African Americans of Round Top
9781467160742
Regular price $24.99 Sale price $18.74 Save 25%Round Top’s African American pioneers came into Texas in 1825 when Stephen F. Austin brought in 300 Anglo-Americans, and the people they enslaved, for the purpose of colonizing the area. Soon afterward, more slaves were bought in from other slaveholding states. After the Civil War ended, the descendants of these original Round Top pioneers began building their own community. Many earned money by toiling away in the cotton fields for the very men who had once enslaved them. Others earned money working as cowboys, washerwomen, barbers, or blacksmiths. In 1867, the group founded the Concord Missionary Baptist Church as a communal space for them to come together and pool their resources to buy their own land, build their own homes, and hire teachers, which led to the creation of the Concord Missionary Baptist Church Colored School. For generations, this school successfully educated freedmen, their children, and their descendants before finally closing its doors due to desegregation. Despite many challenges, they overcame obstacles that grew into a prosperous community.
African Americans of Houston
9780738584874
Regular price $24.99 Sale price $18.74 Save 25%African Americans of Galveston
9781467130271
Regular price $24.99 Sale price $18.74 Save 25%Football and Integration in Plano, Texas
9781626195011
Regular price $21.99 Sale price $16.49 Save 25%The Houston Negro Hospital
9781467171625
Regular price $24.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%“This Great Hospital Fight” – Dr. Drake
At the height of racial and political tensions in early twentieth-century Houston, two unlikely figures became allies. Dr. William M. Drake, a pioneering surgeon and Black community leader, and Joseph Cullinan, a white oil magnate and founder of the company that became Texaco, united in a desperate effort to save a hospital that symbolized hope. The Houston Negro Hospital was born from America’s Black hospital movement. Dedicated on Juneteenth 1926, it embodied a bold experiment to bring dignity and health care access to a community that was systematically denied both in the Jim Crow South.
Journalist and storyteller Carlton Houston—whose ancestors played a role in this remarkable heritage—reveals the untold, human drama behind the institution that would become Riverside General. Discover the vision, conflict, and resilience that shaped a century of health care through the struggle of those determined to save lives.
African Americans in Corpus Christi
9780738585284
Regular price $24.99 Sale price $18.74 Save 25%African Americans in Nacogdoches County
9781467132152
Regular price $24.99 Sale price $18.74 Save 25%African Americans in El Paso
9781467131773
Regular price $24.99 Sale price $18.74 Save 25%Austin's Rosewood Neighborhood
9780738595979
Regular price $24.99 Sale price $18.74 Save 25%African Americans in Amarillo
9780738571287
Regular price $24.99 Sale price $18.74 Save 25%African American Bryan, Texas
9781609496982
Regular price $21.99 Sale price $16.49 Save 25%