Pan toting

Pan toting, also known as the service pan, was the practice of African-American domestic workers taking dry goods or leftover table scraps from their white employers as a form of compensation that they deserved, due to the wealth they produced for their masters during their former status as slaves and because of the low wages received post-Civil War. As their way of seeking justice, domestic workers implemented the strategy of "pan-toting" by "re-appropriating the material assets of their employers for their use." == Origins == Pan-toting originated in slavery in the United States, during the nineteenth century, among the African-American population.

Source: Wikipedia — Pan toting (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Pan toting

Pan toting, also known as the service pan, was the practice of African-American domestic workers taking dry goods or leftover table scraps from their white employers as a form of compensation that they deserved, due to the wealth they produced for their masters during their former status as slaves and because of the low wages received post-Civil War. As their way of seeking justice, domestic workers implemented the strategy of "pan-toting" by "re-appropriating the material assets of their employers for their use." == Origins == Pan-toting originated in slavery in the United States, during the nineteenth century, among the African-American population.

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Source: Wikipedia "Pan toting" · CC BY-SA 4.0

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