“A Million Farmers On
Relief” by Whitney Tharin, Carolina
Co-Operator, October, 1935
A million farmers on
relief and to take them off the government gave us the Resettlement
Administration. What it aims to do is told here by the regional information
officer.
Orators and writers for generations have pictured the
advantages of farming so glowingly that many persons received a severe shock in
the summer of 1934 when they discovered that more than a million farm families
were on the Federal Emergency Relief Rolls.
These shocked citizens, however, had listened too long to
the pleasant platitudes about the advantages of fresh country air and bright
sunshine. They had forgotten that agriculture, like all other great economic
enterprises, has for a long time included persons who for various reasons have been
marginal in their capacity to earn. These people were so near the borderline of
poverty that the coming of the depression brought them quickly below the line.
A million families meant that at least 4.5 to 5 million
rural inhabitants had to be aided. They were kept from starvation by handouts
from state, local, and federal governments or by such rural rehabilitation work
as had already been started. With so large a portion of our farm population on
relief, the government became convinced that more fundamental causes than the
depression were responsible for this situation and that some more permanent
economic solution had to be found for a great many of these people.
Are Victims of ____
Investigation proved that it was not merely the depression
and the years of low farm prices which have brought these people to their
present plight. Many of them, through no fault of their own, are more
fundamentally the victims of:
1.
Mistaken agricultural policies of the last
hundred years, especially the homesteading upon lands incapable of yielding a
decent standard of living.
2.
Overfarming and overgrazing policies, aggravated
by war demands and later the struggle to make a living by producing more
commodities to offset low prices.
3.
Failure to adopt adequate methods of soil conservation.
4.
Exhaustion of lumbering, mining, and oil areas.
5.
Failure to conserve forest lands, thereby
accelerating the destruction of millions of acres through erosion and floods.
In an effort to concentrate study of this problem, and to
work out its solution carefully, President Roosevelt established the
Resettlement Administration, naming as its head Dr. Rexford G. Tugwell, the
Under Secretary of Agriculture. At the same time, the President transferred to
the Resettlement Administration the Rural Rehabilitation Division of the FERA;
the Subsistence Homesteads Unit of the Department of Interior; and the Land
Policy Section of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration.
North Carolina In
Region Four
In the national administrative set-up approved by Doctor Tugwell,
the nation was divided into 11 regions. North Carolina, with Virginia, West
Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee, makes up Region IV, with Raleigh as regional
headquarters. The work in this region is under the supervision of two
specialists in their respective fields—Homer H. B. Mask, Regional Director of
Rural Resettlement, and James M. Gray, Regional Director of Land Utilization.
The present goal of the Resettlement Administration is to
put 350,000 destitute or low-income families on a self-sustaining basis. To do
this properly will require much time and patient work. After land has been
acquired for the use of those who should move to new locations, steps must be
taken to assure that the persons so resettled will be enabled to earn a
subsistence and raise the standards of their home life. Ideal functioning of
the program involves careful social studies of the groups concerned, and the
acquisition of land not too far removed from the places where the families are
already accustomed to conditions.
There is nothing arbitrary about resettlement. In no case
will any family be removed to another location without that family’s voluntary
acceptance of the plan. As a matter of fact, the overwhelming majority of the
families assisted will be resettled, insofar as possible, “in place,” that is,
in the community or neighborhood in which they are now living. There will be
established, however, a few rural agricultural communities to which selected
families will be permitted to move.
Is Not Relief
There is nothing about resettlement that smacks of relief—as
such. Money advanced by the Resettlement Administration for the purchase of
farm lands and necessary equipment by farmers, tenants, share-croppers, or farm
laborers is to be repaid within a reasonable time.
The work of the Land Utilization Division of the
Resettlement Administration is directed towards the better use of land
resources. Some of the projects under this division involve the purchase of
lands now in agricultural use which should be placed in public ownership as
forest or grazing lands in order to conserve the soil and native cover and to
correct unsatisfactory conditions of human life and public finance. Other
projects are concerned primarily with the public reservation of needed areas
for recreation or wild life protection when such use is justified by the
location and physical characteristics of the land.
Three major objectives comprise the purpose of the land
utilization projects. First is the conservation of land resources, and the use
of them to the fullest public advantage. Second is the assistance of families
bound to a poverty-stricken dependence on unproductive land to sell out their
poor holdings and move to a more profitable location. The third objective is to
make possible a reorganization of the finances of local governments by
relieving them of the necessity of expending large sums for the maintenance of
roads, school, and other public serves in areas of poor land which do not
contribute their fair share of taxes to the public treasuries.
In addition to the close-knit cooperation with which the two
major divisions—Rural Resettlement and
Land Utilization—of the Resettlement Administration must operate, there must be
inter-governmental cooperation with a number of other federal departments, administrations,
and services.
Chief among the agencies with which the Resettlement
Administration will co-operate are the Extension Service of the United States
Department of Agriculture, the Land-Grant Colleges, and Experiment Stations.
The Extension Service has agreed to cooperate in appraising the resources of
families proposed for rehabilitation or resettlement, in the development of
specific plans for each family, and in the supervision of the execution of
these plans. In this manner, all families aided by the Resettlement
Administration will have available the expert services of Extension Service
workers, including those of county farm and home agents and their assistants.
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