TABIE 42,-Total acres operated by race of operator, economic class of farm, and major land use classes, North and West Florida, 1956 SLand use classification Race of operator : : Total :___ and economic class : Farms: acres :: of farm :operated:Cropland:Other:I d Other : oo- in crop- permanent: land Scraps : land as e: pasture : :Number Acres Acres Acres Acres Acres Acres White: Residential : 64- 2,598 402 549 156 78 1,413 Part-time class VI : 42 3,955 868 400 179 34 2,474 Class VI : 20 2,272 648 282 128 44 1,170 Part-time class V : 20 2,816 979 372 499 5 961 Class V : 32 5,280 1,712 808 429 54 2,277 Class IV : 57 10,531 4.523 1,334 1,178 48 3,448 Class III : 29 8,413 3,362 1,069 638 503 2,841 Class II : 16 11,846 3,551 485 1,685 710 5,415 Class I : 3 1,436 366 11 470 355 234 Total farms 283 49,147 16,411 5,310 5,362 1,831 20,233 Nonwhite: Residential : 27 1,222 333 261 30 55 543 Part-time class VI : 21 902 474 224 25 .. 179 Olass VI : 16 1,284 686 283 84 42 189 Part-time class V : 4 510 149 94 .. 30 237 Class V : 8 666 391 127 .. 148 Class IV : 9 1,585 802 227 22 20 514 Total farms : 85 6,169 2,835 1,216 161 147 1,810 All farms : 368 55,316 19,246 6,526 5,523 1,978 22,043 the same economic classes operated by white farmers. Those with operators, however, had much larger proportions of total land in nonwhite crops and idle cropland and smaller proportions in pasture and woodland than those with white operators. Because of this, average acreages of cropland were approximately the same on farms f. these economic classes with white and those with nonwhite operators. Acreages in crops by type of crop are given in Table 43. Because