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JOHN L. HANDCOX: "SONGS, POEMS, AND STORIES OF THE SOUTHERN TENANT FARMERS UNION"

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In Depression-era Arkansas, tenant farmers came together to fight for better pay, favorable legislation, and better working conditions. They formed a multi-racial, desegragated union called the Southern Tenant Farmer Union. A Tenant farmer himself, John Handcox recognized the injustices of the life of sharecroppers and embraced the union. Becoming involved in union activities, Handcox composed songs and poems that were sung at union meetings and used to raise spirits. In 1937, Handcox made a recording at the Library of Congress. The songs were so popular that some have become standard folksongs themselves, recorded by musicians such as Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie. This CD represents the work of John Handcox from the 1937 material as well as more recent material that was recorded by the Smithsonian's Center for Folk Life and Cultural Heritage in the 1980s. The CD not ony spans Handcox's entire career, but also includes an interview with Joe Glazer recorded at the Library of Congress in 1985. Selections for this CD include ten songs (tracks 1-10), two poems (tracks 11-12), and an interview with Handcox by folksinger Joe Glazer and labor historian Micheal Honey.

Audio CD

Published December 1, 2004

About the author

Mark Allan Jackson

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