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Cotton Sack Memories: Freida Lawrence, Arkansas

As told by Buffalo Island Central EAST Students
Buffalo Island, Arkansas

Story Narrative:

A burlap-like sack holds freshly picked cotton and rests on the floor.

Freida Lawrence recalls what it was like when she was a young child and her mother worked in the cotton fields in Arkansas. \

This story is part of Buffalo Island Central EAST's online story map From Swamp to Farmland and exhibits at the Buffalo Island Museum, which both trace the the history of agriculture in the area. Either click on the video to watch it or follow the instructions below to make it magically come to life like it does in the Museum by scanning this "Cotton Sack" picture in the HP Reveal app.

Freida Lawrence (00:00): In 1961, I was about 2 years old, and I remember my mama picking cotton and she would put it in this long white cloth bag that had a shoulder strap. And sometimes her hands would bleed from the holes because they were dry, and she would wrap rags around them and just keep working.

Freida Lawrence (00:28): And I remember her dragging that, she called it pick sack. So she'd drag it to the field and I remember riding on it. And when she got it full, I think it held to 80 pounds, when she got it full, it was weighed, and my dad would lift it onto this big hook with a scale on it.

Freida Lawrence (00:48): But they would weigh it and it was how much a cent percent each pound weighed. That's what she would make a day. She would pick like 200 pounds a day, and if it was 3 cents a pound should work from daylight to sundown for $6.00, $6.00.


Asset ID: 2018.20.20
Themes: The Way We Worked, farming, Arkansas, cotton, work, tenacity, childhood, memories, AR, Augmented Reality, agriculture, technology
Date recorded: 2018
Length of recording: 01:13 m
Related traveling exhibition: The Way We Worked
Sponsor or affiliated organization: Buffalo Island Central High School, EAST (Environmental and Spatial Technology, Inc.); Buffalo Island Museum, Arkansas
More informationhttps://museumonmainstreet.org/blog-node/storytelling-augmented-reality-rural-arkansas

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