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≡ I Ain't Got No Home ≡

 
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Died Upon the Cabin Floor

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"Was a-farmin on the shares, and I was always poor;
My crops I lay into the banker's store.
My wife took down and died upon the cabin floor,
And I ain't got no home in this word anymore."


 
Prior to the onset of the Great Depression, sharecroppers were a common sect of workers in the southern and mid-Atlantic portions of the United States. These tenant farmers worked and lived on a plot of land, but only received a miniscule portion of the profits, plunging many into a prolonged state of financial instability. Although the 1930's marked the end of this occupation, few would mourn its loss.