Book Title: The Promised Land: The Great Black Migration and How It Changed the States   (Ranked 67 on Best American Journalism  screen 100)  originator:  Nicholas Lemann Year Published: 1991                  The Promised Land is unquestionably  merit of its   dispelaxe as one of the top 100 works of American journalism.  Written by Nicholas Lemann, The Promised Land explains the massive  disastrous migration from   siemenseast plantations to industrial cities.  First-hand accounts from the Mississippi sharecroppers journey to Chicagos South-Side set Lemanns work  apart(predicate) from similar  literary works and clearly depict the tragic  hopelessness of the black ghetto  subsequently so much optimism that success was  threatening for blacks in the north.                Sharecropping, the post-Civil  struggle agreement between landowner and renter  husbandman to  demolish the profit from its sale, was hardly a  growth than the slavery their ancestors endured.  Alth   ough  statutory and fair in theory, the wealthy landowners  a lot cheated their black farm-workers on the settleÂ.  The settle was the payment the renter farmer earned after living expenses were subtracted from the workers portion of a crops profit.  In the white-ruled Deep South, black sharecroppers had no choice  just  judge what the plantation owner gave them.  Poor living conditions,  wakeless   like fiber-picking, inadequate education, racism, segregation and constant moving was the post-slavery life of millions of blacks for   cardinal years following the end of slavery.

                October 2, 1944    maybe the most   artless date in 20th centu!   ry America.  Just  south-central of Clarksdale Mississippi, less than 3,000 people flocked to  theater of operations C-3 of the Hopson plantation to attestant the  first gear public demonstration of a working, production-ready  baffle of the mechanical  cotton fiber picker.  Eight International Harvester cotton pickers collected 2,000 pounds of cotton, each, in one-hour, at a cost of $5.26.  A good field hand could pick twenty pounds in an hour; to pick 2,000 pounds worth, the cost was $39.41.  Instantly, the...                                        If you want to get a full essay,  ensnare it on our website: 
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