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  • Yesterday's seeds, today's harvest

    Los Angeles Times
    June 27, 2004 Sunday
    Home Edition

    Yesterday's seeds, today's harvest;

    Beasts of the Field A Narrative History of California Farmworkers,
    1769-1913 Richard Steven Street Stanford University Press: 904 pp.,
    $75; $29.95 paper * Photographing Farmworkers in California Richard
    Steven Street Stanford University Press: 330 pp., $39.95

    by Mark Arax, Mark Arax, a Times staff writer, is the author of "In
    My Father's Name" and co-author of "The King of California: J.G.
    Boswell and the Making of a Secret American Empire," written with
    Times business editor Rick Wartzman.


    My grandfather, Aram, took the long road to California in the spring
    of 1920. His migration covered 7,000 miles by ship and train. There
    was no turning back.

    Everything along the way seemed so farfetched to him -- the Statue of
    Liberty, the nation's capital, the budding factories of Detroit. It
    wasn't until the tracks reached Fresno that America came true.
    Outside his window, at the foot of the Sierra, the San Joaquin Valley
    shimmered. Vineyards and orchards and vegetable fields, row after
    perfect row. As his train chugged into town, my grandfather kept
    muttering the same words in Armenian. "Just like the old land."

    The old land was a lazy village beneath the Mountain of Mist in
    Bursa, Turkey. Every month the Anatolian sun ripened another fruit,
    but it was the silk from the mulberry that gave the village its
    wealth. "We had a very easy life," he told me. "Our village was too
    prosperous to do its own work. The poor Turkish workers did it all.
    We used to have a name for them -- 'almost like slaves.' "

    My grandfather survived the 1915 genocide at the hands of the Turks
    by hiding in an attic with Maupassant and Baudelaire. He came down
    after a year with plans to attend the Sorbonne University and write
    for a living. Then the letters from his Uncle Yervant in Fresno --
    "watermelons as big as small boats" -- arrived. My grandfather was 19
    when he took the bait.

    He might have been forgiven for assuming the best when his uncle
    drove up to the depot that day in a shiny Model T Ford. It wasn't a
    week later that they headed three hours south on a country road and
    landed in Weedpatch. There, long before the Okies and Steinbeck
    arrived, my grandfather dropped to his hands and knees and began
    picking potatoes. Up and down the valley he trailed the harvest.
    Watermelons, peaches, grapes, oranges and olives. This new land
    wasn't like the old land. My grandfather had become one of the beasts
    of the field.

    He was far luckier, it turned out, than the legions of migrant
    farmhands who came before him, men whose American rebirths and brutal
    journeys are vividly captured by Richard Steven Street in "Beasts of
    the Field," a stunning narrative history of California farmworkers
    from 1769 to 1913. It took my grandfather four seasons working
    alongside his widowed mother, sister and brother to go from fruit
    tramp to farmer. He would watch his brother, Harry, become a cop
    killer in 1934 and his son, Ara, become a murder victim in 1972 after
    both strayed from the farm.

    My grandfather taught me, the oldest child of that murdered son, that
    our drama was part of a larger drama that played out in California
    agriculture long before his arrival. Because I spent years gathering
    his story, I thought I understood why the dreams of so many
    immigrants are swallowed up by the fields. Because I live in the San
    Joaquin Valley, the most productive farm belt in the world, a place
    built on the backs of fieldworkers, I thought I understood their
    lives. For the last six years, I've collected and written the
    narratives of the black sharecroppers, Mexicans and Okies who came
    here to pick the cotton for such giants as J.G. Boswell.

    But "Beasts of the Field" is a history book that reaches into the
    present and changes the way we see things. I now understand why the
    lives of farmworkers so often end in the same broken place. Because
    it has always been this way -- as far back as the native Chumash and
    Gabrielinos who plowed the first fields in the shadow of the missions
    and the Chinese who erected the levees to drain the waters of the
    great Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and the white Europeans who
    threshed the wheat as the giant metal harvester, the farm's first
    breathing machine, snorted and clawed at the earth.

    For the first time, thanks to Street's 25-year labor of love, the
    whole extraordinary tapestry of that early era is before us. A
    photographer, journalist and scholar, Street hails from no academy
    and works for no publication. Logging thousands of miles from field
    to library to newspaper morgue, he has produced a work of monumental
    scholarship. One might ask if the subject hadn't been thoroughly
    mined. Countless academics and journalists, after all, have
    documented in articles and books the peculiar institution that is
    California agriculture. But although readers may believe that Carey
    McWilliams' seminal 1939 work, "Factories in the Field," offered the
    definitive word on the feudal empires of the soil, Street provides a
    far more exhaustive, layered and satisfying portrait. Simply put,
    Street's remarkable book belongs on the short shelf of such
    indispensable works of American history as Oscar Handlin's "The
    Uprooted" and Bernard Bailyn's "Voyagers to the West."

    He steers clear of the polemics and dry scholarly treatments that
    have undermined less ambitious books on the subject. Instead of
    shouting his moral indignation at the lot of farmworkers, Street
    builds his case pound for pound with an assiduous weighing of the
    facts. He does so with language that may not be lyrical but serves
    his chronological narrative well, giving a voice to those who have
    always appeared to us hidden under hats, muffled in bandanas, backs
    to the sun, hands in the earth.

    Notably, Street, who is the Ansel Adams fellow at the Center for
    Creative Photography and a onetime Guggenheim fellow, has
    accomplished this while putting together a companion volume,
    "Photographing Farmworkers in California," that stands out as a
    comprehensive visual record of farm labor from 1850 to the early
    1990s. In the more than 270 images, we see workers picking, striking,
    fighting, dancing, resting, praying and dying in photographs shot
    through the lens of the famous (Dorothea Lange) and the obscure
    (Ernest Lowe). His third volume, set for publication in fall 2005,
    will complete the massive history, focusing on the period 1913 to
    2000 and the farmworkers' struggle to unionize.

    "Beasts of the Field" follows the migrant field hands dawn to dark
    through the early evolutions of a California agriculture destined for
    industrial greatness. First, the missions sought a blend of salvation
    and self-sufficiency. Then the bonanza wheat farms chased the numbing
    notion that bigger is better. Finally, the vineyard and orchard
    growers recognized that the Golden State offered a one-of-a-kind
    union of soil and climate. Why waste it on mere wheat?

    Street gives the reader the look, smell and taste not only of those
    fields but also of the Chinatown opium dens and the skid rows
    crackling with liquor, prostitution and murder where the workers'
    long day ended. Nowhere in the 625 pages of text (and more than 200
    pages of notes) does he shy away from his singular focus, and why
    should he? The story of agriculture is the story of California from
    Junipero Serra, the Franciscan friar who brought the first field
    hands north, to Japanese immigrant Kinji Ushijima, the Potato King
    who harvested 28,000 acres of spuds in the early 1900s on reclaimed
    delta land. Every epic migration that transformed the state was a
    migration rooted in the fields.

    "Adrift in a landscape of ordered beauty," he writes, "the
    [farmworkers] illustrate the human costs required to produce a
    geography of abundance, telling us not only about irony, suffering,
    misery, acrimony, disorientation, resentment, cynicism and violence
    but also about hope, tenacity, sacrifice and generosity."

    Who, precisely, were the first campesinos in California? That they
    were brown-skinned peoples native to the land down south should come
    as no surprise. By early 1769, Spain had kicked the Jesuits out of
    Baja California and installed the Franciscans as missionaries who
    would claim the Pacific Coast. The Franciscans dragged a group of
    Cochimi Indians north for the "Sacred Expedition." By summer's end,
    more than half the Cochimi -- 180 in all -- had died of disease and
    starvation.

    Street deals head-on with a question that has long divided scholars
    of the mission period. Were the padres taskmasters or slave drivers?
    Were the Indians ennobled or exploited? What was so bad about
    Catholicism, hard work and an adobe roof over the head, even if they
    came with the dreaded disciplina, the rawhide whip?

    The padres weren't monsters, Street agrees. They fed the newly
    baptized California natives well, sweated alongside them and rarely
    demanded more than a 40-hour workweek. And for their part, the
    natives could be exasperating. By the droves, they feigned illness
    and ran away from the missions and hid in the tules of California's
    interior, where they became addicted to booze and games of chance.
    But Street ultimately comes down on the side of mission critics,
    concluding that the system reduced natives to "childish dependence,
    prepared them for nothing, exposed them to diseases."

    Measuring the agricultural legacy of the missions is easier. The
    California natives who joined the Cochimi planted the first vineyards
    and wheat fields, erected the first brush dams and dug the first
    irrigation canals. A peek into the state's future grape and wine
    industry could be glimpsed at the San Gabriel mission where the
    170-acre La Vina Madre, "the mother vineyard" had taken root.
    Likewise, the practice of labor contractors acting as go-betweens in
    the California fields began with the mayordomo, boss men selected
    from the ranks of mission guards.

    For the better part of a century, the male natives bent, stooped,
    squatted and crawled with their poles, clippers, sacks and buckets.
    The women, who weren't allowed in the fields, had their own quotas to
    meet grinding wheat and corn. Their positions hardly changed after
    Mexican rule replaced Spanish rule and the natives were supposedly
    free to pursue a life of small-scale farming. Instead, cast adrift,
    they huddled in dusty camps like the one on the outskirts of El
    Pueblo de Los Angeles, where they led "vicious and irrational lives."

    Growers in the 1850s were still so reliant on native field hands that
    they pushed the newly minted U.S. state of California to enact a law
    that controlled the natives and forced them to work. The Indian
    Indenture Act, in the words of McWilliams, "competed favorably with
    slavery." Only when the native population dwindled to a band of old
    and crippled field hands did the farmer begin his eternal search for
    a new group of desperate and poor.

    The late 1860s and 1870s brought fresh laborers to the fields:
    hard-luck Americans of European stock who had come West with gold
    fever but who now found themselves threshing and bagging California's
    booming wheat crop. Street brings to life the grinding toil of the
    men who wandered farm to farm, their worldly possessions packed tight
    in a bindle. He does his best writing describing how they mounted the
    first leviathan wheat harvesters and bounced all day over rough
    ground, jolting themselves silly. They could not escape the Central
    Valley sun.

    "The heat had an almost metallic characteristic," he writes. "It was
    a weight that men carried on their backs, a fiery warmth that cracked
    their leather boots, heated equipment to the point where it could not
    be touched without gloves and baked straw so crisp that it snapped
    like glass filaments underfoot."

    He lingers on the wholesome meals served to the wheat threshers and
    on the songs they sang, always swearing off another harvest season:
    "Don't go, I say, if you've got any brains. You'll stay far away from
    the San Joaquin plains."

    As the crops grew more diverse, the call for more dependable
    farmworkers grew louder. It was answered by peasant Chinese farmers
    from the Guangdong province who poured off ships in the 1850s and
    fanned out to Stockton, Sacramento, Fresno, Sonoma County and Los
    Angeles. Among the myths Street debunks is the notion that the
    Chinese constituted a significant minority of farm laborers at any
    one time. Of the 50,000 Chinese in California in 1861, only about
    1,500 had moved onto farms.

    Nowhere was their imprint more lasting than in the delta, where they
    drained hundreds of thousands of acres of wetlands with an incredible
    latticework of levees. The Chinese boasted their own system of
    mayordomo: "China bosses" who made good on the promise that each
    field hand would pick 1,500 to 2,000 pounds of grapes a day. The
    bosses won many jobs by agreeing to a pay scale of $1 a day --
    cheaper than the wage for Mexicans, $1.25, and for whites, $1.50.

    "Beasts of the Field" makes clear that the issue of wages has long
    pitted field hand against field hand, striker against grower and
    reformer against politician. The debate always seems to start and end
    in the same place. The farmer believes he isn't exploiting the field
    hand because what he offers is so much better than what the worker
    had back home. The reformer shouts back that the farmer is engaging
    in the cheapest form of moral inoculation. It is the ideals of this
    country -- not the Third World exigencies of their old land -- that
    judge morality. A dime a day in Guangdong doesn't excuse a dollar a
    day in Weedpatch.

    The picker does hold certain leverage. Crops left too long in the
    field perish. A two-week delay in picking might bring a grower to his
    knees. This math drove the Chinese to strike again and again in the
    1880s, shutting down the fruit harvest in Santa Clara and the raisin
    pick in Fresno until they got their way, the same wages as the white
    man.

    That the "coolies" had the cheek to strike only played into the
    anti-Chinese sentiment sweeping across the land. Farmers didn't know
    what side of the fence to stand on, with their white neighbors or
    with their ethnic field hands. Some tried appealing to logic:
    "Americans can not go out in the hot sun and stoop over the vines all
    day when the thermometer is probably 115 degrees in the shade," one
    grower asserted. "Our American sons won't do that."

    For all its breadth, "Beasts of the Field" never quite makes the case
    that agriculture's exploitation differed from the brutality imposed
    by industrial America. Was farm work worse because it took place
    under the searing sun? Were the white farmers greedier as a class
    than white factory owners? Were the bottom-line impulses of
    agriculture different from the quotas that industry imposed on their
    beasts of the steel mill?

    Occasionally Street tips the scale of judgment in error. He quotes a
    1913 editorial by Chester H. Rowell, a longtime editor of the Fresno
    Republican, likening the perfect field hand to a manifold beast.
    Rowell, it turns out, wasn't expressing his view but what he regarded
    as the unfortunate view of the farm lobby. The sarcasm is not noted
    by Street.

    Back on firm ground, Street details how the racist views of the
    Yellow Peril culminated in the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act that, over
    time, dried up Chinese labor. The Japanese then staged their own
    rising. At the height of their influence in 1909, about 30,000
    Japanese worked on California farms, accounting for nearly 42% of the
    labor force.

    More than any other ethnic group, the Japanese saw fieldwork not as
    an end but as a means to buy their own farms. Toward that goal, they
    became tough negotiators. They confronted and boycotted growers,
    withheld labor at key times and walked out during harvests. By 1910,
    many Japanese had realized the dream of becoming farmers; they had
    bought 17,000 acres and leased 89,000 more, dominating the
    strawberry, melon and sugar beet crops.

    The Yellow Peril soon raised its ugly head again. The so-called
    Gentlemen's Agreement in 1907 halted Japanese immigration. As always,
    Big Ag didn't know where to turn. Into this vacuum, miraculously,
    came the Greeks, the Sikhs, the Portuguese and the Armenians.

    My grandfather didn't have the benefit of those hobo songs to steer
    him clear of the San Joaquin plains. The only song he heard was his
    Uncle Yervant's naively sweet one. For that second harvest, he
    returned to Weedpatch with his mother, sister and brother, this time
    to work for Villa Kerkorian, a grape grower with a ferocious mustache
    resembling Pancho Villa's.

    My grandfather and his family slept in the Kerkorian barn on a bed of
    raisin crates and hay until one night when they began feuding.
    Grandpa's 17-year-old brother, Harry, had the gall to question the
    arrangement by which Uncle Yervant picked very little and played
    pinochle a lot. Challenged for the first time, Yervant stormed out of
    the barn.

    "That boat that brought you over," he shouted. "I would have been
    better off had it brought a sack of potatoes instead."

    They didn't speak again for years. By that time, Harry was well on
    his way to killing a cop in Long Beach and serving a life sentence in
    San Quentin. My grandfather was married and farming raisins outside
    Fresno. In his 80s, as he grew blind, he gave me a stack of poems he
    had written to the memory of the grape and cotton pickers: "To my
    white, brown, yellow and black brothers and sisters who toiled under
    the hellish sun."

    A few weeks ago, as another harvest neared, I drove to Weedpatch and
    tried to find the old Kerkorian ranch. Villa Kerkorian had lost all
    his land during the raisin bust of 1920-28. Not long after, they
    found an ocean of oil beneath his old grapes. Kerkorian didn't live
    to see his get-even: His youngest son, Kirk, came to rule MGM and
    rank as one of the world's wealthiest men.

    At the edge of town, a few miles down the road from where John
    Steinbeck encountered the Okies, I met a young Mixteca who had
    arrived the week before from deep in Mexico, her land turning to
    dust. She had been smuggled across the border in the back of a
    Suburban and was using her wages from the bell pepper fields to pay
    off a $1,900 debt to the coyote. I asked her why she had come and she
    began to tear up. She had left behind two young children with her
    mother. "For their future," she explained. In another few days, she
    will stop harvesting peppers and begin picking grapes. In the powdery
    loam, she will trace the footsteps of my grandfather and the other
    "beasts" whose imprint Street has so faithfully recorded.

    They still walk through these fields. *

    GRAPHIC: PHOTO: FIELD HANDS: Laborers pick lettuce in the Salinas
    Valley in 1935, from "Photographing Farmworkers in California."
    PHOTOGRAPHER: Photograph by Dorothea Lange Courtesy of Stanford
    University Press PHOTO: SUBSISTENCE: A farmworker from Mexico, idled
    by freezing weather, cradles a baby outside his home next to an
    Imperial Valley pea field in 1937. PHOTOGRAPHER: Photograph by
    Dorothea Lange Courtesy of Stanford University Press PHOTO: LOCAL
    CREW: Chinese laborers sewed wheat sacks in the San Fernando Valley
    in 1898, 16 years after the Chinese Exclusion Act cut the workforce.
    PHOTOGRAPHER: Courtesy of Stanford University Press PHOTO: ON THE
    COVER: "Cheng's Hands and Hat," Roger Minick's 1966 photograph, is
    included in Richard Steven Street's "Photographing Farmworkers in
    California." PHOTOGRAPHER: Photograph by Roger Minick Courtesy of
    Stanford University Press
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