Contents i i 



Page 



Chapter III. City and Inter-State Migration 122 



Small Towns and Villages 123 



Large Southern Cities 131 



Inter-State Movements 132 



Classes Moving 135 



Causes — Housing Difficulties, Protection and Justice in 



the Courts, Churches, Schools 138 



Chapter IV. Results of Migration 148 



Population — Sex, Fecundity, Vitality, Defective Classes, 



Economic and Social Classes 149 



Organizations — Schools, Churches, Industry 156 



Race Relations — In Areas Gaining, and in Areas Losing. 166 



Conclusion 169 



Summary 169 



Constructive Measures 172 



Bibliography 181 



Appendix 187 



TABLES 



1. Cotton States: Increase in Negro Population and Negro 



Farms, 1900-1910 18 



2. Georgia: Farms by Size in Acres, 1860-1910 43 



3. Georgia: Land Proprietorships, by Size in Acres, 1873-1902 46 



4. Georgia : Farms According to Tenure, 1880-1910 49 



5. Georgia : Negro and White Proprietorships by Size in 



Acres, 1873-1902 58 



6. Selected Counties, Number and Size of Holdings, 1903 61 



7. Georgia: Farms by Tenure and Color of Farmer, 1900- 



1910 65 



8. Georgia: Percentage of all Farms Operated by Owners, 



Cash Tenants and Share Tenants 66 



9. Black Belt, Wiregrass and Upper Piedmont: White and 



Colored Farmers by Tenure 67 



10. Details of Tenant Contracts 72 



11. Georgia, and Selected Counties: Factors of Production 



and Yield, Negro Farmers by Tenure, 1909 78 



12. Georgia, Farmers by Term of Occupancy and Color, 1910. 89 



13. Georgia: Rural and Urban Population, 1890-1910 93 



14. Georgia : Village Population, 1910 96 



15. Georgia : Occupations of Negroes, 1910 97 



16. Georgia: Migration of Negroes by County Groups, 1900- 



1910 101 



