TABLE 50.--Value of farm real estate, livestock, and machinery and equipment by race of operator and economic class of farm, North and West Florida, 1956 : Value : : Value of Race of operator s of farm : Value of : machinery : ota and economic class : real : livestock : and : estate : : equipment : :Number Dollars Dollars Dollars Dollars White: Residential 64 340,040 15,507 20,084 375,631 Part-time class VI : 42 276,580 20,785 24,921 322,286 Class VI : 20 166,730 14,533 13,041 194,304 Class V : 52 416,480 41,590 66,680 524,750 Class IV : 57 713,875 79,265 120,897 914,037 Class III : 29 720,600 88,985 107,031 916,616 Class II : 16 838,420 127,547 97,805 1,063,772 Class I : 3 215,000 101,980 53,477 370,k57 Total farms : 283 3,687,725 490,192 503,936 4,681,853 Nonwhite: Residential : 27 44,400 3,912 4,670 52,982 Part-time class VI 21 42,730 5,429 4,936 53,095 Class VI : 16 43,100 5,150 10,912 59,162 Class V : 12 44,000 4,040 7,341 55,381 Class IT 9 69,500 7,830 13,741 91,071 Total farms : 85 243,730 26,361 41,600 311,691 All farms : 368 3,931,455 516,553 545,536 4,993,544 resources averaged $3,700 on farms with $16,500 on farms with white operators. as great as that between all farms with nonwhite operators While the relative compared with difference was not white and those with nonwhite farmers, the average value of farm resources on farms af: .the latter wp aubtattial.y - 3vwe -than.those en farms of .the former in all economic classes where compari- sons were possible. As was shown earlier, tenancy was considerably more prevalent among the farms with nonwhite operators; to a large degree, it would account for the lower average investment in farm resources by nonwhite operators.