Undercurrents: Two disasters reveal inequities in the Mississippi Delta
verything began to change in April 1927. After an especially wet winter and spring that year, the Mississippi River tipped its banks, forcing more than 13,000 farmers and black sharecroppers to the top of an unbroken levee near Greenville, where they encamped for days without food or clean water. When rescuers arrived, only 33 white