Cover of: White and Black Weight by Socioeconomic Status and Residence: Revaluating Nineteenth-Century Health during the Institutional Change to Free Labor
Scott Alan Carson

White and Black Weight by Socioeconomic Status and Residence: Revaluating Nineteenth-Century Health during the Institutional Change to Free Labor

Section: Articles
Volume 173 (2017) / Issue 4, pp. 643-661 (19)
Published 09.07.2018
DOI 10.1628/093245617X14812908932547
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Summary
Heights and body mass index (BMI) values are now well-accepted measures that reflect net nutrition during economic development and institutional change from bound to free labor. This study uses 19th-century weights instead of BMIs to measure factors associated with current net nutrition. Across the weight distribution and throughout the 19th century, white and black average weights decreased by 8.5 and 6.3 percent, respectively. Farmers and unskilled workers had positive weight returns associated with rural agricultural lifestyles. Weights in the Deep South were greater than in other regions within the U. S., indicating that while Southern infectious disease rates were high, Southern current net nutrition was better than elsewhere within the U.S. (JEL: I1, J11, J71, N31)