Type | Journal Article - The Arkansas Historical Quarterly |
Title | Leaving the Land of Opportunity: Arkansas and the Great Migration |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 64 |
Issue | 3 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2005 |
Page numbers | 245-261 |
URL | http://faculty.nwacc.edu/dvinzant/documents/DonaldHolley.pdf |
Abstract | BETWEEN 1930 AND 1970, almost fifteen million Americans left their homes and farms to seek new opportunities in other states, one of the largest population movements in American history.1 When popular literature and television documentaries describe this migration, the story usually involves black migrants who ride the Illinois Central out of the Mississippi Delta in a desperate escape from the malevolent effects of the mechanical cotton picker.2 Yet this population movement involved more white migrants than black, and they headed to destinations all over the country. These migrants were searching for better jobs rather than fleeing mechanization. |
» | United States - Census of Population and Housing 1960 - IPUMS Subset |
» | United States - Census of Population and Housing 1970 - IPUMS Subset |