Braceros perform stoop labor and hoe rows in a field in California.

NAD-2004.0138.31.12.jpg

Title

Braceros perform stoop labor and hoe rows in a field in California.

Description

Original Caption: "Stoop labor" - monotonous, exhausting work - is an operation no machine can do. Men are switched back and forth from hourly to piece-rate jobs at the will of the overseer, and get paid at whichever rate is lower. (Jubilee: A Magazine for the Church and Her People, April 1957, p. 41.) In the fields, Mexican braceros are needed by growers for the "stoop labor" jobs U.S. workers don't want, regardless of pay - 80 c an hour up to $1,75 for average workers. (Business Week, September 24, 1960, p. 51)

Creator

Leonard Nadel

Date

1956-00-00

Source

The Leonard Nadel Collection, NMAH. Catalogue #: 2004.0138.31.12; Negative #: NAD-2004.0138.31.12; Roll #: 31

Publisher

National Museum of American History

Contributor

National Museum of American History, Division of Work and Industry

Rights

Restricted: no; Contact: NMAH Rights & Reproductions by email before distribution - rightsreproductions@si.edu

Relation

See Nadel Footnotes, 24.

Spatial Coverage

California

Rights Holder

National Museum of American History

Citation

Leonard Nadel, “Braceros perform stoop labor and hoe rows in a field in California.,” Bracero History Archive, accessed November 27, 2024, https://braceroarchive.org/es/items/show/2200.