Introduction to Delta Pieces: Northeast Louisiana Folklife
Map: Cultural Micro-Regions of the Delta, Northeast Louisiana
![A map of the cultures of Northeast Louisiana, drawn by anthropologist H. F. “Pete” Gregory, shows the Delta sub-regions of plantations, yeoman farmers, and fishing.](../../siteimages/info.png)
The Louisiana Delta: Land of Rivers
![An anthropology professor and Delta native recalls over 100 years of Louisiana history and culture recorded during a personal interview about his life and the lives of his ancestors. Having grown up in various towns along the Black River and Mississippi Delta, Pete Gregory's stories illustrate the cultural landscape. Telling tales of sharecroppers, hill folk, swamp dwellers, tent towns, fishing communities, race relations, and the perseverance of this unique way of life, Gregory's accounts represent the Delta experience, and conclude that, even today, the Delta remains a strange and wonderful place.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![In one of his 11 reflections, a native son explores the importance of the Mississippi River to the region of the Northeast Louisiana Delta from its geography to its identity. The transformations wrought by the newer levees, the leveling of the land to plant soybeans, and the new catfish farms have made the Delta a different place, yet many traditions continue such as the naming of river terms and commercial fishing.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![In one of his 11 reflections, a native son explores the historical influence of early French settlers in the Northeast Louisiana Delta in family names, foodways, and architecture.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![In one of his 11 reflections, a native son describes the small farm homesteads in the Northeast Louisiana Delta which were referred to as family 'places' in the hills and backswamps. Many of these places have been purchased by corporate farms.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![A native son reflects on the changing landscape and culture of the Delta in northeast Louisiana in one of his 11 reflections, describing the effects of the oil and later soybean and corn industries on the native forested wetland and its wildlife and people.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![In northeastern Louisiana, hunters-and-gatherers established a tradition of mound building that began five millennia ago. The earthworks they built are striking evidence of Louisiana's earliest residents and a testimony to the complexity of an ancient culture that remains largely a mystery. Mound construction was widespread by 3000 BC in northern and southern Louisiana as well as Mississippi and Florida. Research on the Watson Brake mound complexes prove these earthworks predate those at Poverty Point in West Carroll Parish, while also providing new information on the lives of Middle Archaic hunter-gatherers.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![While Native Americans and Spanish explorers preceded French settlement in Louisiana, a lasting influence of the French is demonstrated by names given to waterways and landforms still used today. Using streams and bayous as modes of transportation, early French settlers were hunters, gatherers, harvesters, and fur trappers with close ties to the land. Most of the names of waterways and geographic features in Louisiana fall under two categories: French surnames or French words used to describe natural features, and variations of these can be seen throughout the state.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![The history of the 1927 Mississippi River Flood and Great Depression shows the struggles endured by residents as a result of these events, as well as the resilience with which they responded. Preparation, rescue operations and recovery efforts toward the 1927 Flood are described. For some constructing flood protection provided escape from the Great Depression. Others coped with their circumstances through hard work and determination. These two disasters not only influenced the lives of survivors, but influenced future generations.](../../siteimages/info.png)
Ethnic Groups
![In one of his 11 reflections, a native son explores the influence of Native Americans, both past and present, in the Northeast Louisiana Delta and their folk traditions. Mounds and artifacts provide evidence of past Native Americans, while some contemporary tribes, including the Choctaw and Tunica remain in the Delta and carry on their traditions.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![In one of his 11 reflections, a native son explores the prevalence of archaic Indian mounds in the Northeast Louisiana Delta and how early settlers and present residents regarded and used (or abused) them.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Louisiana and Mississippi Choctaw have overcome a history of relocation and population decline to emerge as a growing tribe that is thriving economically and adapting to surrounding culture, while preserving traditions of language, dance, basketry, clothing, and sports.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Formerly considered an invisible culture, the migratory workers and permanent residents from Mexico and Central America have inspired cultural changes visible in the availability of Hispanic food, medicine, and music in Louisiana. Migratory work, such as agriculture, construction, and the oil industry are also discussed. The Hispanic population trend and accompanying cultural changes are expected to increase and continue in Louisiana.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Interviews of second-generation Italians in Monroe, Louisiana, reveal a tight-knit community maintaining ethnic traditions despite pressures to assimilate to mainstream American culture. Attracted by the prospect of new opportunity, they began as farmers, applying their earnings and strong work ethic toward establishing businesses and formed bonds through social clubs. Second-generation storytellers recall struggling with their “Italian-ness” during their youth; however, as adults, some returned to their roots, and practiced customs such as foodways and the St. Joseph's Day altar.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![M. J. Varino, took over his father's Rainbow Grocery, one of the first Italian grocery stores in Monroe, and ran it until his retirement in 2000. In the high-ceiling, old style grocery, he made around a hundred pounds twice a week of his specialty item, Italian sausage. Made with a recipe from his friend, Father Sam Pollacia, the pork and beef link sausage containing tomato juice and spices was a community favorite for holidays.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![The history, origins, and evolution of the St. Joseph's Day altar tradition, a long-practiced Catholic event predominantly celebrated by Italians and Sicilians is presented along with detailed descriptions of the complex work involved in preparing the altar. Recipes and baking procedures for Italian foods associated with the tradition, such as spinges, biscotti, St. Joseph's bread, fish dishes, and spaghetti are featured along with photographs of these preparations performed by the Men's Club and Altar Society of St. Joseph's Church in Monroe, Louisiana.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Of Sicilian descent, Guy Serio gives oral history about running his grocery in Ferriday, Louisiana, where he observed the hardships of Italian farmers in the Delta.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Qin Lin, of Ferriday, Louisiana, practices Chinese paper crafts using folded paper and glue. When she finds the time during her work in the family Chinese restaurant, she makes intricate colorful animal figures and other objects from magazine pages and colored paper. Her repertoire which she displays in the restaurant, includes horses, frogs, birds, fish, pineapples, and other Chinese symbols of good luck for the New Year.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![While the practice of Judaism in America does not vary significantly, cultural variations are revealed through accounts of Jewish life in northeast Louisiana. An example is southern variations on matzoh balls, being served outside of the Passover holiday and in gravy as opposed to soup. Interviews with Jewish residents detail prejudice they experienced. Outward migration of younger Jewish generations compounds their struggle to maintain Jewish identity. This raises questions about the future of Judaism in north Louisiana and highlights the need to further document Jewish folklore within the region.](../../siteimages/info.png)
Working in the Delta
![The Mississippi's floodplain produces rich resources which residents of the rural Delta have historically used to develop river-related livelihoods and traditions. Occupations such as cotton farming, commercial fishing, crop dusting and riverboat work are described along with the folklore that accompanies these professions. The occupational folklife of Delta exhibits a complex of techniques, customs, and modes of expressive behavior. While the landscape is changing and associated occupational crafts are fading, the risks and rewards of working in the Delta remain.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Net making, a specialized skill predominantly practiced by women and passed down through generations, both preserves the fishing traditions of Catahoula Lake and surrounding areas and provides necessary tools for the fishing industry. The struggles and rewards experienced by Louisiana fishing families are discussed with highlights of the adaptations they employ to make ends meet. Methods of net making and maintenance are presented for trammel nets, hoops nets, seine nets, and baiting nets. Special focus is placed on the Champlin Net Company in Jonesville, Louisiana.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Despite a sometimes ambivalent public opinion toward the profession, cropdusting provides the important service of protecting farmers and their crops. Pilots teach each other how to handle dangers associated with the job, and the lifestyle surrounding cropdusting provides a wealth of occupational folklore in the form of stories, jokes, and jargon. Anecdotes of Delta dusters are presented, illustrating their role as a professional one with pressures, requiring courage, caution, and safety, but also one that provides thrills, laughs, and fulfillment to the pilots taking on these risks.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Historical and contemporary accounts offer evidence that folk traditions inspired by life in occupations involved with the Mississippi River survive. Examples of the these traditions range from jargon inspired by barge and steamboat industries, to stories of a steamboat musician known for playing five instruments at once. The oral history of the past is as valuable as new forms of these traditions. For example, today's steamboats carry tourists up the Mississippi to view Christmas Eve bon fires along the river.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Extensive waterways and forests support a strong tradition of boat building with boat builders specializing in small crafts suited for different environments. Examples of several types of boats used by fishermen and trappers in Catahoula Lake, ranging from the dugout canoe to houseboats, are offered along with traditional methods of construction. The advent of metal boats, a changing ecosystem, and the death of boat makers who are experts in their craft threaten the future of wooden boats and the long-standing boating tradition of Catahoula Lake in LaSalle Parish.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![In one of his 11 reflections, a native son reflects on the types of traditional boats used to deal with the vast wetlands of the Delta. With the rise of sawmills, dugouts were replaced by bateaus, which were replaced with aluminum bateaus. Skiffs and houseboats, also common on the river, evolved with technology.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![The story of Carl (C. J.) Girlinghouse and his rolling store set in mid-20th century, rural Louisiana illustrates the struggles of a small business man in changing times. His store, The Blue Goose, is recalled affectionately, having been the supplier of essentials to families of remote farming villages in the Delta. He provided vital supplies at low cost, a reality that contributed to the loss of his business along with modernizations such as highways and food commodity programs. The rolling store is now a storage shed and serves as a reminder of rural farm life.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![The life and occupational lore of Mississippi River commercial fisherman and fish market operator Whitey Shockley of Lake Providence, Louisiana show that expertise and luck are important in this traditional occupation.](../../siteimages/info.png)
Homemaking in the Delta
![Much of social life in the rural Southern Delta is centered around the home and outdoor space. Homemaking in these regions defies generational, race, and class lines, as women of all backgrounds retain similar practices, cultivating outdoor gardens as sources of food and social space. Southern cooking traditions and the function, construction, and decoration of gardens as an extension of Southern life are highlighted through historical and contemporary accounts.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Maye Torrey of Columbia, Louisiana, recalls her family's folk tradition of making jelly from wild fruit such as mayhaws, muscadines, dewberries, and blackberries and also the apples and peaches they grew. She continues the tradition today, but uses commercial pectin.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![A native son reflects on past family Christmas traditions in the Northeast Louisiana Delta in one of his 11 reflections. He reports decorating local pine or cedar Christmas trees with haw berries, Spanish moss, and paper chains with Delta cotton as snow, sharpening knives on Christmas day, cooking loads of traditional Southern dishes, typical gift giving, and a community dance.](../../siteimages/info.png)
Worshiping in the Delta
![An analysis of oratory, music, and ritual religious traditions, as well as sacred spaces reveals the commonalities and differences between Anglo and African American worship in the Delta region. Examples of preaching styles such as call-and-response, singing styles including gospel and spirituals, and shaped-note, and ritual practices such as river baptisms and the Easter Rock ceremony are offered along with historical explanations for their origins. These worship traditions, shaped by a collective and selective memory, relive the past while providing shared values for the future.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![A detailed account of the African American Baptist ritual of outdoor river baptism kept alive in rural Louisiana is presented. Religious traditions proceeding, during and after the three stages of baptism rites are described, including the preparation of handmade baptismal robes, reading scripture, delivering sermons, singing hymns, and symbolic immersion in the river. Baptismal locations often remain in the same spot, and the river baptism ritual has been passed down through generations, ensuring the preservation of African American heritage and Baptist religious traditions.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Lucille Stewart of Monroe, Louisiana, who grew up in Richland Parish, learned to sew from her mother and made the traditional baptism robes worn for the outdoor baptisms which were common in rural Delta African American Baptist churches. The construction process from sizing to cutting a paper pattern, sewing, and fitting are presented.](../../siteimages/info.png)
Making Music in the Delta
![Examining the historical evolution of blues music, beginning with outsider accounts in the early 20th century and ending in contemporary times, shows the Delta region to be one of America's musical fertile crescents. Contributions of musical styles ranging from gospel to rockabilly, musicians from Memphis Slim to Aretha Franklin, musical arenas such as juke joints and casinos, recording studios such as Sun Record Company in Memphis, and social traditions of the Delta serve as a comprehensive illustration of the origins, influences, migration and evolution of blues music.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Po' Henry and Tookie, the stage names of Henry Dorsey and Wayne 'Tookie' Collum, play older acoustic Delta blues guitar and harmonica. Their common backgrounds of working in cotton farming, their meeting and formation of their group, their repertoire, and performance styles reveal the strength of this powerful duo.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![The career of Thomas Edison 'Brownie' Ford, included death defying rodeo performer, woods cowboy, traveling circus clown, and legendary musician. Ford, of Comanche and British decent, got the name “Brownie” from white playmates when he was growing up in Oklahoma. His dual ancestry made him an outsider to both cultures. Ford traveled for 86 years across Texas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma as a showman whose talents ranged from escape artist to pitchman for medicine shows. He spent the end of his career touring as a musician, gaining recognition for his ballads and honky-tonk songs.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Guitarist and rockabilly pianist, Kenny Bill Stinson, of West Monroe, Louisiana, plays regional music ranging from blues to rock 'n' roll to rockabilly and country. His musical roots and influences, multi-instrument expertise, songwriting, and hard driving performance make him one of the most versatile traditional performers in the Delta.](../../siteimages/info.png)
Playing in the Delta
![In one of 11 reflections, a native son reflects on the importance of the pastimes of hunting and fishing in Delta culture. Hunting traditions for Delta boys begin early, and hunting and fishing tales abound, as do today's hunting camps.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![In one of his 11 reflections, a native son explores aspects of gigging before it was outlawed in the Northeast Louisiana Delta. An efficient way of fishing, gigs (or harpoons) were adapted for various fish such as buffalo, carp, or gar, as well as frogs.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![James LeCroix of Harrisonburg in Catahoula Parish, Louisiana, discusses how he makes and uses hunting horns and the role of deer camps in hunting.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Moses Poole of Aimwell, Louisiana, in Catahoula Parish, breeds, trains, and hunts with Walker hounds in a fox hunting tradition that differs considerably from the formal English style of hunting. The breeds, the tradition of listening to the dogs on the hunt, and the challenges of the sport explain its attraction.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Nalda Gilmore, of West Monroe, made traditional hunting horns to use when hunting coons and rabbits with his Beagles. His techniques and the aesthetics of horn making and blowing, along with the development of other horn crafts are explored.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![Thanks to cash from the occupations of soybean farming and commercial fishing, a strong gambling tradition lasted into the 1970s in hunting camps, country stores, and package liquor stores. A collection of vibrant folk narratives told by Louisiana gamblers recounts the language, stories and customs of Delta gambling.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![In one of his 11 reflections, a native son describes nightclubs in Northeast Louisiana Delta communities from the 1930s-1940s and into the 1950s. Clustered around Mississippi River bridges, clubs featured Black bands and later the white big bands. In the Black areas of towns, Black clubs, the largest being Haney's Big House, also offered major entertainment. By the 1950s roadside bars and dance halls brought in country music and violence.](../../siteimages/info.png)
Telling Stories in the Delta
![Deer hunting, an important part of Louisiana life, involves folk traditions that are integral to the experience. An essential tradition for generations, hunters tell stories of encountering the “big one”. These fantastical accounts of big buck sightings are presented along with description of Louisiana deer hunting.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![A historical account of the Natchez Massacre and events that followed offers an alternative theory toward the Hub Lake Gold legend, disputing the location and very existence of the supposed treasure. The Natchez likely exchanged any valuables for their survival, eliminating the probability of a gold treasure. However, sacred relics deemed important to the Natchez may have been thrown into a lake to prevent desecration by enemies. This alternative theory, coupled with differing historical accounts of the treasure's location, serves as a possible explanation for this enduring legend.](../../siteimages/info.png)
![The origin of the names Colewa Creek, Big Colewa Bayou and Little Colewa Bayou in West Carroll Parish has long been a subject for speculation. A theory connecting the name Colewa with the mispronunciation of Koroa, a tribe known to have inhabited this area, is presented along with a claim that although extinct, the Koroa Indians left a permanent mark on Louisiana through the use of this name which appeared on maps as early as 1838.](../../siteimages/info.png)
Delta Archival Materials
Bibliography
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![The Mississippi's floodplain produces rich resources which residents of the rural Delta have historically used to develop river-related livelihoods and traditions. Occupations such as cotton farming, commercial fishing, crop dusting and riverboat work are described along with the folklore that accompanies these professions. The occupational folklife of Delta exhibits a complex of techniques, customs, and modes of expressive behavior. While the landscape is changing and associated occupational crafts are fading, the risks and rewards of working in the Delta remain. <br><em>Contains photos.</em>](../../siteimages/iconinfo.gif)
Working in the Delta
By Susan Roach
Dictator and definer of the Delta, the Mississippi River provides the fertile flood plain that makes possible the majority of traditional, regional occupations in this predominantly rural area. Now open and flat with blurred timber on the horizon, the Delta landscape with its resources of rich "buckshot" dirt, waterways, timber, and gas features farming- and river-related occupations, which exhibit a complex of techniques, customs, and modes of expressive behavior typical of occupational folklife: raising cotton, soybeans, rice, cattle, and catfish; crop dusting; commercial fishing; lock operations; and riverboat work. Floods, chemicals from the air and water, insects from mosquitoes to boll weevils, dangerous, expensive technology, and debt all pose risks to life and livelihood and are echoed in Delta occupational narratives.
The river itself gave rise to major occupations such as riverboat work and river and flood control. Riverboat work—earlier on steamboats and on today's towboats—has always required a wealth of informally learned occupational knowledge: of complex, traditional jargon and operating techniques associated with the river; of specific boats and their parts; of duties of each job; and of riverboat crafts. For example, a deckhand makes a "possum"—a braided rope bumper—to cushion the boat when it docks or ties up to a lock wall. Sometimes living on the boat for thirty days at a time, riverboat workers also share stories, songs, and jokes about river work (Sandmel 1990:10-11). Lock and dam operators, who maintain appropriate water levels in river channels, may share riverboat lore and learn much of their job traditionally.
![](images/Delta/24_1e.jpg)
Because of the threats of flooding and malaria, the flat, rich flood plain along the Mississippi and its tributaries came to settlement and farming later than the adjacent areas. Termed buckshot because it dried into hard black pellets—and gumbo when it was wet, because of its stickiness—Delta topsoil, laid down by centuries of flooding, was "such perfect soil for raising cotton that people considered it worth the risk long before flood control was possible" (Bolsterli 1991:5). In the early 19th century Anglo-American pioneer farmers and slaves settled in the river bottoms. Towns became centers for the lumber industry, which riverboats and railroads helped grow, until no virgin timber remained (Whayne and Gatewood 1993:216). Jewish, Syrian, and Lebanese immigrants entered the Delta mainly as peddlers and later became merchants with businesses such as dry goods. To replace slave labor after the Civil War, planters brought in Italian and Chinese workers. After World War II, these groups opened small groceries and restaurants in such Arkansas towns as Helena, Blytheville, Pine Bluff, and Holly Grove; and in Ferriday, Vidalia, and Monroe, Louisiana. Some Irish also came as laborers and tenant farmers and were quickly assimilated. In 1878, Germans from the Midwest came to the Delta and brought their farming technology; one of the larger groups, led by a Lutheran minister, purchased a 7,747-acre plantation near Stuttgart, Arkansas, which would become the center of the Arkansas rice industry (Whayne and Gatewood 1993:153, 165-66).
![](images/Delta/24_2e.jpg)
Worked by slaves before the Civil War and by sharecroppers and paid laborers after the war, large tracts of cotton grew even larger with the advent of mechanized, corporate farms. Delta planters traditionally have taken mainly a supervisory role: giving orders, arranging loans, doing the paperwork, absorbing the profit and loss, risk and worry. However, some planters also grew up working in the fields, plowing, chopping, and picking cotton. Along with their work in the home, many Delta women and children also did farm work. Liddy Aiken, an African-American woman from Wheatly, Arkansas, summed up the work ethic in 1938 when she was sixty-two: "We farm. I done everything could be thought of on a farm. I ploughed some less than five years ago.... I learnt to work. I learnt my boys to go with me to the field and not be ashamed to sweat. It's healthy. They all works" (Whayne and Gatewood 1993:141).
Lake Providence, Louisiana, planter Grady Brown relates the daily routine of his boyhood on his father's Panola cotton plantation and the typical changes wrought on these traditions by growing mechanization:
When we grew up, we were able to walk behind a plow at probably six or seven.... We were tall enough to reach up and hold the handles.... Daddy gave us all a mule and plow and put three or four of us in the field, and we just plowed the same cotton field every day. We had ninety-five tenant families on the farm.... They used to ring a big bell up on the mule barn and all the hands would be at the barn catching their mules.... They all came to work with an old syrup bucket, and that was their dinner. They would carry some peas and what they called hoe cake.... This went on for four or five years, and then the tractors came about the starting of the war, 1942-44, and then we switched over to tractors, and the first year we ... lost forty families. They migrated to Dallas, or Chicago, or California. And when I came home in 1961, we had about twelve or fifteen families living on the farm.
Cotton also generated work in cotton gins, compresses, and crop dusting. Illustrating the importance of versatility and on-the-job learning, John Warner, from Rayville, Louisiana, began as a water boy at a local compress in 1937 and advanced to calling the press from the 1950s to the 1970s, when he was finally named foreman - the first African American in the region to hold the position. Undoubtedly, his promotion to foreman resulted from his twenty years as the press caller, when he would shout instructions and sing blues work songs to pace the monotonous yet dangerous activity of the compress. These songs were patterned after the work songs from the cotton fields and prison chain gangs. Warner recounts the typical learning process of such jobs: "The older men - they'll watch you and they find out you want to do different things. They would always take the time out and show you and tell you how to take advantage and how to do certain things." However, the same men might play tricks on inexperienced workers; Warner remembers someone being sent to the office to fetch a cotton saw - a nonexistent tool. Such joking behavior is probably still found around today's computer-operated compresses.
![](images/Delta/24_3e.jpg)
In the early 1900s, mechanization and larger farm acreage turned Delta farmers to a more efficient method of fertilization and pest control - crop dusting, or aerial application, the current professional's term. Having been fascinated by flying in his childhood, Owen Dale Holland and his older brother, from Jonesville, Louisiana, started dusting their own crops and later developed a family crop dusting business. Crop dusters also learn the specialized language concerning equipment, techniques, and the different jobs of their trade in a traditional manner. And they, too, tell and suffer through jokes. A crop duster for forty-two years, Charlie Davis recalls being teased at his wedding about his survival chances: "When we got married, the preacher asked me what did I do. I said I was in crop dusting. He told my wife that the life span of a crop duster was two years."
The public regards crop dusters with some ambivalence. On the one hand, they are "crazy nuts" taking risks and putting poisonous chemicals into the environment. On the other hand, as Arthur Woolson puts it, "You're almost next to God to those farmers when you're dusting those crops because upon your efforts depend his success. If you fail, he fails. If you win, he wins." Holland explains the modern farmer's plight and the complex, symbiotic relationship of the two occupations, justifying why the crop duster is "willing to take a risk":
Most of the people don't understand to begin with why you are aerial applicating. It is simply because they have no background knowledge of farming. They still want to see a farmer in overalls and a pitchfork and a straw hat. Today, with finances and economics, you do now or you don't get it done. You've got to have someone that is qualified to do the job. Farmers are working under a lot of pressure themselves these days. We know that; we have farmed before. And a farmer comes here with that look on his face; you know he is serious. You don't play with him much; you get very serious with him, and you deal with him from that point on because of his problems. When he comes to get the airplane, he's got to have help, and you know that, so you take that into consideration.
Crop dusting, which in Tallulah, Louisiana, grew into Delta Airlines, also is important for soybeans and rice, which diversified Delta farming during World War II. The popularity and higher price of soybeans caused many farmers to plant even more soybeans during the fifties and sixties; this brought heavy dirt-moving machinery operators from the Midwest, including Mennonites, to level the land further. Many Mennonites such as the community near Lake Providence, Louisiana, stayed in the region, thus changing the cultural landscape as well.
While the flattened land eased cultivation and irrigation, it also increased drainage and flood problems. Flooding is a periodic problem in the backwater areas of rivers which run into the Mississippi. Many stories about floods concern destruction of crops, homes, and businesses, and traditions of moving people and livestock to higher ground. Since early farming days, livestock—especially mules and cattle—has been important for the Delta farmer. In some areas range land was open, and livestock even grazed on the levees. However, when floods threatened, local levee boards hired levee guards to watch for drifting debris, water seepage, and sand boils. As an eighteen-year-old guard in 1927, Myles Smith recalls an experience he had one night returning to St. Joseph, Louisiana:
Just as we got into town, a mule had bogged down in this levee right in front of the Masonic Hall, and they was scared the levee was going to break right there, and everybody that could pack a sack was on that levee throwing sacks. I guess that mule's bones are still in that levee. He went down in there, and there was no way to get him out. They just put sacks in there on top of him.... That was a pretty rough night.
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Today's farmers still maintain herds of cattle with little open range. Calling themselves ranchers, they manifest typical cowboy culture with some characteristics peculiar to the Delta, such as the use of Catahoula cur dogs for round-ups and herding cattle and free-ranging hogs. Stories about the breed's origins abound in the Delta: one says it is a hybrid of the red wolf and mastiffs brought by DeSoto's Spanish explorers in 1542, another traces the dog to the Natchez Indian tribe.
Traditionally, Delta farmers also risk huge debts - a recurring theme in narratives. As described by Margaret Bolsterli, the Delta plantation's peculiar method of farming after the Civil War was based on "indebtedness:
The landowner borrowed enough money from a bank to make a crop and then lent it to his sharecroppers, most of whom were black, against half the proceeds. He furnished seed, tools, animals to pull the plows, and guarantees of enough money to clothe, feed, and provide medical care for the sharecropper's family until harvest, when the tenant would be obliged to give the landowner half the crop and then, out of his own half, pay back the money he had "drawn" for his and his family's expenses. The owner then would repay the bank for his "furnish" loan. If no money was made, the chain of indebtedness was carried over to the next year (1991:6-7).
Contemporary, often corporately owned plantations still rely on banks to finance expensive farm equipment such as $100,000 cotton combines. Even buying the equipment secondhand at traditional farm-equipment auctions requires financing, according to West Monroe, Louisiana, auctioneer Ike Hamilton; he notes that farmers attending must already have arranged their bank loans before the bidding starts.
Also requiring a huge initial outlay is commercial catfish farming, begun in the 1960s and now flourishing in the Delta. It can cost $200,000 - $300,000 to build and stock eight fifteen-acre ponds, to which must be added an annual feed bill of $150,000. Mississippian Larry Cochran, who farmed the same land as his father and grandfather, gave up row cropping his one thousand acres of cotton and soybeans in 1985 to raise catfish. "I remember my grandfather borrowing eighty thousand dollars at the bank for a year to buy his seed and get a few hundred acres of cotton planted. He could feed both his and my dad's families, and now it costs me sixty thousand dollars a month to feed twenty-three ponds of fish" (Schweid 1992:27).
Catfish farming has had a profound effect on commercial river fishing, which had thrived in earlier decades in the Delta and supplied fish to markets as far north as Chicago. While today's fishermen still brave the dangers of the river, their markets are decreasing, with only small, independent fish markets purchasing their catfish, buffalo, and gar. Traditional river crafts that have survived to support this endangered occupation include net making, often done by women, and boatbuilding. Commercial products and net companies such as the Jonesville, Louisiana, Champlin Net Co., which builds nets to order, have affected these crafts. Some fishermen who still knit their own hoop nets purchase commercial fiberglass hoops instead of making the older-style white oak hoops. Gill and trammel nets are more often purchased today, but wire catfish traps and wood slat traps are still made by fishermen such as Kenneth Hebert, who learned fishing crafts from his grandfather. Representing what is left of the subsistence farmers in the swamps of the Catahoula Lake area, Hebert also raises some wild hogs, hunts, traps, and makes related crafts such as hunting horns for calling dogs.
Throughout the Delta, traditional Southern occupational crafts are sparse, reflecting the massive changes both on water and land. Still, gourd or tiered wooden birdhouses atop tall poles stand near farm buildings to lure purple martins, which eat their weight in mosquitoes every day. While the traditional yeoman farms and the aristocratic plantations have faded along with the steamboat, the water, mosquitoes, fertile soil, risks, and rewards remain.
Works Cited & Suggested Reading
Bolsterli, Margaret Jones. 1991. Born in the Delta. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
Daniel, Pete. 1985. Breaking the Land: The Transformation of Cotton, Tobacco, and Rice Cultures since 1880. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
Roach, Susan, H. F. Gregory, and Maida Owens. 1994. The Delta Folklife Project: An Overview. In The Louisiana Folklife Festival Program Book. Monroe: Louisiana Folklife Festival.
Sandmel, Ben. 1990. Mississippi River Folklore. In The Louisiana Folklife Festival Program Book. Baton Rouge: Louisiana Folklife Program.
Schweid, Richard. 1992. Catfish and the Delta: Confederate Fish Farming in the Mississippi Delta. Berkeley: Ten Speed Press.
Whayne, Jeannie, and Willard B. Gatewood. 1993. The Arkansas Delta. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press.
Suggested Listening
Afro-American Spirituals, Worksongs, and Ballads. Library of Congress Recording AAFSL3.
Blake, Clifford. Cornbread for Your Husband and Biscuits for Your Man: Mr. Clifford Blake, Sr., Calls the Cotton Press. Louisiana Folklife Recording Series 001.
Mississippi Folk Voices. Southern Folklore Record 101.
Negro Folk Songs from the Mississippi State Penitentiary. Tradition TLA 1020.
Negro Work Songs and Calls. Library of Congress Recording AAFSL 8.
Roots of the Blues. Atlantic SD1348.