d. usually had their own tools and animals
Tenant farmers were different from sharecroppers because they usually had their own tools and animals.
Tenant farmers in Uruguay are known as gauchos. Such farmers will lease land for cultivation and are different from sharecroppers.
Sharecroppers and tenant farmers made their living from cash crops.
Corn
Tenant farmers rented land and paid a fixed rent to the landowner, while sharecroppers did not pay rent but instead received a portion of the crops they grew as payment. Sharecroppers typically had less control over their farming decisions and were more vulnerable to exploitation than tenant farmers.
Used their own tools and animals
Sharecroppers and Tenant Farmers
cash crops
cash crops
own plows
Sharecroppers and tenant farmers made their living from cash crops.
Howard Kester has written: 'Revolt among the sharecroppers' -- subject(s): Cotton growing, History, Sharecroppers, Sharecropping, Southern Tenant Farmers' Union, Tenant farmers, United States, United States. Agricultural Adjustment Administration