My
life on the farm during the Great Depression
more nearly resembled farm life of fully
2,000 years ago than farm life today.
I have reflected
on it often since that time; social
eras change at their own curious pace,
depending on geography and technology
and a host of other factors. It is
incredible with what speed those changes
have totally transformed both the
farming methods and the very life-style
I knew in my boyhood.
- Jimmy Carter, 1975
Our Childhood Home
Our farm was at Archery,
about three miles west of Plains,
Georgia. Of course, Archery was not
incorporated or organized in any way;
it was just the name of the rural
community and train stop.
- Jimmy Carter, 1975
The
day the Carter family moved to the
farm in 1928 was memorable. Earl Carter
forgot his house key and had hi 4-year-old
son Jimmy crawl through a window to
open the front door. The family never
remembered the door being locked again.
The home has been restored to its
appearance, just before electricity
was installed in 1938. "When
electricity came to the farm,"
Jimmy Carter recalled, "an almost
unbelievable change took place in
our lives." This farm was home
to Jimmy Carter until he departed
for college in 1941. The Carters grew
peanuts, cotton, and sugar cane as
cash crops. They also raised vegetables
and livestock on this 360-acre farm.
The store adjacent to the Carter home
contained various rural necessities
for sale: canned goods, coffee, lamp
wicks, kerosene, soap, lard, tobacco,
overalls, shoes, flour, sugar, cornmeal,
castor oil, and homemade syrup. Earl
Carter also sold hams, pork shoulders,
and sausage which had been cured in
the smokehouse. Farm workers and neighbors
could buy their goods on credit and
settle their bill on payday, which
was Saturday.
Farm animals were tended such as cows,
guinea hens, ducks, geese, and pigs.
Jimmy also had his own pets to take
care of such as dogs, Shetland ponies,
and occasional calves and pigs for
Future Farmer of America projects.
Dogs were constant companions; they
were used for playmates and also for
hunting squirrels, rabbits, coons,
possums, and other small game.
Although chores kept the family busy,
there was always time for recreational
activities. A clay tennis court was
located between the house and the
store. The Carter family was known
for its competitive spirit. The girls
had a playhouse adjacent to the Carter
home. Fishing hunting, reading, playing
with homemade toys, and listening
to their father's battery-powered
radio were also favorite pastimes.
The Community Around Us
In the undefined community
of Archery, there lived two permanent
families who were white, one my own
family and the other that of the Seaboard
Railroad section foreman. There were
usually one or two more transient
white families and about twenty-five
black families in the community.
Jimmy Carter, 1975
The
town of Plains was for the Carter
children the center of commerce, education,
and religion. During his childhood
Jimmy Carter didn't consider himself
part of the Plains society, but always
thought of himself as a visitor when
he entered what he called that "metropolitan"
community. He attended his school
and church in town and could even
travel to nearby Americus on occasion,
but his life was mostly tied to his
home in Archery.
The small rural community consisted
of a train stop, the St. Mark African-Methodist-Episcopal
(A.M.E.) church (located 1/2-mile
southwest of the Carter home), a school
for black youth, and houses used for
railroad employees. This school for
black youth, known as the Johnson
Home Industrial College, offered primary,
high school, and vocational classes
to male and female African-American
students. Classes taught job skills
to enable students to obtain careers
other than farming.
Life On The Farm
My
black playmates were the ones who
joined me in the field work that was
suitable for younger boys. We were
the ones who "toted" fresh
water to the more adult workers in
the field. We mopped the cotton, turned
sweet potato and watermelon vines,
pruned deformed young watermelons,
toted the stove wood, swept the yards,
carried slop to the hogs, and gathered
eggs - all thankless tasks. But we
also rode mules and horses through
the woods, jumped out of the barn
loft into huge piles of oat straw,
wrestled and fought, fished and swam.
The early years of my life
on the farm were full and enjoyable,
isolated but not lonely. We always
had enough to eat, no economic hardship,
but no money to waste. We felt close
to nature, close to members of our
family, and close to God.
Jimmy Carter, 1975
It was in this rural setting that
Carter grew to adulthood. His enjoyment
of and concerns for the environment,
his farming expertise, his keen business
sense, and his later interest in civil
right were developed as he mopped
cotton, hunted doves, worked in the
fields, raised stock, operated his
father's store on the farm, and interacted
with his father's employees.
Some
of the jobs were enjoyable; some were
pure drudgery. One of the most unpleasant
jobs on the farm was mopping cotton.
Boll weevils were a problem during
the 1920s. A mixture of arsenic, molasses,
and water was used to kill the weevils.
Farm workers would dip a mop into
the bucket containing the poison mixture
and apply a small amount of it into
the bud of each cotton plant. The
job was given to the boys and Jimmy
Carter hated this task. His trousers,
legs, and bare feet would become saturated
with the syrupy mess. Flies would
swarm around him and at night he took
off his trousers and stood them in
the corner because they were so stiff.
Although farm work was hard, most
of it was enjoyable. Hauling cotton
to the gin or watermelons to the railroad
was always exciting. Working in the
blacksmith shop on the farm was challenging.
Most of their food was raised on the
farm. Sweet potatoes were a major
part of the family's diet. Other crops
raised were watermelons, corn, black-eyed
peas, cabbage, Irish potatoes, pecans,
and beans. The hours of work meant
days were long on the farm, from sunup
until sundown.

Cotton
was a primary cash crop in the Plains
community, but there was a growing
trend toward raising peanuts. Jimmy
always remembered his father's most
prominent crop as peanuts. Jimmy Carter
was a businessman even as young as
five years old when he sold boiled
peanuts on the streets of Plains.
He would earn about $1.00 per day
gross income selling peanuts and on
Saturdays he could sell more. He would
get up early on Saturday morning and
fill up his buckets with choice peanuts.
They would be washed and boiled in
salt water and then he would rush
through his morning farm work. After
breakfast Jimmy would walk the railroad
tracks to Plains carrying the peanuts
in two large baskets. When he got
to Plains he sold the peanuts for
a nickel a bag.
Most Archery residents worked as
sharecroppers, tenant farmers, or
day laborers on farms. Sharecroppers
and tenant farmers, who sometimes
paid rent for the property that they
farmed, worked the land for a share
of the crop. Jack and Rachel Clark
were day laborers who lived in a cabin
on the Carter farm. They were provided
a place to live and earned a salary
for their work. Mr. Clark tended mules
and rang the cast iron bell to wake
the farm workers each morning. He
also took care of the barn, the yard,
the vegetable garden, and collected
wood for the fireplaces in the Carter
home. Mrs. Clark was as close to the
Carter family as a "second mother"
could be. She sometimes worked picking
crops and cared for the Carter children
when their mother, Lillian Carter,
worked as a nurse. Jimmy Carter's
young life was shaped by Rachel Clark
who he remembered as being a close
companion, confidante, and someone
who enhanced his fishing skills.
The
impact of the Carter family's environment
during childhood cannot be overestimated.
The location, their family life, their
relationships with neighbors, and
this place in time each factored into
the development of the Carter children.
Their upbringing and the things that
were important to them guided their
formation as adults. Their childhood
environment serves as an example of
the past guiding the future.
James Earl Carter, Sr. and his family
moved into this house in 1928, six
years after it had been built by the
Plexico family. The house is typical
of a middle class rural dwelling in
southwestern Georgia during the 1930s.
Heating was originally accomplished
by fireplaces and wood stoves. Initially,
there was no running water and electricity
was not available until 1938. This
farm was sold by Earl Carter to T.
Richard Downer in 1949. The Downer
family owned the property until 1994
when it was purchased by the National
Park Service. The site now consists
of 17.22 acres of the original 360-acre
farm which includes the residence
and surrounding structures. The site
is restored to its appearance before
electricity was installed in 1938.
Tour President Carter's farm: Click
Here.
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This page was produced with permission
from the National Park Service.
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