Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

TikToker's 103-Year-Old Grandma Talks About Picking Cotton In Her Youth In Eye-Opening Video

TikToker's 103-Year-Old Grandma Talks About Picking Cotton In Her Youth In Eye-Opening Video
@blackbeauty_305/TikTok

A video of a 103-year-old Black woman recalling her days out in the fields picking cotton has moved millions of viewers on social media.

Shanika Bradshaw, a.k.a. TikToker @blackbeauty_305, preserved her grandmother's memories in a captivating video in which the centenarian indulged her in an eye-opening conversation of what it was like working out in the cotton fields in Georgia as a young teenager.


Bradshaw said her grandmother, Madie Scott, picked cotton every day from 3 a.m. to 5 p.m. and "was paid barely anything."

The clip Bradshaw hashtagged with #storytime can be seen, here.

@blackbeauty_305

Grandma picked cotton from 3am-5pm every day.. She was paid barely anything. Smh! #storytime


Madie was 12 when she started picking cotton in Georgia. Her work shifts spanned 14 hours a day for 50 cents.

"When you get used to picking cotton, you pick it, you know how to pick it," said Madie, who turns 104 on December 8.

Speaking with Buzzfeed, Madie said:

"I was picking cotton all day. That's all there was to do."
"You can work in the house [babysitting or cleaning], but if you work in the field you make the most money."

Many TikTokers were in awe over Grandma Madie.

@blackbeauty_305/TikTok

@blackbeauty_305/TikTok

@blackbeauty_305/TikTok

@blackbeauty_305/TikTok

@blackbeauty_305/TikTok

@blackbeauty_305/TikTok

@blackbeauty_305/TikTok

Madie moved to Miami, Florida when she was 16 after hearing about a prospect to earn more money as a sharecropper.

As a historical refresher, sharecropping replaced slavery in the South after the Civil War. The legal arrangement involved landowners allowing tenants to rent the land in exchange for a large portion of crops they produced on the land.

Many historians believe the labor system was another way for White landowners to continue exploiting former slaves looking for work—oftentimes by keeping tenant farm families indebted and subjecting them to high-interest rates.

Bradshaw said many sharecroppers were forced to purchase food and other necessities directly from the landowner—who could charge any price they wanted.

"Instead of them being able to go to another place and buy those things, they had to buy their food from the commissary [the company store for sharecroppers]," said Bradshaw.

"They would get paid and then broke even. They got it docked from their pay."

Madie shared a recollection of her late sister, with whom she worked alongside also as a sharecropper.

"My sister — oh, lord — she looked at me at 11:30 (a.m.) or quarter to 12, [because] she wanted to stop and rest."
"She had a lunch break at 12, but she wanted to stop working at 11:30."

Addressing some of the ignorant comments in the previous TikTok video, Bradshaw posted a follow-up clip emphasizing her grandmother was not a slave.


@blackbeauty_305

It's the ignorant people for me. Nobody said she was a SLAVE.. And she has no reason to lie about picking cotton.. 😞


@blackbeauty_305/TikTok

@blackbeauty_305/TikTok

@blackbeauty_305/TikTok

After working a few years as a sharecropper and as a cook, Madie spent the next 40 years as a nanny raising seven kids for a wealthy family.

By the time she stopped working, mostly in physically demanding jobs, Madie was unsure of what to do with herself.

"I was in my 80s when I stopped working in 1989. I didn’t do like a lot of people that get Social Security. I wasn’t worried about getting no money."
"I used to go to the building in the front [where I used to work] and sit and look at the people working because I missed it."

Bradshaw, who was raised by Madie after Bradshaw's mother died, said she "felt a little sad" listening to her grandmother talking about the past.

"I was asking her about the pay. I asked her if she forgave the people for how she was treated and she said, 'Yeah, I did forgive them a long time ago'."
"'Even though I was overworked and put in so much work and was paid so little'."

Despite the heavy topic, Bradshaw felt compelled to share Madie's important history on social media.

"When you think of history, they really don’t talk about the truth. We hear about Christopher Columbus, but we don’t really hear too much of black history."
"So I feel it’s important for me to put this out there so people can hear it firsthand. This is what happened, these people — not just my grandmother — but other people who built up America and were never acknowledged for it."

Madie also wants the younger generation to learn the truth.

"Ain't none of these young people will have to go through what I went through to get where I am now."
"Oh lord, I wish we had that — how y'all got everything laid out for you [in life] and you know where you’re going. When I was coming up, we didn’t know where we were going, all we know to do was work."

When Madie discovered social media users' veneration of her after the video went viral, she said she didn't "feel no different."

"But I'm just regular. Nothing changed about me."

More from Trending

Screenshot of Bryce Mitchell; Donald Trump
@HQNewsNow/X; Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

UFC Fighter Bryce Mitchell Expertly Rips Trump For 'Desecrating' White House With 'Freedom 250' Fight

While speaking to reporters at UFC Vegas 118 Media Day, mixed martial artist Bryce Mitchell criticized the Trump administration for hosting a UFC fight for President Donald Trump's birthday.

Trump previously announced there will be a UFC fight on the White House grounds to celebrate America's semiquincentennial. Trump expects the fight will happen in front of 20,000 to 25,000 people, a proposal backed by former two-division champion Conor McGregor, who confirmed his interest after not having competed since 2021.

Keep ReadingShow less
Father and bride performing 'Last Bite Ritual' in China
u/s**tonthebeach/Reddit

Viral Video Of Dad Performing Emotional 'Last Bite' Ritual With His Daughter On Her Wedding Day Has Us Sobbing

While a person's wedding day is meant to be a celebration of their love and starting a new life with their partner, it's also important to remember the life they're leaving "behind," specifically the household that raised them.

In a video that's gone viral multiple times before, a Chinese father presents his daughter, who is about to be married, with a bowl of dumplings. He then selects one dumpling and feeds it to her, as a reminder of how he raised her and symbolizing that this is the last time he'll take care of her before she becomes a married woman.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from Calleigh Cartwright's TikTok video
@calleighpaige07/TikTok

Woman Goes Viral After Suffering Hilariously Mortifying Wardrobe Malfunction In Her Town Square

What's a social media influencer to do on a nice day when they feel like their outfit is especially cute, but take photos for Instagram?

But for social media influencer Calleigh Cartwright, that may have been the wrong choice.

Keep ReadingShow less
Sean Reifel (left) with Bethlehem Mayor J. William Reynolds before entering the Love Island USA villa.
CBS 19/Youtube; @loveislandusa/Instagram

Pennsylvania Mayor Rips Police Officer Who Quit The Force To Go On 'Love Island USA'

A badge-wearing bombshell has entered the villa.

Sean Reifel is one of 12 singles entering the Love Island USA villa this summer, but his search for love is already creating drama back home. The former Bethlehem Police Department officer has drawn criticism from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, Mayor J. William Reynolds after leaving the force to appear on the Peacock reality series.

Keep ReadingShow less