Vance E. Beasley

Title

Vance E. Beasley

Description

Biographical Synopsis of Interviewee: Vance E. Beasley was born on March 11, 1916, in Heber Springs, Arkansas; in 1927, his family moved to Heth, Arkansas; he was the third eldest of his six siblings, four brothers and two sisters; with the exception of one of his sisters, the rest of his siblings passed away; he was educated in public schools, but he often went in late and left early in order to help with the crops; in 1939, he graduated from the University of Arkansas with a degree in agriculture; soon after he married, and he and his wife had three children; he later went on to help his father and brother with their farming partnership, CJ Beasley and Sons.

Summary of Interview: Mr. Beasley describes his family and what his life was like growing up; he also talks about his wife and children; during the midfifties, his father asked him to help with the family farm and the partnership of CJ Beasley and Sons; the dwindling labor supply led to their hiring of braceros, particularly for help with cotton, their primary crop; they took on thirty-five to forty braceros per season, and they stayed for contracts of roughly two and a half months; the farmers were required to provide basic necessities such as housing, bedding and cooking supplies; in addition, the braceros were given picking sacks, which were roughly seven feet long and could hold up to one hundred pounds; there was always at least one man in the group of braceros who spoke English and served as a leader; he would receive pay for all the workers and distribute it accordingly; he was also responsible for helping the men buy groceries; Vance repeatedly mentions the incredible work ethic of the braceros; they picked cotton better than any other workers; in fact, he mentions an instance in which he hired workers from Memphis, Tennessee, but they drank too much and did not pick the row of cotton as clean as the braceros did; he found it easier to pay them to leave; eventually, mechanization took over and eliminated the need for manual labor, which in his opinion, ultimately led to the end of the bracero program.

Creator

Mireya Loza

Date

2008-09-24

Subject

Farmer

Rights

Institute of Oral History, University of Texas at El Paso

Language

English

title (Spanish)

Vance E. Beasley

creator (Spanish)

Mireya Loza

Rights Holder

Institute of Oral History, University of Texas at El Paso

Online Submission

No

Title

Vance E. Beasley

Creator

Mireya Loza

Date

2008-09-24

Rights

Institute of Oral History, University of Texas at El Paso

Language

English

Original Format

Digital, WAV, MP3

Duration

59:56

Bit Rate/Frequency

24 k/ 96 bit

Interviewer

Mireya Loza

Interviewee

Vance E. Beasley

Location

Heth, Arkansas

File Name Identifier

Beasley_ARK05

Citation

Mireya Loza, “Vance E. Beasley,” Bracero History Archive, accessed November 16, 2024, https://braceroarchive.org/items/show/3078.