Agriculture - Overview

From butter churns to diesel tractors, the Museum's agricultural artifacts trace the story of Americans who work the land. Agricultural tools and machinery in the collections range from a John Deere plow of the 1830s to 20th-century cultivators and harvesters. The Museum's holdings also include overalls, aprons, and sunbonnets; farm photographs; milk cans and food jars; handmade horse collars; and some 200 oral histories of farm men and women in the South. Prints in the collections show hundreds of scenes of rural life. The politics of agriculture are part of the story, too, told in materials related to farm workers' unions and a group of artifacts donated by the family of the labor leader Cesar Chavez.
"Agriculture - Overview" showing 3 items.
Picking cotton on a great plantation in North Carolina, U.S.A. [Active no. 13801: half-stereo photonegative.]
- Notes
- Similar to RSM 428 and 1327. Associated number: 3667
- Currently stored in box 1.1.4 [156]
- Date
- 1900
- 1910
- 1900-1910
- North Carolina
- publisher
- Underwood & Underwood
- H.C. White Co
- Subject
- White Oak Cotton Mills
- Local number
- RSN 1328
- Data Source
- Archives Center - NMAH
One of the Active Industries of the South--Grinding Cane. [Stereo photonegative.]
- Notes
- "South" on envelope
- Editorial comment: This image is part of a series intended to amuse white audiences, pandering to and reinforcing negative racial stereotypes of the period (although this particular image is relatively neutral compared to the rest of the series). The series title, which many late 20th-century and early 21st-century audiences would consider offensive in itself, makes the intentions of the publisher clear. --David Haberstich, Archives Center
- Currently stored in box 1.1.31 [161], moved from [153]
- Cancelled by scratching
- Orig. No. 3-B
- Date
- 1900
- 1910
- 1890-1920
- publisher
- Underwood & Underwood
- H.C. White Co
- Local number
- RSN 5669
- Data Source
- Archives Center - NMAH
[Boy and man in farmyard : stereoscopic photonegative.]
- Notes
- Currently stored in box 1.1.31 [161], moved from [153]
- Cancelled by scratching
- Orig. no. 7-E
- Editorial comment: This image is part of a series intended to amuse white audiences, pandering to and reinforcing negative racial stereotypes of the period. The series title, which many late 20th-century and early 21st-century audiences would consider offensive in itself, makes the intentions of the publisher clear. --David Haberstich, Archives Center
- Summary
- African American boy with white man, probably first image in chicken-stealing sequence
- Date
- 1900
- 1910
- 1890-1920
- publisher
- Underwood & Underwood
- H.C. White Co
- Local number
- RSN 5682
- Data Source
- Archives Center - NMAH

