59 pages • 1 hour read
Turpentine has long been part of the history of the American South. According to Everhart, turpentine farms and camps became popular in the United States during the Colonial era, during which the navy made ships out of wood and used turpentine and tar to seal the ships (363). In the early 20th century, turpentine farming remained a successful and vital business in the United States, particularly in the South. People frequently used turpentine in household remedies, paint thinners, and wax.
Throughout the early half of the 20th century, labor camps promised work and stability for workers, especially for desperate working-class people during the Great Depression. These included turpentine camps, which were common in the South due to the region’s large forests of pine trees, the most common source of the sap used to make turpentine.
Though they promised hard work and opportunities for workers, these camps offered brutal working and living conditions for minimal pay under a system that strongly favored owners. In her Author’s Note, Everhart explains that she read Zora Neale Hurston’s observations of the turpentine camps in Florida in the work Mules and Men and learned the following:
[C]amps used a peonage system, ensuring workers were always at a financial disadvantage.
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