![]() ![]() In return they had to share part of their harvested crops as rent for the use of the land. Throughout the South, large landowners opened their fields to sharecroppers who would lease plots of land to tend themselves. ![]() Word went out for workers and before long African-American families began to flock to Dockery Farms in search of work in the fields and, as tenant farmers (sharecroppers,) they cultivated cotton on the rich farmland. Recognizing the richness of the soil, he cleared the woods and drained the swamps opening the land for cotton. Young Will Dockery had graduated from the University of Mississippi and in 1885, with a gift of $1,000 from his grandmother, purchased forest and swampland in the Mississippi Delta near the Yazoo and Sunflower Rivers. Will Dockery, the son of a Confederate general that died at the battle of Bull Run, founded the plantation. It was a welcome diversion from their hard lives and a form of personal expression that spoke of woes and joys alike in a musical language all its own. The music that was created, at least in part, by Dockery farm workers a century ago continues to influence popular culture to this day. The vivid poetry, powerful songs, and intense performing styles of the blues have touched people of all ages around the world. ![]() From its beginnings in the late 19th century through the rise of such unforgettable Delta bluesmen as Charley Patton, Robert Johnson, Son House, and Howlin' Wolf, to the many legendary blues musicians today, Dockery Farms has provided fertile ground for the blues. Although cotton was king in the post-Civil War South, it has been the music from the fields and cabins of Dockery Farms that make it famous as a birthplace of the blues. Dockery Farms began as a cotton plantation in the Mississippi Delta. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |