The Young Black Farmers Defying A Legacy of Discrimination

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Published 2019-11-23
Kendrick Ransome started out farming a few years ago with just a hoe, a rake, and a shovel.

He could have used support getting his hog and vegetable business off the ground, but he was wary of asking institutions for help. “My big brother told me, ‘Stay away from loans,’” said Ransome. In 1925, most farmers in his rural hometown of Edgecombe County, North Carolina, were black. But now, the 26-year-old is an anomaly.

“When they did take out loans and they were unable to pay them back, you lose everything you got — that’s including your farm and your land for your family.”

Ransome’s fear of institutions is based in the centuries of discrimination black farmers have faced across the country. But despite that history, he and other young black Americans are reclaiming the trade.

The forces pushing black farmers off their land in the 20th century were manifold, and the impact was devastating. In 1920, there were more than 925,000 black farmers; by 2017, there were fewer than 46,000, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

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All Comments (21)
  • @VICENews
    “They're looking for ways to live out their values. And returning to the land is one dramatic way that they can do that.” WATCH NEXT: The Case for Reparations Goes To Congress - https://youtu.be/CTydxtgfJM8
  • @MrLamont215
    We need more black farmer's and we to teach the youth how to live off the land.
  • I've never thought of slavery when I think of Black Farmers... I think of a Black People owning Land
  • @tiadeese
    Young farmer to hog: "What's up? You sleep good?" 😭😭😭
  • @myabbayah9092
    It always amazes me when people act wierd to stuff that was the norm for our people. Farming is what Black have always done. people need to wake.
  • @uwanan7557
    Omg! I’m feeling very thankful that my family’s 250 acres of land in the Deep South didn’t get taken, though they did try. My great grandfather and family fought hard to keep our land. I wish others could’ve been as fortunate.
  • @jamerson808
    That old man looks amazing to be born in 1947
  • @davidmoore5004
    I'm seeing more Black farms on Facebook these days I'm happy to see it.
  • @xxxxxx-br6ix
    So much respect for Kendrick and I hope he is successful at producing healthy food for his family and community.
  • @monaleon7184
    “ black farmers have always been here “ I felt that ! As a vegan I would to grow my own produce and pass it on to my family
  • @donavan4387
    Y’all got to understand, it was never meant for black people to own land, let alone a lot of land. An acre of land isn’t cheap. So when people see us with land in our name, paid for, its makes some people mad/upset. My family owns 50 acres of land that I hunt on, and I thank God for my family holding on to that land. We own land all over but it’s important to keep it. Build on it, hunt it, and keep it in the family.
  • @lovely-mk4rt
    This is brilliant. These people are hard working, caring, good morals and ethics. And very smart. Lovely 🕊
  • @MsAjefferson
    I am planning on finding my family's land. If land was taken illegally, we have a legal right to get it back.
  • Being a farmer is an honorable job and I wish this man a healthy harvest. In a time where there are many food deserts that impact POC, black farmers are needed more than ever.
  • @Chosen1Ras
    Rastafarian’s in the Virgin Islands are all involved in farming and agriculture, farming is a way of their lives 🙏🏾
  • @MrGelly70
    Control the food, control population
  • @ShwagSoLovelyy
    "The land really was the scene of the crime". That truly hit different...
  • @4Chizkey
    Agriculture and Animal farming is a Billion Dollar industry project..
  • @BothHands1
    farming is awesome! my mom has a farm up in north florida, and i absolutely love it there. she'll put me to work, and it's sweaty dirty work, but when you come in and get showered up after a long day transplanting seedlings to bigger pots and mixing up soil with the right amount of fertilizer and stuff, you feel so accomplished. i always got a good night's sleep after a day outside, and while we're mostly focusing on trees for hardwood or decorative palms, the greenhouse has tons of nice veggies. eating a tomato off the vine has a totally different flavor, it's delicious. oh, and there are chickens too, and legit you can taste their environment in the eggs, the hemp bedding they have, and the fresh grass, all the flavors come through in the eggs and it's amazing. so much respect to this couple, and farmers everywhere. it's hard work, but really important.