Sharecropping house
1 2018-03-27T04:12:38-07:00 Maureen Gray ab288c53aefb942d3e6102c32f4d6e3a10268d3b 19701 1 plain 2018-03-27T04:12:38-07:00 Maureen Gray ab288c53aefb942d3e6102c32f4d6e3a10268d3bThis page is referenced by:
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2018-02-10T19:18:00-08:00
Dickey's Practice
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Dr. Dickey's Medical Achievements
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2018-06-17T23:10:25-07:00
30.5625957 N, -96.4054649 W
As his practice stabilized, Dr. Dickey focused on the bigger picture. As a Booker T. Washington devotee, James Dickey did not believe racial equality would be accomplished through confrontation; instead logic and cooperation would bring it about. It was obvious to everyone in Taylor’s black community that the promises of Reconstruction were a myth. Problems in the southeast section of town included substandard housing, poor drainage, waste dumped into creeks and streams, lack of fresh water, exploitive landlords, dire poverty, violence, lack of nutrition and inadequate educational facilities not to mention state and local laws that intentionally kept African Americans voteless, voiceless, and dependent on white charity. By 1931, James Dickey decided it was time to put relationships to work.
The Great Depression devastated African Americans in Taylor as it did throughout the United States. White workers replaced Negro farm labor and railroad workers as national unemployment reached 25%. Those numbers for African Americans reached as high as 70%. Negroes sought whatever economic opportunities and public aid that was possible in urban areas. Black population increased in Taylor 61% by 1935. Housing proved inadequate so landowners in south Taylor simply moved antiquated shacks from area farms and deposited them in town with no amenities, specifically they had no electricity, no gas hookups, no running water and no sewage access. Waste was dumped into nearby waterways. Even if water lines were available, many families could not afford the $1.30 per month fee for water so they dipped buckets into nearby creeks, including “stinky branch.” As one can imagine, the unsanitary conditions created the perfect site for a disease outbreak. A full typhoid epidemic erupted in 1932. Demand for intensive treatment far exceeded what Dr. Dickey’s 3-room office on Main Street could handle. The only hospital beds available to black patients were the two located behind one of Taylor’s white hospitals. Dr. Dickey was able to appropriate an abandoned boarding house at 401 Bland St. to create a makeshift hospital for the duration of the crisis.
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2018-03-30T22:12:49-07:00
If You Lead Me...
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Personality conflicts led to diverging philosophies
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Because slave owners had prevented their slaves from practicing self-reliance and from gaining an academic education, freedmen endured an onerous burden. Since the terms of Reconstruction granted voting rights to an inexperienced electorate, many vulnerable freedmen were elected to political office quickly. Not surprisingly, white Southerners were infuriated to be governed by those they still believed to be less than human (Dred Scott, 1856). With the yoke of slavery removed, many freedmen disparaged physical labor and sought a life of ease. In a few short years, they distanced themselves from the skills gained in bondage and equated hard work with shame but still had to provide for themselves. In the transition between the 19th and 20th centuries, two African American leaders emerged, both claiming to represent their people but each traversing different paths. Booker T. Washington and WEB DuBois began the journey together but diverged when Southern whites named Washington the leader of the black race. Their subsequent animosity diminished racial progress to the point that African Americans had to look to local leaders for assistance.