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==History== ===Establishment=== Dyess Colony was established in Mississippi County in 1934 as part of the [[New Deal]] efforts of [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]] to provide economic relief to destitute workers in the [[Great Depression in the United States|Great Depression]].<ref name = EOA>{{cite encyclopedia |last= Hendricks |first= Nancy |encyclopedia= [[Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture]] |title= Dyess (Mississippi County)|url= http://www.encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=2397 |access-date= May 12, 2018 |date= November 17, 2017 |publisher= [[Butler Center for Arkansas Studies]]|location= Little Rock |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20180414234009/http://www.encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=2397|archive-date=April 14, 2018 |url-status= live}}</ref> The experiment was the largest such community-building experiment established by the federal government during these years.<ref name=Smith49>Fred C. Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen: Plain Folk, Roosevelt, Jesus, and Marx in the Great Depression South.'' Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi, 2014; pg. 49.</ref> The project was established by Mississippi politician and [[cotton]] planter William R. Dyess (1890β1936), director of the Arkansas Emergency Relief Administration, who initially sought the establishment of a self-supporting agricultural community housing 800 families upon unused [[Mississippi Delta]] farmland.<ref name=Smith50>Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen,'' pg. 50.</ref> Director Dyess established the entity remembered to history as "Dyess Colony" and as "Colonization Project No. 1", plans for which were submitted to chief of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) [[Harry Hopkins]] early in 1934.<ref name=Smith51>Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen,'' pg. 51.</ref> The project was approved by Hopkins in March 1934.<ref name=Smith51 /> Some {{convert|15144|acre|km2}} of unimproved land were purchased by Dyess for the colonization project at the cost of $9.05 per acre, with the parcel redeemed for the payment of unpaid back taxes in this amount.<ref name=Smith52>Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen,'' pg. 52.</ref> The site consisted primarily of swamp and cutover forest land, although containing deep topsoil deposited by the [[Mississippi River]], part of what was then the most productive cotton farming county in the entire United States.<ref name=Smith53>Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen,'' pg. 53.</ref> The project's scope was immediately scaled back to 500 family parcels, with the participants to be recruited from Arkansas [[sharecropper]]s and tenant farmers from across the entire state.<ref>Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen,'' pp. 50-51, 53.</ref> Thousands of applicants were carefully screened, and eligibility requirements included being an experienced farmer made destitute through no fault of his own and being an Arkansas resident "of good moral background" in good health, under the age of 50, and white.<ref name = EOA /><ref name = Pittman>{{Cite journal| doi = 10.2307/40025484| issn = 0004-1823| volume = 29| issue = 4| pages = 320β321| last = Pittman| first = Dan W.| title = The Founding of Dyess Colony| journal = The Arkansas Historical Quarterly| date = 1970| jstor = 40025484}}</ref> Funds for the purchase of land were provided by FERA in the form of a grant to the Arkansas Emergency Relief Administration, which initially managed the project.<ref name=Smith57>Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen,'' pg. 57.</ref> Subsequently, a new entity was established known as Dyess Colony Inc., the stock of which was held in trust by the [[US Secretary of Agriculture]], and management and control passed over to the managing board of that company.<ref name=Smith55>Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen,'' pg. 55.</ref> The main purpose of the town's administration was to give poor white families a chance to start over with land that they could work toward owning. The original township included 500 individually owned and operated farms which were 20 or 40 acres each. ===Early administrative structure=== The colony was carefully planned and administered by Dyess and a board of directors, who managed the day-to-day activities of the colonists.<ref name=Smith54>Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen,'' pg. 54.</ref> A turnover of this top leadership took place on January 14, 1936, however, when Dyess and his top lieutenant, chief accountant and finance director Robert H. McNair Jr., were killed in an airplane crash returning to Arkansas from Washington, DC.<ref>The January 1936 air crash, which killed all 17 people aboard, was at the time the worst aviation disaster in American history. Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen,'' pg. 54.</ref> After his death, leadership of the Dyess Colony passed to [[Little Rock, Arkansas|Little Rock]] attorney and Arkansas Department of Labor statistician Floyd Sharp, a personal friend of Dyess, and Lawrence Westbrook, a [[Texas]] rancher who had been recruited by Harry Hopkins to work at FERA.<ref>Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen,'' pp. 54-55.</ref> Westbrook was fired by Hopkins in 1937 for a highly absentee work ethic and for attempting to imperially micromanage the colony's affairs from his desk in Washington.<ref name=Smith56>Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen,'' pg. 56.</ref> Two [[cooperative|cooperative associations]] were incorporated by the board of directors of Dyess Colony Inc. β a consumer cooperative which operated a colony store and other businesses and a producer cooperative which coordinated the processing and sale of cotton farmed by residents of the colony.<ref name=Smith59>Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen,'' pg. 59.</ref> The colony also launched its own cooperative [[credit union]] not later than 1938.<ref name=Smith59 /> ===Dissolution=== The Dyess Colony gained a powerful opponent in the form of Governor [[Carl E. Bailey]], a rival and political opponent of Floyd Sharp.<ref name=Smith59 /> It was the governor and his allies who persuaded the directors of Dyess Colony Inc. to incorporate under Arkansas rather than [[Delaware General Corporation Law|Delaware law]] β an action which later made the colony vulnerable to punitive bureaucratic attack.<ref name=Smith59 /> Multiple attempts were made in the Arkansas legislature to undermine and disestablish the Dyess colony, an effort culminating on March 10, 1939, when the Arkansas Corporation Commission, serving at Gov. Bailey's pleasure, revoked the Dyess charter for failing to file reports for three years and failing to pay an $11 annual corporation fee.<ref>Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen,'' pp. 61-62.</ref> In an effort to avoid additional capricious action, a new legal entity called the Dyess Rural Rehabilitation Corporation (DRRC) was established, to which Dyess Colony Inc. sold its assets.<ref name=Smith62>Smith, ''Trouble in Goshen,'' pg. 62.</ref> This succeeded in saving the non-profit colony until the DRRC was absorbed by the [[Farm Security Administration]] (FSA) in 1944.<ref name=Smith62 /> The federal aspect of the project was formally terminated in 1951.<ref name=Smith62 />
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