HIGH SCHOOL HISTORY
Part Two: Leaving the farm

After the Civil War thousands of Tennesseans left home for factories. Let's talk about this process and what it entailed.

PHOTO: TN State Library and Archives

Take a look at this photograph, which we think was taken in West Tennessee in the 1890s. If you look closely, you will see many things that tell you what life was like for many people at that time. First of all, the family appears to consist of several generations and several branches of the family -- aunts, uncles, grandparents, etc.  Everyone is dressed conservatively, as was the custom of that era. Horse and buggy is the method of transportation. The musical instrument that the woman is holding appears to be very important to her, and it appears to be homemade. The baby stroller is also homemade.

 

During this time period, many people were leaving family homesteads such as this one and moving to new factories. They were turning away from the extended family (grandparents, aunts and uncles) and moving toward the core family (usually consisting of two parents, children, and no one else). They were turning toward the promise of a regular paycheck and turning away from the dependence on the family crop.

 

One of the many Tennesseans who went through this transition was Josie Coleman, a young girl who left her family farm in Maury County in 1914 to work for Nashville's Hartsford Hosiery Mill. Click here to read about what she said about the experience.


A mother and daughter plant a garden in DeKalb County in the 1940s.
PHOTO: TN State Library and Archives

This was a completely different lifestyle than what people had experienced before, and it certainly affected the kids. Let’s say that you live on a farm in Tennessee in 1890. As soon as you are old enough to help, you are helping out every day – doing things like milking cows, feeding the animals, plowing. School is something you do when you can, but working on the farm comes first. You see both your parents a lot, and you also see a lot of your uncles, aunts, cousins, and grandparents, because most of them live close enough to visit maybe once a week. But you don’t live in a town or in a neighborhood, so you spend a lot of time alone and with your brothers and sisters. And you spend a lot of time wandering around, fishing, hunting, this sort of thing. So you can't play a video game, and you've never heard of a video game, but you can catch and skin a catfish faster than you could imagine today.


Students reading in the doorway of the Little Greenbrier School in Elkmont.
PHOTO: TN State Library and Archives

Now imagine it is 1892 and your family has left the farm because your dad took a job at a factory in a city. You live in a small house in an area where there are many other small houses and a lot of kids to play with. You don’t see nearly as much of your dad, though, because he leaves early in the morning and only comes home at around dinnertime. Meanwhile there is no farm to work on, and no big piece of land to wander around and fish and hunt on. It used to be that you got in trouble for hunting on your neighbor’s farm. Now you get in trouble for hanging out with kids that your parents don’t want you to hang out with. And you now have to go to school more than you used to.

 

Obviously, not every family in Tennessee went through this change, because there are still young people in the state who wake up every day at 4 a.m. to milk cows. But most families did go through this change at some time during the last century and a half. And there are major parts of Tennessee's culture and economy that exist today because of this transition and the problems people had to deal with because of it. For example:

* The early country music stars in Nashville and the early blues music stars in Memphis were all people who left farms for the big city and then wrote about the struggles that they faced when they got there. (More on this later).

* With all the people leaving farm life and their extended families for jobs in the city, thousands of people bought insurance for the first time (prior to this shift in demographics, most people didn't have insurance and counted on their extended families when bad things happened). Much of this insurance was sold by city-based companies such as the National Life and Accident Insurance Co. of Nashville, Provident Life & Casualty Insurance Co. of Chattanooga, and the (black owned) Universal Life Insurance Co. of Memphis.

This is what the Ducktown Basin looked like as recently as the 1960s.
Industrial operations

Elsewhere on the Tennessee History for Kids web site are several examples of the kind of industrial operations that were popping up all over the Volunteer State in the late 1800s.

* Polk County, in southeast Tennessee, became one of the largest producers of copper in the world, and that had a long-term impact on the environment there. Click here to read about this and to explore the Ducktown Basin Museum.

* Coal mining also became big in Tennessee. Today, one of the best places to learn about this is the Dunlap Coke Ovens Park. Click here to take a virtual tour.

Workers at the Musgrave Pencil Co.
PHOTO: Musgrave Pencil Co.
* Meanwhile there were factories being developed all over Tennessee that made everything from clothes to furniture. One of the oldest in the state today is Shelbyville's Musgrave Pencil Co. -- the first pencil factory in a town that eventually became known as "Pencil City, U.S.A." Click here to see it.
The Werthan Bag plant in Nashville
PHOTO: TN State Library & Archives
* And click here to read a first-person description, written in 1898, of the Phoenix Cotton Mill, a large textile factory in Nashville that was typical of many such operations in that era.
FURTHER READING

In 1930 several Tennessee writers wrote I'll Take My Stand, which contains essays about changes in Southern culture that occurred when people left farms for the city. Although the book must be taken in its context (its authors had attitudes that many would find racist today), it is indicative of how many Southerners felt about changes to their region.

And here are some other sections of Tennessee History for Kids that talk about this era:
Boyd, Richard
Church, Robert
Murfree, Mary
Napier, James
Rugby virtual tour
slavery and publishing

QUIZ

1. Explain how your lifestyle would have changed if your family left the farm to move to a city in the 1890s.
2. Explain why Tennessee's insurance industry grew because of people leaving the farm to move to the city.

ASSIGNMENT: Find an old, abandoned manufacturing operation in your county and research its history.

The next things we'll be talking about -- World War I, the construction of a massive gunpowder facility, and the Influenza Epidemic of 1918 -- are grim. Click here.

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