Louisiana's sugar cane region — the parishes south and west of New Orleans, including Lafourche, Terrebonne, and St. Mary — was one of the most labor-intensive agricultural systems in the world. Sugar required year-round cultivation and a grueling harvest season (the "grinding") between October and December. After emancipation, planters could no longer compel labor by ownership, but they retained every other lever of control.
Workers were paid in scrip rather than cash — redeemable only at the plantation store, where prices ensured that wages were consumed before workers could accumulate savings. Vagrancy laws made it a criminal offense to be unemployed, effectively binding workers to plantations through the threat of arrest. The convict leasing system provided planters with a backup labor supply of imprisoned Black men if free workers became difficult. By 1887, wages for sugar workers had not increased in a decade. Workers received 75 cents per day during grinding season — the period when their labor was most essential and, theoretically, their bargaining power was highest.