- Thomas W. Jones
- 2019
- Gebunden
- 614 Seiten
- ISBN 9780578562704
In the earliest decades of the 20th century, more than twenty-eight million men and women-black and white-began "The Great Migration" north from Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia and other states of the Deep South and Appalachia. This, as all were lured to the industrial centers of our country by high wages and the opportunity to make a better life for themselves and their families. Among the white southerners who left their homes, tens of thousands left Kentucky and came to work in the rubber factories of Ohio during the teens and twenties, forever changing the state's culture, history, and politics. Who were they? Other than the throwaway term of "hillbillies," the astonishing fact is that historians really haven't had any idea at all. In Susan Allyn Johnson's 2006 dissertation, "Industrial Voyagers: A Case Study of Appalachian Migration to Akron, Ohio, 1900-1940," she writes: "Virtually absent from historical narratives are the experiences of the 1.3 million white southerners who left the South before the Great Depression." "Furthermore," she adds, "they were less likely . . . to write letters or keep the sort of personal journals that have served to document the experiences of sojourners of earlier eras." In his 2011 work, The Devil's Milk, author John Tully notes,
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