AANI - September 25 - October 1, 2017

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WWW.AFRAMNEWS.COM

SEPTEMBER 25 - OCTOBER 1, 2017 | FREE

AframNews

VOL. 22 ISSUE 36

AframNews

African-American News and Issues Newspaper

Did You Know?

“FORTY ACRES AND A MULE”

Greater Houston Area

Do Not Remove the Confederate Statues Colin Powell

Charles Drew Benjamin Banneker

In 1870, only around 30,000 African Americans in the South owned land (usually small plots), compared with 4 million others who did not. Power In Land Ownership In 2012, the number of black farmers in the United States was 44,629. This was a 12 percent increase percent since 2007, when the last agriculture census was conducted. That number is up 12 percent since 2007; most live in southern states. Nationally, black farmers were 1.4 percent of the country’s 3.2 million farmers in 2012. Ninety percent lived in twelve southern states.

Alexander T. Augusta

“Though, they quietly lost the war they put up them statues in our damn face, as a reminder that we still stand…” – Roy Douglas Malonson SEE PAGE 4

Marcus Garvey

Robert Smalls

Medgar Evans

MEET MR. ANDREW RICHARDS FOUNDER & CEO OF

Texas has more Black farmers than any other state, but they make up only 3 percent of the state’s total farmers. Freestone County, Texas, had more black farmers than any other county. Black farmers make up a larger share of total farmers in Mississippi (12%), Louisiana (7%), South Carolina (7%), Alabama (6%), and Georgia (4%). The 33,371 Black farms combined for an economic impact of $846 million in agricultural products and operated 3.6 million acres of farmland. History’s “Smoke and Mirrors” about Early Black Landownership With the southern economy in disarray after the abolition of slavery and the devastation of the Civil War, conflict arose between many white landowners attempting to reestablish a labor force and freed blacks seeking economic independence and autonomy. Many former slaves expected the federal government to give them a certain amount of land as compensation for all the work they had done during the slavery era. Union General William T. Sherman had encouraged this expectation in early 1865 by granting a number of freed men 40 acres each of the abandoned land left in the wake of his army.

SEE PG 5

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