James L. McCorkle, Jr. | |
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Born | May 17, 1935 Hazlehurst, Copiah County Mississippi, USA |
Residence |
(1) Natchitoches, Louisiana (2) Salem, Oregon |
Alma mater | University of Mississippi |
Occupation | Historian Professor at Northwestern State University, |
Years active | 1966-2003 |
Religion | Presbyterian |
Spouse | Deann Obern McCorkle |
Children | James W. McCorkle (1977-2002) |
Notes
(1) After receipt of his graduate degrees at the University of Mississippi, the historian McCorkle spent his entire teaching and research career at Northwestern State University in Natchitoches, Louisiana.
(2) McCorkle was the book review editor and later the editor of the interdisciplinary journal Southern Studies. His research specialty is truck farming. |
James L. "Jim" McCorkle, Jr. (born May 17, 1935), is a retired professor of history from Northwestern State University in Natchitoches, Louisiana, who specialized in research on the American South, particularly agriculture. He was an NSU faculty member from 1966 to his retirement in 2003. In 1998, McCorkle became the editor of Southern Studies, an interdisciplinary journal published by NSU.[1] In 1971, he was appointed book review editor for the same publication.[2]
Contents |
McCorkle was born in Hazlehurst, the seat of Copiah County, southwest of the state capital of Jackson in southwestern Mississippi. He procured his Bachelor of Arts degree in history from Auburn University in Auburn, Alabama and his Master of Arts and Ph.D. degree, completed in 1966, from the University of Mississippi at Oxford.[1] In 1957, he graduated as an officer from Class 29 of the Pensacola Naval Air Training Station in Pensacola, Florida. He is pictured in the naval yearbook called Flight Jacket. He is a member of the United States Naval Institute.[3]
McCorkle served as president of the NSU chapter of Phi Kappa Phi and president of the Faculty Senate. In 2002, he was one of five NSU professors to receive the annual "Excellence in Teaching" award. He held membership in the Southern Historical Association, Agricultural History Society, Louisiana Historical Association, Mississippi Historical Society, and the North Louisiana Historical Association, based in Shreveport. He has received the "Outstanding Educator of America" designation and the Willie D. Halsell Award given by the Mississippi Historical Society for the best article in the Journal of Mississippi History and named for Professor Halsell (1905–1974) of Mississippi State University at Starkville.[1]
As Southern Studies editor, McCorkle sent manuscripts to be reviewed by scholars in the fields of history, politics, literature, and art. The articles selected for publication in the refereed journal meet the approval of authorities in the corresponding field. The journal also carries book reviews on southern culture. The publication began as Louisiana Studies under former editor and NSU historian John M. Price (born 1942).[4]
In 1996, McCorkle penned the article entitled "Southern Truck Growers Associations: Organizations for Profit" in Agricultural History, the journal of the Agricultural History Society published by the University of California Press.[5] He researched the efforts of small southern truck farmers to form local associations to guard their interests, much like western cattlemen had accomplished with their stockgrowers' associations. The farmers grew fresh fruits or vegetables, such as strawberries, peaches, Irish potatoes, or celery. Different areas specialized in high-demand crops. For instance, the Hammond area east of Baton Rouge is known for strawberries, and the Ruston region of north Louisiana specializes in peaches. McCorkle said that the attempted associations sometimes worked but usually failed because the buyers could offer individual truck farmers higher prices than they obtained through the cooperatives.[6]
"I remember growing up in Copiah County, Mississippi, and watching the farmers and the buyers coming together at parking sheds to conduct business. The farmers would come in and sometimes this would go on until two or three in the morning. I'd watch them pack and load the refrigerated cars that would go to Chicago," recalls McCorkle, who did his doctoral dissertation on truck farming.[6]
McCorkle's research focused on the local associations established between the 1870s and the 1930s. He conducted his research in archives from Virginia to Texas, having examined local newspapers and county records in particular. "The markets for their products were very volatile; so the farmers and producers tried to band together to protect themselves. It was hard for an individual to survive on his own," McCorkle explained.[6]
Related articles by McCorkle include "Truck Farming in Arkansas: A Half-century of Feeding Urban America" in Arkansas Historical Quarterly.[7]"Agricultural Experiment Stations and Southern Truck Farming," in Agricultural History.,[8] and "Moving Perishables to Market: Southern Railroads and the Nineteenth-Century Origins of Southern Truck Farming," in Southern Studies.[9]
McCorkle wrote the chapter entitled "The Louisiana 'Buy-A-Bale' of Cotton Movement, 1914," in Agriculture and Economic Development in Louisiana, by Thomas A. Becnel.[10]
In 1984, McCorkle wrote the article "Los Adaes," a survey of the easternmost settlement of Spanish Texas, the area about Robeline in western Louisiana, which was moved westward to Nacogdoches, Texas, published in The Handbook of Texas.[11] This selection was based on his earlier 1981 article entitled "Los Adaes: Outpost of New Spain," published in the Journal of the North Louisiana Historical Association (Vol. 12, 1981), since renamed North Louisiana History.[12]
In addition to John Price, McCorkle's NSU colleagues included Marietta LeBreton, a specialist in the history of Louisiana and the U.S. West; Donald M. Rawson, a Mississippi native and later graduate school dean and an authority on the 19th century South, and William A. Poe, a Baptist minister and Alabama native whose research was primarily in European history.
After his retirement, McCorkle and his wife, the former Deann Obern (born 1941), relocated to Salem, Oregon.[13] They had a son, James W. McCorkle (August 3, 1977– May 24, 2002).[14]