You may also like
Topeka's African American Community In Photographs
Sherrita Camp's new book, "African American Topeka" (2013) offers the reader the opportunity to learn about the history of African American life in a medium-sized American city west of the Mississippi River, Topeka, Kansas. A long-time resident of Topeka, Camp is a historian and a genealogist.
As Camp's pictorial history emphasizes, Topeka has played two significant roles in African American history. The first occurred in the years following the end of Reconstruction in 1877. African Americans in the South sought to escape the coming Jim Crow regime and moved in large numbers to Kansas and Topeka. This migration has become known as the "Great Exodus of 1879". The African Americans settling in Topeka were called "Exodusters". Because many of the migrants were from Tennessee, the community they established became known as "Tennessee Town", and it retained its character for generations.
Camp's book offers photographs and biographies of many of the Exodusters, many of whom still have descendants in Topeka. In 1879, the prominent journal "Harper's Weekly" ran articles about the Exodusters. This volume includes valuable photographs of the migrants gathering at places such as Vicksburg to seek a new life. The Harper's series shows stages of the migrants' long and frequently hazardous journey to Topeka as well as scenes of provisions made in the new Topeka community to accommodate the sudden large influx. When the migrants arrived, they found a city that did not have the extremes of Jim Crow even though it was segregated in many respects.
The second significant contribution of Topeka emphasized in this book reached its climax in 1954 when the Supreme Court decided Brown v. Board of Education that held that segregated public schools violated the Constitution. The Brown decision had its origins in Topeka. The city segregated its elementary schools but not its junior high or high schools. Four Topeka families with young children, including the Browns, brought suit challenging Topeka's "separate but equal" policy in the city's elementary schools.
Camp offers many photographs of Topeka's schools at the time and of the children. She also emphasizes that by the late 1940's Topeka had developed a strong African American middle class. African American attorneys trained and practicing in Topeka took the case through the lower courts and, with the assistance of the local NAACP, brought the national organization into the case for the Supreme Court proceedings. Camp's history strongly emphasizes the role of Topeka's African Americans in Brown. The community had a long history of challenging segregation practices in education and elsewhere. In 2004, the 50th Anniversary of the Brown decision, the Monroe School in Topeka became a National Historic Site under the administration of the National Park Service.
The stories of the Exodusters and of "Brown" are more than enough to make this book appealing. Camp also offers photographs of the African American communities, relatively prosperous and self-contained, that developed in Topeka over the years. Many of these communities were destroyed by urban renewal in the early 1960s. The book also emphasizes the religious nature of African American life in Topeka with photographs of many of the early churches and other religious organizations and their histories. The book describes the many community organizations that brought cohesiveness to local life. It discusses individuals from Topeka who achieved fame, including the poet Gwendolyn Brooks and the bluesman Gatemouth Moore who became the first blues singer to perform at Carnegie Hall. With its emphasis of important national events, this book also has a strong local feel. It includes many photographs of students, residents, and community leaders painstakingly identified by name.
"African American Topeka" is part of a series of volumes of local American photographic histories published by Arcadia Publishers. Although the books are marketed to local audiences, I learn a great deal when I have the opportunity to read about a community I don't know. I have particularly enjoyed learning about local African American communities through the series. Readers interested in local African American history, especially as it involves an early migration and the "Brown" decision will enjoy reading this photographic history of Topeka's African American community.
I enjoyed skimming the book (my first time checking out the photos) and will read it in depth soon. I especially enjoyed seeing faces I hadn't seen in ages and loved seeing family members who had passed on. Thank you Miss Sherrita.
You may also like
"Run! Boudin, Run!"
9781455625956
Regular price $19.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%
'70s Chicagoland Rock Concerts
9781467156851
Regular price $24.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%A Portal to Rock ‘N’ Roll History
During the 1970s, Chicagoland venues hosted an eclectic mix of legendary rock ‘n’ roll acts that thrilled audiences. Fans flocked to historic venues like the Auditorium Theater, International Amphitheatre, Arie Crown Theatre, Kinetic Playground and B’Ginnings to forge relationships and hear music that shaped their youth and endured a lifetime. Acts like Led Zeppelin, the Who, Rolling Stones, Black Sabbath, Wings, Genesis and so many others took the stage here during rock’s most prolific and memorable era. Jim Summaria and Mark Plotnick bring those mind-blowing performances back to life with exclusive concert photos, histories, trivia and more.
'Sconset
9781467128735
Regular price $24.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%
(Mis)Diagnosed
9781948742993
Regular price $16.95 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%“Fascinating history . . . A passionate and well-informed study on the importance of improving inclusiveness in mental health evaluations.” ―Kirkus Reviews
In a clear, empathetic style, Jonathan Foiles, author of the critically acclaimed This City Is Killing Me, takes us through troubling examples of bias in mental health work. Placing them in context of past blunders in the history of psychiatry and the DSM, he looks closely at questions that lay bare the intersections between mental health care, race, gender, and sexuality:
• Why are women more likely to be labeled borderline personalities?
• Are transgender patients being treated today like gay patients were in the past?
• Has “protest psychosis,” a term used to diagnose Black men during the civil rights era, simply been renamed schizoaffective disorder?
• How different is our current label of “intellectual disability” from the history of eugenics?
• What does it actually mean to be diagnosed with a “mental illness”?
This slim but wide-ranging collection of essays wrestles with these questions and offers potential ways forward in a world where mental health diagnoses can be helpful, but not necessarily absolute. It is a pragmatic and sympathetic guide to how we might craft a better and more just therapeutic future for all people.
100 Catholic Things to Do Before You Die
9781455623686
Regular price $15.95 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%Better than a bucket list—a guide to growing your faith!
The demands of modern society often create distance between Catholics and their cultural heritage. Earl J. Higgins, a New Orleans native and lifelong Catholic, offers ways to embrace Catholic influences in everyday life. Suggestions range from such simple activities as putting a “Keep Christ in Christmas” bumper sticker on your car to more devout practices, including lighting an Advent wreath or making the Sign of the Cross in times of trial and joy. In addition, Higgins provides historical backgrounds on Catholic holidays such as Mardi Gras. Feeling like you’re drifting from your faith? From the St. Joseph’s Day Altars to Midnight Mass, let these 100 tips reconnect you!
100 Greatest Desserts of the South, The
9781589806139
Regular price $17.95 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%The editors have divulged treasured recipes from famous restaurants, out-of-print cookbooks, and family files and compiled them into a collection that includes the best of what the South has to offer. Whether you're craving Kentucky Bluegrass Pie, Texas Candy Cake, Georgia Peanut Cookies, Charlotte Rousse, or Virginia Hot Apple Sundae, the formula can be found in one delectable volume.