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Negro Migration During the War by Emmett J. Scott for Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Oxford University Press pub.
Emmett J. Scott's classic study, Negro
Migration During the War, presents data relating to the causes and consequences
of migration from South to North during World War I. Only the table of contents
and the introduction are included in this pdf; the entire text and transcript are available at books.google.com.
From Chapter II, Causes of the Migration:
The economic motive stands among the foremost reasons for
the decision of the group to leave the South. There are several
ways of arriving at a conclusion regarding the economic forces.
These factors might, for example, be determined by the amount
of unemployment or the extent of poverty in a community
as registered by the prosperity. These facts are important, but
may or may not account wholly for individual action. Except
in a few localities of the South there was no actual misery
and starvation. Nor is it evident that those who left would
have perished from want had they remained. Discontent became
more manifest as comparisons were made between the
existing state of things at home and a much better state of
things elsewhere. It is possible to note in the appeals of the letters a suggestion of a desire simply to improve their living
standards so long as there was an opportunity. In the case
of some there is expressed a praiseworthy providence for
their families; and in others may be found an index to the poverty
and hopelessness of their home communities. In this type
of migration the old order is strangely reversed. Large numbers
of negroes have frequently moved around from State to
State and even within the States of the South in search of more
remunerative employment. A movement to the West or even
about in the South could have proceeded from the same cause,
as in the case of the migration to Arkansas and Oklahoma.
Among the immediate economic causes of the migration were
the labor depression in the South in 1914 and 1915 and the
large decrease in foreign immigration resulting from the World
War. Then came the cotton boll weevil in the summers of
1915 and 1916, greatly damaging the cotton crop over considerable
area, largely in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia
and Florida, and threatening greatly to unsettle farming conditions
in the year 1917. There followed then the cotton price
demoralization and the low price of this product during subsequent
years. The unusual floods during the summer of 1915
over large sections in practically the same States further aggravated
the situation. The negroes, moreover, were generally dissatisfied
because' of the continued low wages which obtained
in the South in spite of the increasing cost of living. Finally,
there was a decided decrease in foreign immigration. The result
was a great demand in the North for the labor of the negro
at wages such as he had never received.
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