Populism: Georgia Farmers’ Alliance and the Colored Farmers’ Alliance

To address disparities in farming, such as the broken systems of sharecropping and tenant farming, organizations like the Farmers’ Alliance formed to protect farmers and ensure that their farms were sustainable and prosperous. However, these organizations were not open to African Americans. In response, The Colored Farmers’ Alliance (CFA) was established in central Texas in 1886. Following the organization’s formation in Texas, the Georgia Colored Farmers’ Alliance was organized in 1889 starting with the first sub-alliance in Screven County. The alliance-owned stores where Black Farmers could sell their crops, purchase supplies at a lower rate, and take out loans at better open market rates. And with many members—90,000 across 240 chapters—the CFA was integral in electing African Americans to local county positions and its members to the state legislature.[1]

[1] Allen, Roger. “African-American Farmers Associations Form in Georgia.” Statesboro Herald. Statesboro Herald, September 25, 2020. https://www.statesboroherald.com/life/african-american-farmers-associations-form-georgia/.