have his own tools and animals
have his own tools and animals
have his own tools and animals
have his own tools and animals
Have his own tools and animals
have his own tools and animals.
A sharecropper is a term that is used to describe a tenant farmer. It is most commonly heard and used in the southeastern region of the U.S. Sharecroppers usually need seed and a plot of land in which to grow their crops.
let the landowner decide what to plant
One of the methods of farming in the South after the war involved renting land from a big land owner thereby paying all of the expenses and also reaping any profits, is called tenant farming. The land for a tenant farmer is rented for them to grow crops.
After the slaves were freed white plantation owners had to find new ways to work their land. They typically used three methods: sharecropping tenant farming and wage labor. Sharecropping was a common practice in the South. It involved a system where a tenant farmer usually a former slave would work the land in exchange for a share of the crops proceeds at the end of the harvest. The plantation owner would provide the land tools and supplies while the tenant farmer handled the labor. Tenant farming was similar to sharecropping but the tenant farmer was required to pay rent for the use of the land. This allowed plantation owners to maintain control of their land but it often left the tenant farmer in a difficult financial position. The third option was wage labor which involved hiring workers to work the land. This was the most expensive option but it allowed plantation owners to maintain more control over the land and the labor. In the end white plantation owners had to adjust their methods of working the land after the slaves were freed. Sharecropping tenant farming and wage labor were the three primary options available to them and each had its own pros and cons.
British law discouraged tenant farming
Farmer's Song - 2009 is rated/received certificates of: South Korea:All
tenant farming