Exended social problems
Tenant farming is an agricultural production system in which landowners contribute their land and often a measure of operating capital and management
merchants
Cash rent or tenant farming.
Tenant and Sharecropping
Tenant farming created a new class of wealthy southerners called merchants. Tenant farmers paid a landowner rent for farmland and a house, The tenant farmer owned the crops, and at harvest time would sell the crops for income to pay rent. However, due to poor crops and various other issues, tenant farmers often borrowed on credit to make the rent. It became a vicious cycle for the tenant farmer, but advantageous for the merchants.
They extended social problems and lack of equality after the end of slavery
It extended racial inequality long past the end of slavery in the South.
Tenant Farming also called Sharecropping came about in 1865 in the United States.
Sharecropping and tenant farming are both arrangements where individuals work on a landowner's land in exchange for a portion of the crops grown. However, in sharecropping, the laborer typically provides their own tools and supplies, while in tenant farming, the landowner often provides these resources.
Tenant farming is an agricultural production system in which landowners contribute their land and often a measure of operating capital and management
system of farming in which a person rents land to farm from a planter
tenant farming
A tenant farmer
Merchants
sharecropping
tenant farming
Both tenant farming and sharecropping were agricultural systems prevalent in the southern United States after the Civil War. Both involved renting land to work and paying a portion of the harvest as a form of payment to the landowner. However, in sharecropping, the tenant typically received a share of the harvest, while in tenant farming, the tenant paid rent in cash or crops.