. Two kinds of this credit — that from merchants where a crop lien is given and that from landlords — may be called "restrictive" credit. In cases involving 56.53 per cent of all the credit of the 1,014 families surveyed the creditor may exercise "restrictive" powers over the sale of the farm product and may by indirect methods dictate the rate of in- terest charged. The landed classes use only 25.2 per cent of restrictive credit as compared to 74.07 per cent for the landless. A survey of farm credit in North Carolina has recently been made by F. R. Yoder, H. L. Beardsley, and A. J. Honeycutt, representing the North Carolina Division of Markets, the State College of Agriculture 32 North Carolina Tenancy Commission and The United States Department of Agriculture. This survey found that the average interest charged by banks for short-time credit amounted to a little more than 6 per cent as compared to as high as 34 per cent of crop-lien credit for the colored cropper. The average cost of short-time credit for the whole state was found to be more than 25 per cent. From this analysis of the short-time credit system of the farmers it can be seen that croppers and tenants as well as the landed classes are bearing an unusually high "restrictive" interest burden and this may be one of the reasons for their failure to attain farm ownership. WEALTH AND EQUITY The total and itemized wealth and equity holdings of each farmer was obtained. His equity was calculated by subtracting his incum- brances and personal debts from his total wealth and capital holdings. Tables LV to LX give the facts in detail. Table LV — Average Wealth and Equity (Coastal Plain County) Owner Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Wealth per family Wealth per person Equity per family Equity per person __ $16,025 3,021 14,494 2,750 $11,639 1,320 8,974 1,019 $ 4,734 1,066 3,998 889 $4,568 692.4 3,908 597 $1,111 227.20 868 177.4 6.5 $ 440 73.40 226 37.68 28.5 $ 503 99.40 352 72.15 24.2 % 219 43.0 126 24.83 18.75 Table LVI — Average Wealth and Equity Per Family (Piedmont County) Owner Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Wealth per family Wealth per person Equity per family Equity per person $10,423 2,715 9,86u 2,552 $3,342 742.50 3,197 711 $3,159 650 2,938 602 $2,054 353 1,673 288 2.63 $521 115.05 426 93.50 2.5 $406 72.45 294 50.80 $251 46.75 208 38.70 23.5 $108 18.58 36 6.40 17.15 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 33 Table LYII — Average Wealth and Equity Per Family (Mountain County) Owner Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black S9,583 2,220 9,390 2,170 S3, 550 667.20 3,401 664 {468 88.40 452 88 1338 74.30 308 67.60 Table LVIII — Percentage Wealth and Equity Held by Landed and Landless (For area surveyed) Coastal Plain Piedmont Mountain Total Landed Land- less Landed Land- less Landed Land- less Landed Land- less Per cent of families Per cent of persons. Per cent of wealth Per cent of equity 23.2 24.2 86.7 88.7 76.8 75.8 13.3 11.3 54.1 50.7 94.6 95.5 45.9 49.3 5.4 4.5 68.0 68.3 96.5 96.5 32.0 31.7 3.5 3.5 48.4 47.6 92.7 93.9 51.6 52.4 7.3 6.1 Table LIX — Percentage Wealth and Equity Held by White and Black (For area surveyed) Coastal Plain Piedmont Mountain Total White Black White Black White Black White Black 59.9 57.7 89.5 91.1 40.1 42.3 10.5 8.9 56.8 51.0 87.1 88.7 43.2 49.0 12.9 11.3 72.3 69.7 92.8 94.1 27.1 30.3 7.2 Per cent ot equitv 5.9 34 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table LX — Average Amount Equity Held by Families of Different Tenure Classes (For area surveyed) Coastal Plain Piedmont Mountain* Per Family Per Individual Per Family Per Individual Per Family Per Individual 10,770 402 2,008 79.60 4,900 263 1,036 48.50 5,270 402 1,050 81.45 Whites 4,250 601 860 111.70 4,330 714 957 125 There was too small a number of black farmers in the Mountain county to make percentages trustworthy. The following conclusions are pertinent in relation to wealth and equity holding : 1. That while the land-owner families compose only 48.4 per cent of all the families surveyed, they own 92.7 per cent of the entire wealth of all families and 93.9 per cent of all the equity. 2. That while the white families ' compose only 73.3 per cent of all the families they control 92.8 per cent of the total wealth and 94.1 per cent of all the equity. 3. 16.4 per cent of all landless-men are insolvent; 27.4 per cent of all negro tenants, 25.6 per cent of all white croppers, 22.1 per cent of all negro croppers and 3.2 per cent of all white tenants were insolvent. Only one land-owner, a negro owner-operator in the Piedmont county, was insolvent. 4. In the Coastal Plain county where the tenancy rate is highest, the difference between the wealth and equity holdings of the landed and landless is greatest and in the Mountain county where the tenancy rate is lowest the difference between these classes in their wealth and equity holdings is least, 5. The equity holdings per family for the landed in the Coastal Plain county is $10,770. This is the highest for any section. The aver- age for the landless families in the Piedmont is $263. This is the lowest for any section. The holdings for the negro croppers in the Piedmont county is only $36. This is an average of $6.40 per person for this class. 6. 13 per cent of all the farm lands included in the survey was being farmed by insolvent men. WHY SOME FARMERS ARE LANDLESS Why is it that more than 117,000 farmers in North Carolina are landless? ~No question is more difficult to answer. There is one answer, vague though it is, which no one can deny as correct : these men thus Farm Economic and Social Conditions 35 far have been unable to climb the ladder of agricultural success to ownership. The assumption is that a prospective farmer will begin as a hired laborer or cropper on his father's or some other farmer's land, that he will soon become a share or cash tenant and will ultimately become an owner of some piece of land which he can call his own. If the so-called "Agricultural Ladder" by means of which men climb to land ownership is working according to the method by which the great majority of American farmers became land proprietors in the past there should be a constant stream of farmers making the steady ascent from laborer to cropper, from cropper to tenant and from tenant to ownership. ~No one will deny that there is a great difference between men and that many a landless man has failed to climb the ladder to ownership because he was personally incompetent. Even his personal incompetency always has a history and is generally the result of some adequate causes. The Tenancy Commission could not possibly make an analysis of the personal characters of the thousand farmers it interviewed. It did attempt to ascertain something about each one's family history and especially attempted to gain a concrete knowledge of the farming his- tory of each. Tables LXI to LXIV give the facts concerning these items. Table LXI — Family History of Tenure Classes (Coastal Plain County) Per Cent Whose Father Was Owner Per Cent Whose Father Was Tenant Per Cent Whose Father Was Cropper Per Cent Whose Father Was Landless White Black White Black White Black White Black Croppers 48.4 40.3 90.0 72.9 2.7 32.8 51.9 10.0 18.8 18.7 69.2 40.0 40.0 10.2 7.8 75.0 30.8 43.0 59.7 10.0 27.1 93.7 100.0 60.0 60.0 40.0 8.3 40.0 Table LXII — Family History of Tenure Classes (Piedmont County) Per Cent Whose Father Was Owner Per Cent Whose Father Was Tenant Per Cent Whose Father Was Cropper Per Cent Whose Father Was Landless White Black White Black White Black White Black 15.4 72.5 84.8 98.3 14.7 7.6 18.9 69.2 27.5 15.2 1.7 55.8 6.1 78.4 83.4 29.5 86.3 2.7 16.6 69.2 27.5 15.2 1.7 85.3 92.4 81.1 100.0 36 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table LXIII — Family History of Tenure Classes (Mountain County) Per Cent Whose Father Was Owner Per Cent Whose Father Was Tenant Per Cent Whose Father Was Cropper Per Cent Whose Father Was Landless White Black White Black White Black White Black 57.9 50.8 82.7 94.4 36.8 47.8 16.7 2.8 5.3 1.4 .6 2.8 42.1 49.2 17.3 5.6 From the Tables LXI to LXIII it is apparent : 1. That the tenure status of a person's father has considerable to do with the tenure status of the person himself. The present land-owners are sons of land-owners in 81 per cent of the cases, while landless men are sons of land-owners in only 30 per cent of the cases. 2. Only 19 per cent of the land-owners included in the territory sur- veyed arose to ownership out of landless families. Seventy per cent of the landless farmers are sons of landless farmers. These facts make it apparent that ownership on the part of the father is a great assistance to ownership on the part of the son and landlessness on the part of the father is a barrier difficult for the son to surmount. 3. A smaller per cent of the negroes than of the whites, both landed and landless, have come from owner families. In fact less than 10 per cent of all the negro farmers are sons of land-owning farmers. In spite of the fact that 19.2 per cent of all the negroes are land-owners. A few generations ago a land-owner practically always gained owner- ship by climbing the agricultural ladder. The ascent was easy in those days because of the low price of land. The climb has become more and more difficult as the prices of the land have increased. The result is that fewer men successfully make the climb. They either remain at the bottom as croppers or get stalled in the tenant stage. Oftentimes they rise to tenancy and then slip back to cropper. Some- times they even attain ownership and then slip back to one of the lower tenure types. Notwithstanding the fact that the ascent to ownership is difficult, 59 per cent of all white farmers surveyed and almost 20 per cent of all negro farmers surveyed are owners of land. An attempt was made to discover how these men obtained ownership of farms. Table LXIY gives the facts concerning the tenure history of the various tenure classes. Farm Economic and Social Conditions 37 Table LXIV (a) — Per cent Who Have Attained Different Tenure Statuses (For area surveyed) Coastal Plain Piedmont Mountain All Surveyed Total White Black White Black White Black White Black Owners who have been Croppers _ Owners who have been Tenants Tenants who have been 34.9 46.1 59.7 10.4 70.0 50.0 85.6 7.15 5.38 .89 30.7 50.4 47.5 5.0 7.0.5 75.0 72.7 8.57 24.3 29.4 56.3 9.86 10.5 10.5 27.8 38.4 56.1 9.3 3.67 3.23 65.8 65.8 75.0 2.56 15.0 2.56 32.6 41.0 61.6 Tenants who have been Owners .-- . Croppers who have been 8.1 7.82 Croppers who have been 3.07 From Table LXIV(a) the following conclusions appear: 1. Less than 50 per cent of the present land-owners had ever been landless. The remainder started farming with ownership of land. 2. Less than 40 per cent of the present white owners were ever land- less farmers. 3. About two-thirds of the present negro farm owners started farming without ownership of land. 4. Only 27.8 per cent of the present white owners started at the bot- tom of the agricultural ladder, i. e., as croppers; 65.8 per cent of the present negro owners started as croppers. 5. 61.6 per cent of the present tenant farmers started as croppers. The remainder started either as tenants or started as owners and dropped into the tenant class. 6. 8.1 per cent of the present tenants had at one time attained owner- ship and then slipped into tenancy. This had been the experience of a greater per cent of the whites than of the negroes. 7. 7.8 per cent of the croppers had at one time been tenants and had dropped into the cropper class. This had been the experience of a much larger per cent of negroes (viz. : 15 per cent) than of the whites. 8. 3.07 per cent of the present cropper-farmers had at one time been owners. 9. It is not easy to climb this agricultural ladder from landlessness to ownership, nor has a very large per cent of the present land-owners obtained their ownership by that method alone. Men who now own farms have gained their proprietorship by means of purchases, gifts, and inheritance. Even their purchases were often made by security which some relative furnished or by aid through other 6 38 North Carolina Tenancy Commission financial means than straight-out gifts. Land purchases are here con- sidered, however, in the following table, as if they were made solely by means of assets which the purchaser had made by tenant and cropper farming or had been accumulated in other occupations. An attempt was made to discover the methods by which land-owners had come into ownership in Table LXIV(b). Table LXIV (b) — Per cent of Land Wealth Acquired by Purchase and by Gift, Inheritance, and Marriage* Coastal Plain Piedmont Mountain Area Sur- veyed Operator Landlord Owner Operator Operator Landlord Owner Operator Operator Landlord Owner Operator Land Owners White Black White Black White Black White Black White White Purchase. . Gift, inheri- tance and marriage- 22.5 77.5 32.0 68.0 48.0 52.0 19.6 80.4 74.7 25.3 80.4 19.6 54.4 35.6 87.5 12.5 26.2 73.8 36.3 63.7 41.0 59.0 *Based on values at time of acquirement. From Table LXIV it is apparent that the majority of land-ownership was not gained by individual effort in farming. Among the whites con- siderably more than one-half of their present wealth was given to them. In the case of the negro land-owners more than one-third of their wealth was given to them. This is not said by way of disparagement to these worthy citizens who own their farms, but rather to prove that even where men have reached the stage of ownership they did not al- ways do it unassisted. It would seem therefore that we are not justified in expecting the present tenants and croppers to gain ownership without help. As a matter of fact only 19.7 per cent of the 436 white owners claimed to have gained ownership without assistance, either money or other property gifts and inheritance. A total of 270 of these owners or 61.9 per cent of them never were either tenants or croppers. In the Mountain county 70.6 per cent of the present owners started farming as owners. Furthermore, consideration should be given to the fact that most men inherited their wealth at about the age of thirty. At that time they got the deed to their land the value of which has since greatly increased. Inheritances or gifts at the time they were received consti- tuted a much greater percentage of their wealth-holding than they do at the present. Are the men who are now tenants and croppers ever going to be land- owners ? Needless to say they will not if they are expected to gain owner- ship through methods by which the majority of present landholders Farm Economic and Social Conditions 39 gained ownership, namely, by inheritance and gifts. Most of them must make the climb by successful farming or not at all. Of the white owners surveyed, 166 had successfully made the climb and from them some sug- gestions can be gotten regarding the possibilities of the now landless group doing the same thing. The land-owners who have fought their own way became croppers at the average age of 22.4 years. They made the transfer to tenant-farming at the average age of 24.5 years, and became owners at the average age of 36.2 years. They climbed the ladder of agricultural success to some degree of ownership in the aver- age of 13.8 year. The average age of the present cropper group is now 36.6 years. They have been farming for an average of 15.2 years and are still landless. The average age of the present tenant group is 38.2 years. They have been tenants for 8.5 years and have been farming for 15.8 years and are still landless. Both of these groups have passed the average age at which the present owners first attained ownership. Some of these men will undoubtedly some day become owners. The great majority of them never will unless they receive assistance from some source. Even those who will reach ownership will do so at a con- siderably later age than did the present group of owners. Land is higher priced now than then and it will therefore take the present land- less men longer to accumulate enough capital to make the initial pay- ment on a farm. The number of tenants and croppers are increasing every year. A larger and larger percentage of farm land is being farmed by these landless farmers. Each year sees a higher per cent of all farm values under the direction of these men. North Carolina can not look with complacency on these facts. The late Governor Bickett said in his in- augural address "that he would neither rest nor allow the State to rest until every honest, industrious, and frugal man who tills the soil has a chance to own it." This is but justice to these men. He further said, "Every consideration of progress and safety urges us to employ all wise and just measures to get the lands into the hands of the many." This is a policy of wisdom and statesmanship on the part of the State. THE HOMES Very careful and detailed studies were made of each of the 1,014 farm residences. The number of rooms in each house and the use of that room space was ascertained. Housing experts have generally accepted standards of minimum comfort to be one and one-half rooms per person and one and one-half persons per bedroom. This means that a normal house should include three rooms for each two persons and two bed- rooms for each three persons. Tables LXV to LXXII give the in- formation for the farm homes surveyed. 40 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table LXV — Average Number of Rooms Per Home (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain... Piedmont Mountain 5.64 5.67 5.02 3.8 5.0 4.55 4.67 4.06 3.8 3.98 4.2 4.1 3.64 4.0 4.02 4.12 3.54 2.88 3.42 3.0 4.58 4.77 4.03 3.52 3.82 Total 5.42 4.46 3.95 3.95 3.98 4.02 3.62 3.33 4.38 3.72 Table LXVI — Average Number of Persons Per Room (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain Piedmont . - Mountain .93 .68 .87 2.3 .90 .98 1.04 1.31 1.74 1.46 1.16 1.11 1.41 1.5 1.45 1.19 1.52 1.59 1.49 1.9 1.09 .946 1.24 1.53 1.51 Total .825 1.45 1.19 1.5 1.24 1.46 1.34 1.57 1.11 1.52 Table LXVII — Average Number of Persons Per Bedroom (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain Piedmont Mountain 1.63 1.23 1.55 2.59 1.59 1.62 1.6 2.44 2.75 2.02 1.89 1.47 2.59 2.15 2.16 1.91 2.19 2.74 2.28 3.0 1.8 1.49 2.26 2.3 2.24 Total 1.47 1.87 2.06 2.1 1.99 2.16 2.16 2.44 1.89 2.27 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 41 Table LXVIII — Average Persons Per Bed (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 1.16 .82 .92 1.69 .93 1.06 1.1 1.25 1.27 1.39 1.42 1.24 1.53 1.83 1.5 1.44 1.49 1.48 1.52 1.62 Mountain Total .95 1.29 1.19 1.37 1.42 1.55 1.46 An average landless farmer had 3.74 rooms in his house as compared with 4.66 for the owners. The average white farmer had 4.38 rooms in his house as compared to 3.72 for a negro farmer. The homes of land- less men had 1.38 persons per room as compared to 1.07 for the owner homes. The white homes had 1.11 persons per bed as compared to 1.52 for the negro homes. The landless homes had 216 persons for each 100 bedrooms, and 149 persons for each 100 bedrooms and 112 persons for each 100 beds in the homes of landowners. The white homes had 189 persons for each 100 bedrooms and 121 per- sons for each 100 beds as compared to 227 persons for each 100 bed- rooms and 153 persons for each 100 beds in the negro homes. All the homes surveyed had 199 persons for each 100 bedrooms and 128 persons for each 100 beds. Table LXIX — A Classification of the Homes According to the Xumber of Rooms (For area surveyed) Land Owners Landless Whites Negroes All Surveyed Per cent 1 room 1.4 2.5 2.2 1.4 2.0 Per cent 2 rooms 9.2 15.1 12.2 12.5 12.2 Per cent 3 rooms... 17.6 31.5 20.5 35.9 24.7 Per cent 4 rooms 24.2 24.4 22.4 29.2 24.4 Per cent 5 rooms 13.1 14.5 15.2 10.3 13.8 Per cent 6 rooms. __ 19.2 7.4 15.8 6.1 13.1 Per cent over 6 rooms 15.3 4.6 11.7 4.6 9.8 Table LXIX shows that 17.6 per cent of the landless farmers are living in homes of one and two rooms as compared to 10.6 per cent for the owners. 14.4 per cent for all whites and 13.9 per cent for all negroes lived in one- and two-room houses. 14.2 per cent of all families lived in houses with less than three rooms. ' 42 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Large families housed in small homes often means that the family must eat in the kitchen, sleep in the sitting room or in other ways mix household functions. Table LXX — Percentage of Families With Separate Sitting-Rooms (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain... 25.0 25.8 23.2 60.0 33.3 40.0 7.5 11.4 20.0 16.9 7.2 3.0 5.2 2.7 17.9 11.1 13.6 4.4 2.7 12.7 Total 24.6 27.3 12.6 2.3 11.7 3.75 2.75 2.04 17.8 3.5 Table LXXI — Percentage of Homes With Separate Dining-Rooms (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain... Mountain 68.7 74.1 65.1 60.0 33.3 60.0 44.2 46.9 20.0 05.5 20.8 80.0 45.1 14.1 19.7 34.5 07.7 21.1 20.5 11.8 40.4 57.8 48.4 21.3 14.5 Total 69.0 45.5 47.5 6.97 42.5 18.75 26.6 18.38 48.4 17.4 Table LXXII — Percentage of Homes With Separate Parlors (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain Piedmont Mountain 22.9 34.5 11.6 60.0 10.0 13.9 6.8 20.0 2.6 5.2 5.0 4.2 7.1 3.0 6.9 7.7 2.6 .91 9.9 12.9 10.6 4.4 2.1 Total. 22.3 27.3 9.2 4.65 4.8 3.75 5.5 .68 10.7 • 3.7 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 43 Fifty-two per cent of the 490 land-owners had dining rooms separate from other rooms as compared to 28.8 per cent for the 524 landless. Only 48.4 per cent of the white families and 17.8 per cent of the negro families had dining rooms separate from other rooms. The percentage for all families surveyed was 39. Ten and four-tenths per cent of the land-owners had parlors separate from other rooms as compared to 3.6 per cent for the landless. Only 10.6 per cent of all whites and 3.2 per cent of all negroes had separate parlors. Only 8.7 per cent of all houses surveyed had parlors. Sixteen and a half per cent of all land-owners had family gathering rooms separate from other rooms as compared with 5.9 per cent for all landless. Only 13.6 per cent of all whites, and 3.6 per cent of all negroes were provided with such assembling rooms. Bathtubs, indoor toilets, running water in these modern days, often make a home. The following Tables LXXIII(a) through LXXV give the percentages of homes of the various classes of farmers which have these conveniences. , Table LXXIII (a) — Percentage of Homes With Bath-Tubs, Indoor Toilets, Running Water, and Clothes Closets (For the Coastal Plain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black 8.3 6.6 6.6 2.3 5.0 2.4 1.5 2.0 14.0- 1.7 10.2 5.0 40.0 5.0 13.0 6.5 Table LXXIII (b)- -Percentages of Homes With Bath-Tubs, Indoor Toilets, Running Water, and Clothes Closets (For the Piedmont County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black 3.4 1.7 1.7 38.0 1.05 .52 1.05 22.1 1.7 6.5 10.5 10.5 10.5 42.0 10.5 44 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table LXXIV — Percentages of Homes With Bath-Tubs, Indoor Toilets, Running Water, and Clothes Closets (For the Mountain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total 1.5 .62 1.23 1.85 13.0 .588 .588 .882 8.7 5.63 2.94 7.35 Table LXXV — Percentages of Homes With Bath-Tubs, Indoor Toilets, Running Water, and Clothes Closets (For the area surveyed) Land Owners Landless • Whites Blacks Total 1.84 1.24 1.66 13.01 1.23 .82 1.23 12.9 .885 .591 1.91 8.4 .885 Clothes Closets.- _ 4.64 10.63 No farm tenant has a bath-tub or an indoor toilet. No negro farmer has a bath-tub, an indoor toilet, or running water. Less than two per cent of the land-owners have either of these three conveniences. Quite an elaborate analysis of home equipment and home conveniences was made. Tables LXXYI to LXXIX present the finding. Table LXXVI — Per cent of Homes With Modern Conveniences (For the Coastal Plain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 11.7 3.5 7.2 5.2 1.7 7.2 10.2 2.1 91.8 100.0 5.0 95.0 Per cent have sewing machines 100.0 80.8 86.0 95.0 69.6 10.2 12.5 16.6 83.5 20.0 40.0 1.3 1.3 2.6 39.0 Per cent have telephones Per cent have refrigerators Per cent have rugs _ _ 5.0 5.0 25.0 20.0 14.3 1.2 1.2 34.6 9.0 10.0 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 45 Table LXXVII — Per cent of Homes With Modern Conveniences (For the Piedmont County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 5.9 Per cent have sewing machines 98.5 100.0 96.1 94.6 87.5 69.8 69.3 37.2 41.5 6.9 67.2 26.6 7.5 5.0 12.5 Per cent have rugs - 33.3 41.7 8.3 9.1 3.3 Table LXXVIII — Per cent of Homes With Modern Conveniences (For the Mountain County) Operator Landlords Owners Operators Tenants Croppers 3.7 0.6 2.7 1.4 4.3 84.0 5.2 86.3 66.2 50.0 2.8 1.4 1.4 27.6 0.6 0.6 17.3 2.8 2.6 Table LXXIX- -Per cent of Homes With Modem Conveniences (For the area surveyed) Land Owners Landless White Black Total Per cent other heat than fireplace 1.2 1.4 1.0 91.4 5.2 1.3 0.19 71.6 2.7 2.7 0.82 84.8 2.7 3.1 1.4 0.6 Per cent have sewing machines. .. 72.4 80.7 Per cent have kitchen sinks Per cent have telephones 1.86 11.6 3.9 35.6 0.19 1.14 0.97 15.2 1.2 8.1 2.5 30.2 0.36 0.36 0.98 9.0 1.87 Per cent have rugs 10.6 24.6 y 46 North Carolina Tenancy Commission It is significant to note that 96.9 per cent of all the homes are heated by fireplaces, 98,6 per cent are lighted by lamps, 99.4 per cent of the washing is done by tubs and wash-boards, and 19.3 per cent do all sewing by hand. Not one farm home has a vacuum cleaner, 99.02 per cent have no kitchen sinks, 91 per cent have no telephones, 98.13 per cent have no refrigerators and 75.4 per cent of the families live on bare wood floors. Screens at the windows and doors are not only home conveniences but health facilities in that they keep flies and mosquitoes out of the house. Tables LXXX and LXXXI give the facts about screening. Table LXXX — Per cent of Homes With i\ T o Screens (For the area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain Piedmont Mountain 33.4 48.2 44.8 80.0 50.0 60.0 68.3 75.3 40.0 86.8 68.8 70.0 83.2 85.6 92.5 43.2 92.3 94.7 95.5 94.2 52.2 64.3 73.0 91.9 89.7 Total 42.9 63.7 72.0 81.4 74.5 91.3 67.0 95.3 64.9 90.8 Table LXXXI — Per cent of Homes Only Partly Screened (For the area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain Piedmont 20.8 5.2 10.2 20.0 50.0 15.0 5.1 40.0 7.9 2.6 22.5 2.7 7.15 4.5 25.8 7.7 .9 2.9 14.8 8.9 2.6 3.7 6.9 Total 11.4 36.4 2.68 11.6 6.92 5.1 14.7 1.36 •7.6 5.3 Tables LXXX and LXXXI show that 81.3 per cent of the homes of landless farmers have no screens as compared to 62.2 per cent for the homes of the land-owners. 64.9 per cent of the homes of the whites and 90.8 per cent of the homes of the negroes have no screens. Only 30.4 per cent of the land-owners, 12.0 of the landless, 27.5 per cent of the whites, 3.9 per cent of the negroes and 20.9 per cent of all surveyed had their houses completely screened. Information was gathered on the number of windows and their con- ditions. Tables LXXXII and LXXXIII present the findings. Farm Economic and Social Conditions 47 Table LXXXII — Per cent of Homes With Broken Window-Lights (For the area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain ... Piedmont Mountain 16.66 34.5 15.9 20.0 16.6 30.0 20.2 12.4 40.0 55.2 28.5 50.0 33.8 64.2 65.2 34.5 30.9 26.3 56.2 68.6 27.5 31.5 19.1 55.2 61.3 Total 22.23 18.2 16.1 53.5 35.05 65.0 31.2 59.15 24.7 58.3 Table LXXXIII — Average Number of Windoiv Frames Per Home (For the area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain... Piedmont Mountain 9.5 10.2 8.7 10.6 7.84 7.7 7.7 6.17 5.4 5.76 7.18 6.82 5.14 5.85 5.77 7.35 5.0 3.9 5.4 3.83 7.83 5.39 6.2 5.64 5.39 Total 9.41 9.1 6.75 5.48 6.35 5.78 5.87 5.2 7.15 5.5 Tables LXXXII and LXXXIII show that the average land-owner has 7.66 window frames in his home as compared to 5.79 for the land- less, 7.15 for the whites, 5.5 for the negroes, and 6.68 for all 1,014 farm homes surveyed. 21.6 per cent of the homes of the land-owners, 45.6 per cent of the homes of the landless, 24.7 per cent of the homes of white farmers, 58.3 per cent of the negroes and 34.1 per cent of all 1,014 homes surveyed had broken panes. Tables LXXXIV through LXXXVII give the per cent of farm homes with interior walls covered with tar paper, newspapers, plastering and ceiling. Table LXXXIV — Per cent of Farm Homes With Tar-Papered Walls (For the area surveyed) Owner Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black 5.0 0.5 1.5 0.68 Mountain 0.6 5.0 0.41 Total .38 1.25 1.83 .054 .35 48 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table LXXXV — Per cent of Farm Homes With Neivspapered Walls (For the area surveyed) Owner Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain.. _ 4.0 40.0 5.0 1.26 17.0 20.0 17.0 5.0 17.0 28.0 1.5 7.0 21.0 10.0 1.58 10.4 22.8 2.07 Mountain 5.8 24.0 Total 3.4 18.2 11.5 2.33 14.35 6.25 11.9 17.7 10.35 11.8 Table LXXXVI — Per cent of Farm Homes With Plastered Walls (For the area surveyed) Owner Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain 56.0 20.0 25.0 3.8 1.8 35.0 21.0 1.5 19.0 17.0 3.0 35.0 1.58 10.4 17.0 1.36 Total 15.4 9.1 4.2 14.35 5.0 10.1 13.6 10.35 8.71 Table LXXXVII — Per cent of Farm Homes With Ceiled Walls (For the area surveyed) Owner Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White B.ack White B.ack White Black White Black Coastal Plain Piedmont 60.0 59.0 65.0 80.0 60.0 38.0 49.5 80.0 29.0 62.0 14.0 64.0 41.0 62.0 54.0 34.0 46.0 15.0 62.2 41.1 46.5 58.0 29.6 Total 61.7 36.3 46.4 35.0 29.3 45.0 51.4 38.8 46.5 39.0 Tables LXXXIV to LXXXVII show that 57 out of every thousand landless farmers' homes are covered with tar paper, 135 with news- papers, 118 with plaster and 388 are ceiled. In the land-owners' homes 24 out of every thousand are covered with tar-paper, 80 are covered with newspapers, 80 are plastered and 508 are ceiled. The interior finish of the farm-owner homes is distinctly superior to that of the tenant homes. Farm Economic and Social Conditions 49 Tables LXXXVIII through XC give the per cent of homes without porches, per cent with only one porch and the average number of porches per home. Table LXXXVIII — Per cent of Homes Which Have No Porches (For the area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain Piedmont Mountain 2.0 10.3 7.3 33.3 95.5 62.05 8.0 60.0 10.5 18.0 22.4 12.6 14.1 37.9 7.0 38.5 13.1 33.9 55.0 14.5 36.3 9.4 31.3 34.5 Total 4.57 18.2 28.0 16.3 17.0 33.8 12.8 38.8 27.8 33.0 Table LXXXIX — Per cent of Farm Homes Which Have Only One Porch (For the area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain Piedmont .. Mountain 8.3 13.8 43.5 20.0 50.0 25.0 5.7 51.8 60.5 35.0 35.0 61.9 64.2 42.4 46.5 61.5 65.8 45.5 45.0 30.6 17.9 53.8 45.8 48.3 Total 24.0 36.4 35.3 53.4 45.2 46.3 55.0 45.5 38.1 46.4 Table XC — Average Number of Porches Per Home (For the area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain... Piedmont Mountain 1.75 1.72 1.48 2.0 1.17 .705 1.4 1.255 0.8 1.13 1.28 1.2 1.12 1.07 .88 1.36 .69 1.8 .87 .45 1.36 1.44 1.29 .93 .86 Total 1.67 1.55 1.31 1.09 1.21 .91 1.18 .78 1.35 .89 Tables LXXXVIII to XC show that for every one hundred landless homes there is a total of 104 porches as compared to 142 porches for every 100 land-owner homes. The land-owners have porches on 80.8 per cent of the houses as compared to 75.2 per cent for those of the 50 jNTorth Carolina Tenancy Commission landless farmers. The houses of the landless class have only one porch per house in 47.7 per cent of the cases as compared to 32.8 per cent in the case of the owners. For all homes surveyed, 22.2 per cent have no porches, the landless having no porches in 24.8 per cent of the cases and the land-owners having no porches in 19.2 per cent of the cases. Tables XCI and XCII give the per cent of farm homes which have basements and sleeping porches. They are self-explanatory. Table XCI — Per cent of Homes Which Have Basements (For the area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black 2.1 10.3 8.70 .49 3.16 5.0 4.55 2.07 Mountain 4.3 4.24 2.64 Total 7.43 2.68 1.6 3.75 .92 3.27 1.7 Table XCII — Per cent of Farm Homes Which Have Sleeping Porsches (For the area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers Total White Black White Black White Black White Black White Black 6.3 1.725 4.35 31.5 2.64 2.6 5.9 .53 1.17 .69 .62 Total 4.0 3.7 2.33 1.06 2.32 .36 HEALTH AND SANITATION A great many facts were ascertained about health and sanitation. Specific information was gotten concerning contacts with doctors; ex- penditure for services of the physician, drugs and patent medicine; medical attendance on mother at time of childbirth; percentage of still births; vaccination for smallpox; inoculation for typhoid; possibilities of contamination of the water supply; and disposal of the human ex- creta, garbage, and dishwater. Tables XCIV to XCIX give the contact of the families with doctors. Farm Economic and Social Conditions 51 Table XCIV — Per cent of Families Had a Doctor Call on Them the Previous Year (For the area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 83.3 41.5 53.6 80.0 33.3 65.0 40.5 49.4 80.0 31.6 76.7 41.5 50.8 64.2 42.5 84.6 84.6 63.2 54.9 57.7 Total 57.7 54.6 47.9 37.2 59.7 46.3 77.1 55.1 Table XCV — Per cent of Families Called at Doctor's Office the Previous Year (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain - Piedmont . . Mountain... 73.0 8.6 34.8 60.0 50.0 4.5 31.4 80.0 5.3 58.5 12.5 25.3 28.5 21.2 55.0 31.0 39.5 57.3 0.6 Total 37.0 27.3 24.9 14.0 36.2 22.5 46.8 44.9 Table XCVI — Average Doctor Calls Per Family for the Past Year (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 7.3 3.0 2.9 5.0 1.5 2.9 1.3 3.5 1.0 0.71 3.3 1.55 1.36 1.3 1.6 4.7 2.8 3.9 1.4 Piedmont . Mountain 2.0 Total 4.15 3.1 2.78 .745 2.21 1.65 4.29 1.53 52 Xorth Carolina Tenancy Commission Table XCVII — Average Trips to Doctor Per Family (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 4.0 .35 1.8 3.8 2.3 .16 1.7 3.2 .16 2.8 .45 1.27 0.86 .45 3.0 .77 .47 1.91 Piedmont Mountain .21 Total 1.91 1.73 1.34 .51 1.71 5.52 1.85 1.50 Table XCVIII — Total Contacts With Doctor Per Family (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 11.3 11.6 4.7 8.8 1.5 5.2 1.46 5.2 4.2 .87 6.1 1.97 2.63 2.16 2.05 7.7 3.57 4.37 3.31 Piedmont Mountain 2.21 Total 6.05 4.8 4.06 1.26 3.39 2.09 6.13 3.2 Table XCIX — Average Distance to Doctor (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 3.7 8.6 3.7 2.2 7.8 2.6 8.4 4.5 1.0 7.5 4.3 8.8 4.5 3.5 8.7 3.3 8.15 4.5 3.5 8.2 Total 5.34 5.27 5.5 6.77 5.33 .7.77 4.28 4.54 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 53 It may be pointed out in summarizing the Tables XCIY to XCIX that 50.5 per cent of the land-owners had a doctor call on them the preceding year as compared to 59.8 per cent for the landless, 57.7 per cent for the whites, 49.8 per cent for the negroes and 54.8 per cent for all surveyed. In addition to home visits by the doctor, 28.2 per cent of the land-owners made trips to the doctor's office as compared with 38.7 per cent for the landless, 33.8 per cent for the whites, 33.1 per cent for the negroes, and 33.2 per cent for all surveyed. This would seem to indicate a larger percentage of sickness in the homes of the landless than in the homes of the land-owners. Home calls by the doctors and visits to the doctor's office should be considered in conjunction with each other. The land-owner families had the doctor call on them an average of 3.09 times per year and called at his office 1.24 times per year making a total of 4.33 contacts with the doctor per family per year. The landless families had the doctor call on them an average of 2.36 times per year and called at his office 1.5 times per year making a total of 3.86 contacts with the doctor per family per year. It would seem that although the landless families are sick more often than the families of land-owners, that they get less medical attention than the land-owners. The same differences were found to be true between the whites and negroes, but the extreme poverty of the negroes makes it inadvisable to use contacts with the doctor as a fair comparison. An instance which supports this conclusion is a negro family consisting of father, mother and eight children in the Coastal Plain county who were just recover- ing from smallpox and who had had no medical attention during their sickness. The average distance from the home to the doctors' office was 5.3 miles. The comparative distances for the land-owners and landless were 5.53 and 5.25 miles, respectively, and for the whites and negroes 5.27 and 5.82 miles respectively. The expenditure per family for medi- cine, drugs, patent remedies, and doctor fees is given in the Tables C to GUI. Table C- -Average Per Family Expenditure for Doctor Fees, Drugs, and Patent Medicines (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants » Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain Piedmont-. $75.00 28.05 32.04 $27.00 11.03 $31.09 15.00 16.30 $14.08 18.45 $34.14 28.04 17.05 $19.00 24.00 $53.06 28.13 27.03 $19.00 20.00 Total $42.70 $19.20 $17.15 $18.10 $27.40 $23.25 $41.50 $18.85 54 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table CI — Average Per Family Expenditure for Doctor Fees and Drugs (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain._. $69.00 26.00 30.07 $22.00 10.00 $25.09 12.20 13.90 $13.00 13.85 $32.08 26.00 13.00 $13.00 19.00 $49.06 20.07 25.00 $15.00 17.00 Mountain ._ Total $39.70 $16.00 $14.30 $13.80 $24.15 $18.20 $37.60 $15.40 Table CII — Average Per Family Expenditure for Patent Medicine (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black $ 6.00 2.05 2.00 $ 5.00 1.03 $ 6.00 2.80 2.40 $ 1.08 4.60 $ 2.06 2.04 4.05 $ 6.00 5.00 $ 4.00 8.06 2.03 $ 4.00 Piedmont 3.00 Total $ 2.96 $ 3.18 $ 2.95 $ 4.30 $ 3.29 $ 5.08 $ 4.00 $ 3.76 Table CIII — Per cent of Families Use Patent Medicine (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain... , Piedmont _. _ Mountain __ ___ 56.2 77.7 47.9 80.0 66.6 94.8 91.3 48.2 40.0 89.5 53.2 87.8 57.8 92.8 97.0 58.7 100.0 52.7 55.3 97.0 Total 60.0 72.7 64.2 83.7 62.4 96.3 61.5 66.1 A summary of the tables on expenditures for doctor fees and medi- cines shows that the landless families spend an average of five cents more per year for doctor fees and prescriptions than land-owner fami- lies do. When the average expenditure for patent medicines is added to the average expenditure for doctor fees and prescriptions, the aver- age land-owner family spends sixty-seven cents more for health per year than the average landless family does. Farm Economic and Social Conditions 55 A landed family spends an average of $26.42 for medical attention per year as compared to $25.75 for a landless family; $29.45 for white family; $19.98 for a negro family, and $26.84 average for all families. The use of patent medicines was general, 68 per cent of the landless class using them as compared to 64.5 per cent of the land-owner fami- lies; 62.3 per cent of the white families; 76.8 per cent of the negro families, and 65.6 per cent of all families. The average family spends $3.44 for patent medicines per year. The comparative expenditure is $3.02 for land-owner families; $2.30 for landless families; $3.15 for white families, and $4.19 for negro families. Tables CIY to CXIII give in detail the medical attendance on the mothers during childbirth and the number of stillbirths per family. Table CIV — Attendance at Births (For the Coastal Plain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 76.0 23.7 .3 33.3 66.7 72.5 10.2 6.9 10.4 28.6 71.4 57.5 39.5 3.0 8.3 90.5 48.0 52.0 14.6 Midwife 85.4 1.2 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Table CY — Attendance at Births (For the Piedmont County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Doctor 94.0 6.0 53.3 46.7 95.6 3.5 34.2 63.6 78.2 17.0 41.3 58.7 84.2 15.8 43.0 57.0 0.9 2.2 3.8 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 56 jSTorth Carolina Tenancy Commission Table CVI — Attendance at Births (For Mountain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 92.0 5.5 0.5 2.0 85.2 14.2 0.24 0.36 84.9 11.2 1.6 2.3 80.0 16.6 Unattended 3.4 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Table CVII — Attendance at Births (For area surveyed) Land Owners Landless White Black Total 79.7 18.7 0.5 1.1 48.1 50.5 0.6 0.8 80.4 17.6 0.8 1.2 30.3 69.4 64.4 Midwife 34.1 0.5 . 0.3 1.0 Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Table CVIII — Per cent of Births Attended oy White and Negro Hidwives (For the Coastal Plain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black White midwife Negro midwife 0.9 22.8 66.7 7.9 2.3 71.4 18.0 21.5 90.5 29.6 22.4 85.4 Total. 23.7 66.7 10.2 71.4 39.5 90.5 52.0 85.4 Farm Economic axd Social Conditions 57 Table CIX — Per cent of Births Attended by White and Negro Midwives (For the Piedmont County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 3.7 2.3 46.7 1.5 2.0 63.6 18.0 58.7 15.8 57.6 Total - 6.0 46.7 3.5 63.6 18.0 58.7 15.8 57.6 Table CX— Per cent of Births Attended by White and Negro Midwives (For the Mountain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 5.2 0.3 12.9 1.3 11.2 11.7 4.9 Total 5.51 14.2 11.2 16.6 Table CXI — Per cent of Births Attended by White and Negro Midwives (For area surveyed) Land Owners Landless White Black Total 5.9 12.8 9.1 41.4 11.0 6.6 7.4 Negro midwives 69.4 26.7 Total 18.7 50.5 17.6 69.4 34.1 Table CXII — Average Stillbirths Per Family (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black .25 .33 .39 1.0 .83 0.3 .19 0.2 .24 .558 0.4 .23 .214 .13 .258 .38 .26 .678 .34 Total .33 .92 .203 .21 .399 .15 .275 0.6 58 jNTorth Carolina Tenancy Commission Table CXIII — Per cent of Families Had Stillbirths (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 16.7 17.2 21.7 60.0 50.0 20.0 10.01 14.8 10.5 21.8 22.5 16.9 14.3 10.6 20.7 5.3 18.4 36.0 Piedmont Mountain... . . 11.4 Total 18.8 54.6 13.8 9.3 20.2 11.3 20.2 23.8 The landed families had doctors present at 79.7 per cent of all births as compared to 48.1 per cent for the landless families; 80.4 per cent for the white families; 30.3 per cent for the negro families; 64.4 per cent for all families surveyed. Five births out of every one hundred w 7 ere unattended except by members of the immediate family. Midwives attended 50.5 per cent of all births in the landless families as compared to 18.7 per cent for the land-owners' families; 17.6 for the white fami- lies; 69.4 per cent for the negro families, and 34.1 per cent for all families surveyed. The landless families had negro midwives present at 41.4 per cent of the births, as compared to 12.8 per cent for the land-owners; 6.6 per cent for the whites; 69.4 per cent for all negroes, and 26.7 per cent for all families surveyed. 19.9 per cent of all landless families had had one or more children born dead as compared to 16.2 per cent for the land-owners, 17.6 per cent for the whites; 19.2 per cent for the negroes, and 18.1 per cent for all surveyed. Tables CXIV to CXV give the per cent of persons vaccinated for smallpox and the per cent inocu- lated for typhoid. Table CXIV — Per cent Vaccinated for Smallpox (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 48.6 1.3 40.3 79.5 14.8 47.2 11.6 30.3 0.9 51.5 6.6 27.5 3.1 49.0 4.28 11.6 39.9 Piedmont Mountain.. 5.1 Total 30.8 55.0 9.85 4.71 23.08 7.47 30.8 30.98 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 59 Table CXV — Per cent Inoculated for Typhoid (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 27.3 0.4 93.5 61.4 14.8 39.3 38.0 0.9 36.9 3.6 44.7 1.4 28.9 18.4 25.7 Total 45.2 43.7 27.15 .775 35.9 .64 33.7 13.68 Tables CXIV and CXV show that 18.1 per cent of all persons in the land-owner families were vaccinated for smallpox and 30.7 per cent inoculated for typhoid as compared to 24.1 per cent of the landless vaccinated for smallpox and 19.3 per cent inoculated for typhoid. It was found that 21.2 per cent of all persons surveyed had been vaccinated for smallpox and 24.7 per cent had been inoculated for typhoid. Tables CXVI to CXXV give the possibilities of contamination of the water supply. Table CXVI — Per cent of Wells Open at Top (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain . -.-.._. Piedmont,-. _ _ ... — Mountain... . . . 65.1 44.5 66.6 20.0 25.0 73.7 58.0 52.4 100.0 59.3 70.2 28.6 100.0 78.6 34.2 77.7 84.0 75.0 86.5 62.7 Total 55.0 22.2 59.8 65.6 58.05 46.1 78.0 83.5 Table CXVII- — Per cent of Wells 10 Feet and Less in Depth (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 4.2 5.0 1.3 1.2 1.3 21.4 3.5 8.9 ■ Total 1.83 3.92 .89 5.77 2.74 7.8 60 Xorth Carolina Tenancy Commission Table CXVIII — Per cent of Wells Between 11 and 20 Feet in Depth (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 66.8 1.7 7.25 80.0 65.0 1.3 6.7 80.0 63.7 78.6 zl.5 72.7 7.7 2.6 85.8 Total...- 34.9 33.3 24.5 12.5 43.7 23.1 60.26 75.7 Table CXIX — Per cent of Wells More Than 20 Feet in Depth (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 25.0 91.4 5.75 40.0 66.7 25.0 75.9 4.5 20.0 71.0 31.0 87.5 4.2 56.1 23.8 76.9 5.3 4.3 Piedmont Mountain 48.5 63.27 66.7 71.58 87.5 55.41 71.13 37.0 16.5 Table CXX — Per cent of Homes With Wells Within 20 Yards of Privy (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 4.17 5.0 3.9 5.17 7.7 6.24 Total 1.14 .38 1.6 3.67 4.76 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 61 Table CXXI— Per cent of Homes With Wells Within 20 Yards of Bam (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 10.4 6.7 80.0 15.0 .126 40.0 5.27 26.0 7.5 1.41 71.5 6.07 41.4 7.7 17.9 11.4 Total 4.57 36.4 1.53 9.3 12.75 17.5 22.9 16.3 Table CXXII— Per cent of Homes With Wells Within 20 Yards of House (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 60.4 68.9 8.7 100.0 50.0 80.0 53.2 3.08 80.0 60.6 89.6 52.5 4.2 85.8 41.0 86.2 30.8 5.27 71.0 Piedmont Mountain 8.6 Total 42.8 72.7 24.15 62.8 49.5 48.75 51.4 63.3 Table CXXIII — Per cent of Homes Secure Water from Springs (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Piedmont Mountain .. 6.9 87.0 50.0 22.8 87.1 23.7 12.5 95.8 42.4 15.4 89.5 51.4 Total 36.6 27.3 61.0 20.9 38.3 35.0 33.1 12.2 62 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table CXXIV — Per cent of Homes Where Yards Drain Toward Well (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 20.0 16.7 5.0 20.3 13.6 20.0 18.4 13.0 15.0 4.2 21.4 37.9 13.8 15.4 13.2 8.4 6.9 11.6 34.3 Mountain Total 6.85 18.2 14.95 18.6 10.1 35.0 13.75 14.3 Table CXXV — Per cent of Homes Where Privy Drains Toward Water Supply (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 25.0 11.4 4.3 10.0 7.9 15.8 7.5 22.7 9.0 7.7 17.0 il.t Total 9.1 6.14 6.97 4.78 18.75 2.75 4.76 In summarizing Tables CXVI to CXXV on the possibilities of con- tamination of the water supply, it must be considered that a large per- centage of the homes have no privies as will be shown in a later table. A comparatively large per cent of the w^ells of the landless class are shallow, open at the top and located within a few steps of the house, barn, and privy. Sanitary conditions on the whole were found to be bad among all the classes surveyed but they were comparatively worse for landless than for land-owners and worse for negroes than whites. The house wells at 4.1 per cent of the homes of the land-owners and 6.5 per cent of the landless is so located in relation to the privy that the surface slopes toward the water supply. The yard and barn drain toward the water supply at 12.4 per cent of the homes of land-owners and 15.8 per cent of the landless homes. More than 5 per cent of all homes surveyed had privies located on higher ground levels than that of the wells, and more than 14 per cent had barns whicb drained toward the water supply. Tables CXXVT to CXXX give the sanitary practices used by the homes in the disposal of human excreta, garbage and dish-water. Farm Economic and Social Conditions 63 Table CXXVI — Per cent Have Privies (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 48.0 38.0 39.2 80.0 45.0 1.27 27.2 40.0 2.6 49.3 20.0 9.85 21.4 4.55 37.9 15.4 7.9 25.0 5.7 Total 41.1 36.3 20.7 7.0 28.2 7.5 24.8 20.4 Table CXXVII — Per cent of Privies Ever Cleaned Out (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 56.0 50.0 66.6 40.0 68.4 66.6 72.7 53.6 Mountain 70.2 61.4 71.7 33.3 Total 44.4 50.0 61.2 58.4 33.3 63.0 50.0 Table CXXVIII — Per cent of Privies Sanitary (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 43.4 6.9 52.0 11.0 47.3 31.8 10.7 34.2 28.5 33.3 Total.- '. 38.9 29.6 37.8 29.6. 10.0 64 Xorth Carolina Tenancy Commission Table CXXIX — Per cent of Families Who Throw Dish-Water in the Yard (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain 29.2 8.6 -36.2 60.6 25.0 2.5 3.52 60.0 5.3 33.8 31.0 42.82 9.2 62.1 15.4 47.4 57.2 11.4 Total 25.2 27.2 24.5 11.6 25.5 15.0 51.4 46.2 Table CXXX — Per cent of Families Who Throw Garbage in the Yard (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 4.7 8.6 4.35 5.0 2.5 4.94 10.5 45.5 7.5 2.8 9,2 10.4 15.4 7.9 15.2 11.4 Total 5.71 4.2 9.3 21.2 7.5 10.1 10.09 Only 24.5 per cent of the farms surveyed had privies. Of these privies only 30.2 per cent were sanitary and only 53 per cent had ever heen cleaned out. The landed class had privies at 27.2 per cent of the homes, 33.1 per cent of which privies were sanitary and 50.4 per cent had ever been cleaned out. The landless had privies at 22.1 per cent of the homes, only 26.7 per cent of which were sanitary and 56 per cent had ever been cleaned out. Dish-water was thrown in the yard at 29.6 per cent of all the homes surveyed and garbage was thrown in the yard at 11.1 per cent of all the homes surveyed. The landless dump dish-water in the yard at 35.1 per cent of the homes as compared to 23.7 per cent for the landed. The landless dump garbage in the yard at 14.9 per cent of the homes surveyed as compared to 5.1 per cent for the land-owners. EDUCATION In the analysis of education the following facts were investigated : illiteracy, schooling of the parents, schooling of children and the amount of reading matter in the homes. Tables CXXXI to CXXXVI give the facts about illiteracy and schooling of the different classes of people. Farm Economic and Social Conditions 65 Table CXXXI — Per cent of Parents Who Can Read and Write (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 81.8 88.9 96.5 80.0 72.9 80.0 98.0 95.0 90.0 69.8 86.5 94.95 89.0 35.8 63.0 70.8 88.5 79.7 42.3 50.0 Total 89.7 76.2 94.8 72.2 89.5 51.9 76.0 45.2 Table CXXXII — Per cent of Parents Who Have Attended School (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 83.0 98.0 95.85 80.0 72.9 71.5 100.0 94.8 80.0 71.1 84.5 92.1 89.0 42.8 63.0 70.8 88.5 79.7 42.3 53.0 Total 92.8 76.2 95.2 72.2 88.2 59.5 76.0 46.05 Table CXXXIII — Per cent of Fathers Who Can Read and Write (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 81.7 90.0 96.8 60.0 80.0 62.5 100.0 93.3 100.0 70.5 77.5 89.8 86.8 28.5 48.5 58.0 84.5 78.4 36.7 Piedmont _ _ 39.4 Total 90.7 70.0 93.5 74.4 88.2 45.0 68.6 37.3 66 jNTorth Carolina Tenancy Commission Table CXXXIV — Per cent of Fathers Who Have Attended School (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 81.7 100.0 96.8 60.0 80.0 50.0 100.0 92.5 80.0 73.6 74.0 89.8 86.8 35.7 48.5 58.0 84.5 75.8 37.7 45.5 Total 93.8 70.0 92.3 74.4 83.1 41.3 67.5 39.6 Table CXXXV — Per cent of Children, Ages Six to Fifteen, Who Can Read and Write (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain Piedmont Mountain... 82.1 91.5 74.3 55.0 37.5 50.0 84.5 36.5 72.8 55.2 75.1 52.0 60.6 60.0 70.2 61.7 54.6 60.8 45.0 25.95 Total _ 81.4 50.0 50.0 57.8 63.9 68.1 60.0 40.0 Table CXXXVI — Average Gh'ade in School oy Father (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 3.75 6.4 8.25 2.2 1.8 2.19 4.8 4.38 4.2 2.76 3.36 4.87 3.96 .78 1.72 2.7 2.84 3.7 .81 1.48 Total 6.4 2.0 4.33 2.95 3.97 1.55 3.07 .985 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 67 Table CXXXVII- -Classes of Operators Ranked According to School Education White operator landlords . White owner operators White tenants White croppers Negro owner operators,.. Negro operator landlords Negro tenants Negro croppers 6.40 4.33 3.97 3.07 2.95 2.00 1.55 .985 A summary of the Tables CXXXI to OXXXVII shows that 9.4 per cent of the land-owner parents cannot read and write as compared to 31.3 per cent of the landless; 10.7 per cent of the whites; 46.1 per cent of the negroes, and 20.8 per cent for all surveyed. Of the landless parents, 31.3 per cent have never attended school as compared to 8.2 per cent of the owner parents; 10.5 per cent of the white parents; 35.3 per cent of the negro parents, and 20.3 per cent of all surveyed. It was found that fathers in the owner families had on the average attained 4.9 grades in school as compared to 2.55 grades for the fathers of the landless families; 4.55 grades for the white fathers; 1.49 for the negro fathers, and 3.69 for the fathers of all families surveyed. The land-owners' children, from the ages of six to fifteen years in- clusive, could read and write in 60.5 per cent of the cases as compared to 57.2 per cent for the children of the landless; 61.8 per cent of the children of the whites; 52.9 per cent for the children of the negroes, and 58.5 per cent for the children of all surveyed. A thorough analysis was made of the amount of current reading mat- ter which comes into the homes. Tables CXXXVIII to CXLIX pre- sent these data in detail. Table CXXXVIII — Per cent of Families Which Take Different Kinds of Papers and Magazines (For area surveyed) Land Owners Landless White Black All Surveyed Per cent families take dailies. Per cent take weeklies Per cent take church papers.. Per cent take farm papers Per cent take children's papers Per cent take magazines 3.50 31.8 18.6 35.7 2.5 26.3 28.4 6.7 9.0 2.3 18.5 0.6 12.2 65.1 26.8 24.3 13.5 29.8 1.8 25.2 37.6 3.2 8.9 1.4 18.9 0.7 2.8 72.2 20.3 20.0 10.2 2*6.8 1.5 19.0 47.5 68 Xorth Carolina Tenancy Commission Table CXXXIX — Per cent of Families Which Take No Papers or Magazines (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 16.6 13.8 24.6 40.0 33.3 35.0 17.8 37.7 40.0 47.4 54.6 37.5 57.9 92.6 66.7 50.0 53.8 73.8 82.1 Piedmont Mountain 85.8 Total 18.85 36.4 31.4 46.5 52.2 71.25 58.7 83.0 Table CXL — Total Papers and Magazines Taken (For the Coastal Plain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Number surveyed Number dailies taken Number weeklies taken 48 29 15 6 24 5 1 1 20 5 4 5 4 77 11 8 1 15 3 22 14 1 58 5 5 2 22 112 3 5 1 Number farm papers taken 1 5 3 1 1 9 Number magazines taken 27 5 10 3 Table CXLI — Total Papers and Magazines Taken (For the Piedmont County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 58 22 56 38 47 1 46 6 3 2 79 20 62 39 44 4 30 38 7 2 14 1 2 40 5 12 7 22 66 1 6 1 19 13 1 3 1 3 35 1 Number weeklies taken Number church papers taken Number farm papers taken Numbe* children's papers taken.. Number magazines taken 4 14 3 1 Farm Economic and Social Conditions G9 Table CXLII — Total Papers and Magazines Taken (For the Mountain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 69 41 15 18 30 3 37 162 58 33 15 49 4 65 71 6 8 38 2 1 Number farm papers taken 11 3 1 10 Number magazines taken 25 Table CXLIII — Total Papers and Magazines Taken (For area surveyed) Landowners Landless Whites Negroes All Surveyed 490 176 200 118 219 14 213 524 35 49 13 108 4 88 733 205 222 127 275 16 292 281 6 27 4 52 2 9 1014 Number daily papers Number weekly papers Number church papers Number farm papers Number children's papers 211 249 131 327 18 301 Table CXLIV — Per cent of Families That Take Daily Newspapers (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 54.2 32.3 55.0 20.0 20.0 25.3 35.8 7.9 14.3 12.5 8.5 1.5 8.6 7.7 5.25 2.7 2.85 Mountain Total 48.6 9.1 31.5 6.95 11.7 1.25 7.34 2.7 70 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table CXLY — Per cent of Families That Take Weekly Newspapers (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 31.3 65.6 21.7 20.0 0.5 20.0 52.0 17.9 60.0 18.4 10.4 30.0 11.3 7.15 7.5 8.6 15.4 2.63 4.5 Total 38.8 36.4 28.3 23.3 14.9 7.5 7.34 3.4 Table CXLVI — Per cent of Families That Take Church Papers (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 10.4 43.2 21.7 1.3 15.0 1.5 3.45 7.7 .89 Piedmont 39.3 8.0 5.3 Total.. 26.7 16.8 4.66 3.73 1.25 2.75 .68 Table CXLYII — Per cent of Families That Take Farm Papers (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 46.0 39.6 36.3 20.0 .33 25.0 44.3 26.5 60.0 42.2 19.5 40.0 14.0 28.8 32.7 23.0 7.9 7.1 11.4 Mountain Total 40.0 27.3 31.8 44.2 21.8 23.7 22.9 8.17 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 71 Table CXLVIII — Per cent of Families That Take a Children's Paper (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 20.0 2.6 2.6 1.7 43.5 2.5 2.5 2.63 Total 2.3 2.39 4.66 1.6 .918 Table CXLIX — Per cent of Families That Take a Magazine (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain 27.1 32.8 36.3 20.0 22.8 29.0 20.0 5.3 15.6 22.5 24.0 3.0 20.6 7.7 21.0 2.7 Total 32.6 26.5 6.95 20.2 2.50 19.3 2.04 Tables CXXXVHI to CXLIX show that over five times as large a per cent of the land-owners as of the landless take daily papers and over three times as large a per cent take weekly papers. Church papers are eight times as prevalent in the land-owners' homes as they are in the homes of the landless, and farm papers about twice as prevalent in the homes of the land-owners as they are in the homes of the landless. Children's papers are about four times as prevalent in the homes of the land-owners as they are in the homes of the landless. The owners take magazines in over twice as high a percentage of cases as the landless families do. Almost two-thirds of the landless and almost three-fourths of the negroes take no magazines at all. Of all the families surveyed, 20.3 per cent take daily papers, 20 per cent take weekly papers; 10.2 per cent take church papers; 26.8 per cent take farm papers; 1.5 per cent take children's papers; 19 per cent take magazines, and 47.5 per cent take none of any kind. An analysis was made of the number and kind of books in the homes. Tables CL to CLIV give the data in detail. 72 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table CL — Average Number of Books Per Home (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 15.2 65.0 16.3 0.8 15.8 1.4 23.8 7.64 20.2 18.3 2.69 17.7 3.56 1.5 11.75 2.24 6.07 5.35 0.6 4.8 Total 26.4 9.0 14.1 18.6 6.2 9.9 4.24 1.6 Table CLI — Per cent of Families Who Borrow Books (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 25.0 8.6 20.3 5.0 6.3 27.8 20.0 15.6 6.9 12.7 7.9 Total 17.7 19.8 2.33 11.2 6.2 Table CLII — Per cent of Homes That Have Bibles (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 89.5 100.0 100.0 80.0 100.0 95.0 98.6 100.0 100.0 97.2 74.0 100.0 100.0 78.5 78.8 86.5 92.2 97.2 62.0 97.1 Total..- -. -. 97.3 90.9 99.5 97.7 89.4 78.8 90.8 69.3 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 73 Table CLIII — Per cent of Homes That Have No Other Books Than Bibles (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 45.8 5.2 21.7 80.0 55.0 5.1 27.2 100.0 10.5 57.3 5.0 51.2 78.5 15.1 58.6 38.5 52.9 82.1 28.5 Total 22.8 27.3 22.6 16.3 43.6 22.8 54.2 70.1 Table CLIV — Kind of Books in Homes (For area surveyed) Land Owners Landless White Black All 14.0 1.3 19.4 22.1 43.2 6.5 2.9 16.7 32.8 41.1 13.3 1.9 19.8 20.7 44.3 7.4 0.4 8.4 49.2 34.6 12.4 1.6 Per cent fiction 18.8 24.4 42.8 The landless had Bibles in 82.3 per cent of the homes as compared to 98.2 for the owners; 95 per cent for all whites; 77.4 for all negroes, and 90.1 for all surveyed. One-half of the landless homes have no other books than "Bibles as compared to 22.2 per cent for the land- owners; 32. S per cent for all whites; 47.1 for all negroes, and 37.6 per cent for all surveyed. A summary of Tables CL to CLIY shows that an average owner has over four times as many books as a tenant and that the white families have over twice as many books as the negro families have. The prac- tice of borrowing books is three times as prevalent among the land- owners as it is among the landless, and borrowing of books is forty times as prevalent among the whites as among the negroes. More than nine-tenths of all borrowed books were from school libraries. 74 jN"orth Carolina Tenancy Commission RELIGION Religious affairs of the communities were investigated by finding the relations of the parents and children to the church and Sunday school. Tables CLV to CLX present the data in detail. Table CLV — Per cent of Parents Who Are Church Members (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain Piedmont _. - 36.4 96.4 85.8 30.0 100.0 28.6 98.0 89.0 30.0 98.6 78.5 92.7 79.3 21.4 86.5 36.3 53.9 76.7 35.4 83.3 Total 75.5 66.7 87.5 90.0 80.0 75.0 52.7 48.3 Table CLYI — Per cent of Parents Who Go to Sunday School (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 15.9 90.7 92.2 70.5 100.0 81.8 14.3 94.8 76.1 89.8 25.8 89.8 66.2 3.6 69.8 16.8 38.4 63.7 12.3 Piedmont Mountain _ - 65.05 Total 52.5 77.9 78.6 55.8 58.05 35.8 25.8 Table CLYII — Per cent of Parents Who Go to Church (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 93.2 100.0 99.2 100.0 100.0 91.2 99.5 96.4 90.0 94.3 98.3 100.0 95.0 78.6 98.3 80.5 69.2 87.8 94.0 Piedmont - -_ 94.0 Total 97.7 100.0 97.0 93.7 94.5 96.1 82.0 96.2 Farm Economic and Social Conditions Table CLVIII — Per cent of Children, Ages Six Through Fifteen, Who Are Church Members (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 8.95 46.95 21.4 8.74 8.3 54.9 13.4 3.3 21.5 6.7 1.9 34.4 8.3 4.4 16.3 Total 22.5 25.0 22.9 29.5 3.71 17.9 3.1 5.7 Table CLIX — Per cent of Children, Ages Six Through Fifteen, Who Attend Sunday School (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 24.3 93.8 72.0 5.0 75.0 16.6 84.8 67.5 68.8 21.0 54.0 55.2 13.35 59.7 30.0 13.6 58.5 15.2 Piedmont,-, - . . .. Mountain. __ ._ 51.8 Total 58.3 25.0 68.8 59.0 43.6 50.7 37.5 24.5 Table CLX — Per cent of Children, Ages Six Through Fifteen, Who Attend Church (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 75.3 96.0 84.0 20.0 87.4 70.9 87.6 38.2 36.4 90.0 43.2 60.4 69.5 60.0 94.4 61.7 54.6 76.1 63.2 Piedmont... Mountain 87.0 Total 83.3 39.2 53.2 82.0 58.9 87.5 65.7 69.2 76 North Carolina Tenancy Commission From Tables CLV to CLX, and additional information not included in these tables, the following general facts are apparent : That 83 per cent of the land-owner parents, 64.8 per cent of the landless parents, 79.1 per cent of the white parents, 63 per cent of the negro parents, and 74.5 per cent of all parents are church members. The differences between these various classes are slight, but it should be noted that the landless and negro group are lowest in church membership. In Sunday school attendance the differences between the groups are about the same. In church attendance there is very little difference between the dif- ferent classes, the landless and the negro group following only slightly below the others. Church membership of the children is twice as prevalent among those of the land-owners as among those of the landless, but only slightly more prevalent among the children of the white than among the chil- dren of the negroes. In Sunday school attendance the landless are again deficient, only 38.5 per cent of the children of the landless parents attending as compared to 62 per cent for the children of land-owners. The negro children fall considerably below the white in the phase of religious activity. The only exception to the superior showing of the land-owners and whites over the landless and negroes is for church-going among the children. The outstanding fact in this field is the pronounced church- going habit of the negro children, which is probably accounted for by their desire for association with other children. Church membership is more prevalent than going to Sunday school or going to church in practically all cases. RECREATION Two types of recreation were investigated. One of these was the amount of participation in community recreation and the other was the amount and kind of musical instruments in the homes. The recognized forms of community recreation were taken to be picnics, fairs, sociables, movies, holiday celebrations, chautauquas, lec- tures, theatres, dances, and other similar forms of amusement and rec- reation. An analysis was made, to determine the average number of times an individual attended one of these forms of recreation the preceding year. In addition, an analysis was made of the per cent of families who had one or more members who attended one or more of these forms of recre- ation. The following tables, CLXI through CLXVI, give this analysis in detail. Farm Economic and Social Conditions 77 Table CLXI — Average Times Each Person Participated in a Form of Com- munity Recreation the Preceding Year (For the area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain 3.04 3.62 3.34 .79 1.52 1.73 3.02 3.04 1.97 1.77 1.40 1.76 1.73 .25 2.21 .92 1.63 1.66 .88 1.92 Mountain __ _ Total - 3.3 1.07 3.8 1.8 1.6 1.86 1.25 .99 Table CLXII — Amount of Participation in Various Forms of Community Recreation by the Different Classes (For the Coastal Plain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 16.66 16.66 14.6 12.5 37.5 60.0 20.0 5.0 10.0 40.0 20.0 15.0 80.0 21.8 16.8 19.5 7.8 7.8 7.15 21.45 7.15 7.15 22.4 24.1 8.6 8.6 1.7 17.9 17.9 16.0 12.5 Per cent attend more than 4 kinds. 2.7 Table CLXIII — Amount of Participation in Various Forms of Community Recreation by the Different Classes (For the Piedmont County) s Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 8.6 5.2 16.2 13.8 31.1 33.3 33.3 3.8 8.9 29.1 39.2 10.1 7.9 15.8 50.0 15.8 7.9 20.0 12.5 30.0 17.5 17.5 3.01 24.3 33.2 24.3 7.6 7.7 15.4 38.5 15.4 22.9 Per cent attend 3 kinds. ._ 42.8 11.4 Per cent attend more than 4 kinds. 14.3 78 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table CLXIV — Amount of Participation in Various Forms of Community Recreation oy the Different Classes (For the Mountain County) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 5.8 13.0 10.2 13.0 49.3 9.2 11.7 19.2 20.4 28.4 5.6 22.5 22.5 5.6 15.5 23.8 7.9 18.4 7.9 10.5 Per cent attend more than 4 kinds. Table CLXV — Amount of Participation in Various Forms of Community Recreation oy the Different Classes (For area surveyed) Land Owners Landless Whites Negroes All 8.0 12.0 22.6 20.0 26.6 10.8 14.1 19.1 22.1 11.8 8.0 24.9 11.9 13.8 19.8 16.1 21.4 17.0 9.2 20.7 28.8 14.9 5.7 20.7 11.2 15.7 22.3 15.7 Per cent attend more than 4 kinds _ . - Per cent attend none -- - - _. . .. _ _ 17.1 18.0 Table CLXVI — Per Cent of Families Which Participate in No Form of Com- munity Recreation (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 2.08 24.1 8.7 20.0 33.3 10.0 8.8 11.1 20.0 2.6 27.3 2.5 28.3 57.1 7.6 34.4 23.0 31.5 33.0 Piedmont Mountain _ 8.6 Total 12.0 27.3 10.3 4.66 22.3 16.3 32.1 27.2 Fakm Economic and Social Conditions 79 From Tables CLXI to CLXYI it is apparent that the members of the families of the landless farmers participate in community recre- ational events to just about one-half the extent that the members of the families of the land-owners' families do, and that the negroes partici- pate just about half as often as the whites. The landless families had representatives who had attended more than four kinds of community recreation the previous year in 8 per cent of the cases as compared to 26.6 for the landed families, 21.4 for the whites; 5.7 for the negroes, and 17.1 for all surveyed. ISTo member of 18 per cent of all the families surveyed had partici- pated in or attended any community recreational event during the pre- ceding year. The deficiency was greatest among the landless, next among the negroes, next among the whites, and least among the land- owners. An analysis of the amount and kind of musical instruments in the homes is given in Tables CLXVII to CLXXIII. Table CLXVII — Per cent of the Homes With One Musical Instrument (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain.. 51.0 50.0 15.0 40.0 66.0 50.0 40.0 22.0 60.0 39.0 42.0 28.0 21.0 43.0 9.0 50.0 8.0 10.0 29.0 30.0 Total 37.2 45.6 29.2 34.9 31.4 15.0 31.2 19.3 Table CLXVIII — Per cent of Homes With Two or More Musical Instruments (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 24.0 16.0 17.0 14.0 15.0 15.0 4.0 0.9 33.0 2.5 8.0 11.0 4.0 Total 18.8 18.2 5.75 6.97 5.85 12.26 2.75 .68 80 North Carolina Tenancy Commission Table CLXIX — Per cent of Homes Which Have Victrolas* (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 35.0 13.0 21.0 40.0 33.0 30.0 6.0 7.0 40.0 5.0 40.0 10.0 7.0 21.0 12.0 36.0 10.0 13.0 Piedmont i Mountain __ . ... _ 6.0 Total 22.8 36.4 8.45 9.3 21.2 12.7 22.9 11.6 This includes all talking machines. Table CLXX — Per cent of Homes Which Have Organs (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 16.0 39.0 23.0 20.0 33.0 15.0 53.0 17.0 5.0 9.0 10.0 7.0 21.0 12.0 10.0 7.0 15.0 Piedmont 6.0 Total 26.8 45.6 20.3 30.3 6.53 16.2 6.42 14.3 Table CLXXI — Per cent of Homes Which Have Pianos (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 37.0 20.0 5.0 20.0 6.0 10.0 0.9 7.0 5.5 Total 19.4 3.99 2.32 2.66 5.51 .68 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 81 Table CLXXII — Musical Instruments in Homes (For area surveyed) Land Owners Landless Whites Blacks 32.9 28.22 31.85 26.7 10.8 4.77 8.46 5.7 56.3 67.0 49.7 67.6 14.28 17.78 17.58 12.69 24.1 10.9 16.68 18.5 9.57 2.29 7.78 0.71 Total Per cent have 1 instrument.- . Per cent have 2 instruments,. Per cent have no instruments Per cent have victrolas Per cent have organs Per cent have pianos 32.1 7.68 61.8 16.08 17.2 5.82 Table CLXXIII — Per cent of Homes With No Musical Instruments (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 25.0 34.5 65.3 16.6 55.0 57.0 70.4 60.5 44.2 72.5 77.5 75.8 46.6 92.2 86.9 Piedmont _ Mountain ._ 71.5 Total 44.0 36.4 65.3 55.9 62.8 72.7 66.0 70.1 Tables CLXYII to CLXXIII show that a considerably larger per cent of the landless families have no musical instruments than is the case with land-owning families, and that the negroes and whites are about equal in this respect. The owner families have two musical instruments in over twice as great ratios as the landless families. The landless have more victrolas, or other types of talking machines, per family than the land-owners have, but the owner families have four times as many pianos as the landless have. Less than 23 per cent of all families surveyed have pianos or organs. CITIZENSHIP AND SOCIAL CONTACTS In investigating the social and economic conditions of these various groups of farmers a careful study was made of change of residence to find if they indicated anything regarding the stability of the communi- ties. Tables CLXXIV to CLXXYI present the information on changes of residence. 82 JNTorth Carolina Tenancy Commission Table CLXXIV — Average Changes of Residence Per Family (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 2.83 2.44 2.16 3.2 5.0 2.05 2.92 2.64 2.2 4.47 4.28 3.92 4.38 5.29 4.82 4.88 5.23 4.73 5.03 Piedmont . - - - Mountain - -- 5.43 Total 2.44 4.18 2.68 4.2 4.25 4.9 4.88 5.13 Table CLXXV — Per cent of Changes of Residence Which Meant Changes of Community (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 8.83 24.0 15.4 18.7 12.2 20.8 11.2 18.2 11.2 14.55 21.0 11.25 2.30 16.7 39.6 23.6 16.65 37.6 14.7 Total 16.15 6.5 14.45 11.6 14.5 17.85 29.7 31.8 Table CLXXVI — Average Changes of Residence Per Family Which Meant a Change from One Community to Another (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black .25 .586 .33 .60 .25 .61 .296 .40 .50 .62 .825 .493 1.2 .803 1.93 1.06 .78 1.89 Piedmont . ..._..: .80 Total... .394 .273 .388 .488 .617 .875 1.45 1.63 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 83 A summary of the preceding tables on changes of residence shows that a land-owner had moved only half as often as the landless farmers, and that the white farmers had moved about three times to the negro farmers four times. The change of residence involved a complete change of community in 31.1 per cent of the cases for the landless families, and in 35.2 per cent for the negro families. A change of community was here interpreted to mean a move so that the children must attend a different school and the family was within the radius of a different church. An analysis was made of the number of automobiles and buggies pos- sessed by the different classes of farmers because it was believed that these facts would give an index to the amount of communication and social contacts available to the persons owning them. Tables CLXXVII to CLXXIX give the information on these items in detail and are self- explanatory. Table CLXXVII — Per cent Have Automobiles (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 92.9 37.95 20.3 60.0 45.0 32.9 11.73 60.0 7.9 49.4 5.0 2.82 14.3 3.03 34.5 16.96 Piedmont .. _ Mountain... .. . . _____ Total 40.6 27.25 20.7 13.95 22.33 5.0 18.35 12.92 Table CLXXVIII — Per cent Have Buggies (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain _ 60.4 68.0 17.4 80.0 83.4 55.0 71.0 14.8 80.0 73.7 72.8 70.0 12.67 71.5 68.2 34.45 42.8 Mountain. Total 46.3 81.8 34.1 74.5 22.35 68.75 25.7 32.6 84 JSToeth Carolina Tenancy Commission Table CLXXIX — Per cent of Families Which Have No Automobiles, Buggies, or Road Vehicles for Family Conveyance (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 4.17 19.0 6.52 40.0 16.7 10.0 16.45 71.0 20.0 21.07 22.1 27.6 84.5 28.6 33.3 31.04 100.0 100.0 54.5 Piedmont.. Mountain... ... . 100.0 Total 33.15 27.3 49.8 20.92 46.8 32.5 63.3 65.3 When this survey was planned it was thought that an investigation of the amount of exchange of work would give an index to the neighbor- hood spirit and cooperation of the various classes of farmers. It was found, however, that it was customary on the larger estates for all the tenants to work together on such work as tobacco curing and other jobs requiring groups of persons. Table CLXXX — Per cent of Families Which Exchange Work (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 41.6 31.1 33.4 80.0 16.66 40.0 44.3 53.8 60.0 39.5 70.1 52.4 59.1 78.5 39.4 81.0 30.8 58.0 76.0 Piedmont . Mountain. _ . 42.8 Total 34.9 45.5 49.8 41.8 62.3 46.2 67.0 68.0 Table CLXXXI — Average Days Exchange of Work Per Family the Past Year (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 13.0 2.64 2.58 23.0 1.0 9.85 3.1 5.07 8.0 3.4 20.0 5.0 6.97 17.0 1.88 22.2 3.5 6.4 24.4 5.7 Mountain... . Total 5.5 11.2 4.84 3.95 11.85 4.55 14.2 19.8 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 85 An investigation was made to find the number of the parents who were members of some form of community organization other than the church. It was found that 15.4 per cent of the land-owner parents were members of some one of these organizations as compared to 9.75 per cent for the landless; 12.7 per cent of the whites; 11.9 per cent for the negroes, and 12.45 per cent for all surveyed. The following table presents these figures in greater detail : Table CLXXXII — Per cent of Parents Members of Some Community Organization* (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 14.8 16.7 17.5 10.0 18.2 8.6 18.2 12.8 20.3 12.08 8.9 11.8 17.9 9.8 7.97 3.8 2.7 11.3 7.6 Total 16.5 14.3 14.35 17.75 11.2 11.25 5.63 10.4 "Community organization was used to mean some organization other than the church. Each operator was asked how often his family paid a visit to some neighbor. It was found that a landless family goes visiting 86 times per year as compared to 65 for a landed family, 66 for a white family, 101 for a negro family, and 76 for all families surveyed. Table CLXXXIII presents these figures in detail. Table CLXXXIII — Average Visits Per Family Per Year (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 49 153 43 42 149 67 62 45 67 280 49 107 41 74 146 41 112 38 53 130 Total 75 91 53 92 70 87 78 112 86 Xokth Carolina Tenancy Commission Each farmer was asked what he thought of consolidated schools, road bonds, higher education, scientific farming, strict enforcement of the laws and cooperative buying and selling. Each answer was checked as favorable, opposed to, or indifferent. The three following tables give this analysis in detail : Table CLXXXIV — Per cent of Answers Favorable to Consolidated Schools, Road Bonds, Higher Education, Scientific Farming, Law and Order, and Cooperation (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black Coastal Plain Piedmont 59.4 79.2 64.7 36.7 16.6 46.7 84.5 53.0 73.5 18.9 45.3 77.5 38.9 14.3 21.4 41.1 47.5 43.8 17.4 8.6 Total 64.1 25.8 62.2 23.2 49.7 20.2 42.8 15.3 Table CLXXXV — Per cent of Answers Opposed to Consolidated Schools, Road Bonds, Higher Education, Scientific Farming, Law and Order, and Co- operation (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 27.1 9.2 24.4 20.0 31.7 5.9 20.8 16.5 0.9 37.2 6.3 23.9 14.3 2.8 25.9 7.7 25.8 44.3 Piedmont . 1.4 Total 20.0 15.17 17.1 2.5 25.6 4.7 23.7 34.1 Table CLXXXvT — Per cent of Answers Indicating an Indifference to Consoli- dated Schools, Road Bonds, Higher Education, Scientific Farming, Law and Order, and Cooperation (For area surveyed) Operator Landlords Owner Operators Tenants Croppers White Black White Black White Black White Black 13.5 11.6 20.9 43.3 83.4 21.6 9.6 26.2 10.0 80.2 17.5 16.2 37.2 71.4 75.8 33.0 44.9 30.4 38.3 Piedmont - 90.0 Total... 15.8 65.1 20.75 69.5 24.6 75.0 33.6 50.5 Farm Economic and Social Conditions 87 A summary of Tables CLXXXIV to CLXXXVI on the six questions regarding public and community improvement shows that 58.8 per cent of the answers from land-owners were favorable, 16.8 per cent opposed, and 24.4 per cent indifferent. The answers from the landless were favorable in 34.1 per cent of the cases, opposed in 24.4 per cent, and indifferent in 41.5 per cent. The whites were favorable in 56.5 per cent as compared to 18.7 per cent for the negroes and 46 per cent for surveyed. The whites were indifferent in 22.5 per cent of the cases compared with 20 per cent for the negroes and 20.7 per cent for all surveyed. The whites were indifferent in 22.5 per cent of the cases compared with 61.3 per cent for the negroes and 33.3 per cent for all surveyed. From these facts it would appear that the land-owning farmers are more -interested and quite likely more active in promoting community and civic improvement than are the landless .farmers, and that the interest of the whites is three times as evident and favorable to improvement as is the case with the negroes.