The Library of Congress > Linked Data Service
  Label Dataset Type Subdivision Identifier
1. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 [Untitled photo, possibly related to: Day laborers, cotton pickers, waiting to be paid off at end of day's work. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas]

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19823888
2. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 Local agricultural day laborers, potato workers, after a day's work near Spiro, Oklahoma

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19827150
3. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 [Untitled photo, possibly related to: Day laborers, cotton pickers, waiting to be paid off at end of day's work. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas]

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19823873
4. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 Cotton pickers, day laborers, waiting to be paid at end of day's work. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19904965
5. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 Spiro (vicinity), Oklahoma. Local agricultural day laborers, potato workers, after a day's work

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19827147
6. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 Local agricultural day laborers, potato workers, after a day's work near Spiro, Oklahoma

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19827149
7. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 [Untitled photo, possibly related to: Day laborers, cotton pickers, waiting to be paid off at end of day's work. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas]

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19823872
8. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 Day laborers, cotton pickers, waiting to be paid off at end of day's work. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19823874
9. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 [Untitled photo, possibly related to: Day laborers, cotton pickers, waiting to be paid off at end of day's work. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas]

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19823880
10. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 Agricultural day laborer wiping the sweat from his neck after his return home from chopping cotton.This man had once been a tenant farmer and had quit farming because of repeated crop failures and inability to secure good farming land; he then became a day laborer, his entire family working with him in the fields. They chopped cotton, hoed corn, picked cotton, cut spinach and picked up potatoes. However, because they had this established tent home on the banks of the Arkansas River and because they worked in and around this neighborhood, they considered themselves a class above the migrant workers who came in to harvest the crops. This man had planted a small garden back of his tent not for the value of the garden since he said that the sun would get it before the vegetables were mature, but because it would prevent any of the migrant families from camping near them. He said, "Those migrants don't live the way we do, course they don't have anything to live with." Near Webbers Falls, Oklahoma

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19907043
11. Wolcott, Marion Post, 1910-1990 Negro day laborer moving from one man's farm to another to get work. He wasn't needed any more by former "employer." The son of his new employer said his father used to have tenants but that they "skinned" him too often by moving out on him all the time. So he just hires by the day now. Near Madison, Georgia 1939 Spring?

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19845778
12. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 Cotton pickers, day laborers, waiting to be paid at end of day's work. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas 1938 Oct

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19904965
13. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 Spiro (vicinity), Oklahoma. Local agricultural day laborers, potato workers, after a day's work 1939 June

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19827147
14. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 Local agricultural day laborers, potato workers, after a day's work near Spiro, Oklahoma 1939 June

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19827149
15. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 [Untitled photo, possibly related to: Day laborers, cotton pickers, waiting to be paid off at end of day's work. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas] [1938 Sept.]

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19823872
16. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 Day laborers, cotton pickers, waiting to be paid off at end of day's work. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas 1938 Sept

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19823874
17. Wolcott, Marion Post, 1910-1990 Negro day laborer moving from one man's farm to another to get work. He wasn't needed any more by former "employer." The son of his new employer said his father used to have tenants but that they "skinned" him too often by moving out on him all the time. So he just hires by the day now. Near Madison, Georgia 1939 Spring?

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19845777
18. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 [Untitled photo, possibly related to: Day laborers, cotton pickers, waiting to be paid off at end of day's work. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas] [1938 Sept.]

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19823880
19. Wolcott, Marion Post, 1910-1990 Negro day laborer moving from one man's farm to another to get work. He wasn't needed any more by former "employer." The son of his new employer said his father used to have tenants but that they "skinned" him too often by moving out on him all the time. So he just hires by the day now. Near Madison, Georgia 1939 Spring?

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19845779
20. Lange, Dorothea Oklahoma roadside encounter day laborers. "After three years, dry years, not a thing a fellow like me can do. I'd get out and go to California like the rest of them if I could get ahold of some money and get shed of my cows. Ain't done a day's work in four months" (cut off relief April 1, 1936) 1936 Aug

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19875943


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