Little remains of the Lake Dick Project from Roosevelt’s New Deal. All that is left are a few houses. The area is currently on the National Register of Historic Places. When it was active, there was considerable work for everyone as seen by the photographs taken in 1938 by Russell Lee and Dorothea Lange.
Dairy cows at Lake Dick
Member of Lake Dick Cooperative Association repairing mowing machine, Arkansas
Tractor at Lake Dick, Arkansas
Loading bales of cotton onto truck from gin. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas
Cotton in process of ginning. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas
Placing burlap wrappings in compressor. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas
Working on diesel engine in power plant of cotton gin. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas
Bale of cotton immediately after compressing, being tipped out of baler. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas
Cooperative farmer at sorghum mill. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas
Scales and baler, cotton gin. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas
Weighing the milk. Dairy farm, Lake Dick Project, Arkansas. Daily production record of each cow was kept
Cows in stanchions in dairy barn. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas
Milking cows in dairy barn. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas
Sorghum plant. Lake Dick Project, Arkansas
Mules, Lake Dick Cooperative Association, Lake Dick, Arkansas
Airview of Lake Dick project, Arkansas. Taken by Arkansas National Guard ca. 1938
Vinegar of the Four Thieves was a recipe that was known for its antibacterial, antiviral, antiseptic and antifungal properties for years. It was even used to cure the Bubonic Plague. See Thomas Jefferson’s recipe in VINEGAR OF THE FOUR THIEVES: Recipes & curious tips from the past
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