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Madam Walker And Her Theater
"Madam Walker Theatre Centre: An Indianapolis Treasure" (2013) by A'Leila Bundles is a short photographic history of Madam C.J. Walker and of the Indianapolis theatre she envisioned and which bears her name. A'Leila Bundles is the great-great-granddaughter of Madam Walker and has had a remarkable career in her own right. Bundles is an Emmy award-winning producer and former ABC News Executive and trustee of Columbia University. She is the author of a highly regarded biography of Madam Walker, "On Her own Ground".
The first self-made woman American millionaire, Walker (1867 -- 1919) led an inspiring life. Born Sarah Breedlove in Louisiana to newly-freed slaves, Walker was orphaned at the age of seven and a widow with a child by 20. She supported herself as a washerwoman for two decades. When Walker became concerned over her hair loss in her late 30s, she discovered and began selling a product for hair restoration which became known as "Madam Walker's Wonderful Hair Grower". Walker began manufacturing a line of hair and other cosmetic products to African American women. She franchised her products and established a nation-wide system of schools for African American beauticians and cosmetologists. With her business acumen and real estate savvy, Madame Walker became wealthy. She moved her business from Denver to Pittsburgh to Indianapolis and ultimately to Harlem and to the Hudson River where she built a large mansion just before her 1919 death.
In 1914, angered at her treatment by a segregated Indianapolis theatre, Madam Walker purchased a large city block in the city's African American district to house her company's headquarters and factory. The complex, a large four story building which included a drugstore, beauty salon, a beauty school, professional offices, ballroom, and 1500 seat theater, opened just after Christmas in December, 1927 and served for many years as a community landmark and as the headquarters for the Madam C.J. Walker Manufacturing Company. In the 1970's the building had fallen into disrepair and was about to be demolished. The Walker cosmetics business was sold in 1985. With community effort, the building was painstakingly restored and reopened in 1988 as the Madam Walker Theatre Center. In 1991, the Walker Building was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
Madam Walker, her business endeavors, and her theater are wonderful to get to know and Bundles tells their stories well with beautiful photographs. The book covers Walker's early life, her business associates, the products she manufactured, the cosmetology school, the theater, and much more. The book includes photographs of urban Indianapolis through the mid-20th Century and beyond, of advertisements over the years for Madame Walker's products, of her schools, and of the businesses in the Walker Building that are good to have in a short book and that capture a great deal about Madam Walker.
This little book might well have been expanded into several volumes. It covers the opening of the Walker Building and its restoration during the 1980s but has relatively little about the theater and its activities during the intervening years. Instead, most of the book is devoted to Madam Walker, her far-flung businesses, and her successors in the Walker family. While fascinating and important, the focus of the book is not on the Madam Walker Theatre Center.
The book offers an excellent quick introduction to African American entrepreneurship, to the continued lure of pulling oneself up by one's bootstraps, and to Madam Walker. I enjoyed learning more about her in this book, which is part of the "Images of America" series of local American photographic histories published by Arcadia Publishers.
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When the Confederacy collapsed, Gen. Joseph Orville Shelby refused to surrender. In 1861 he had started a Missouri company that grew into the greatest Confederate cavalry brigade west of the Mississippi. This book follows the triumphs of the Brigade of the Confederate States Army all the way to the crossing of a contingent of the brigade into Mexico at the end of the war.
A planter and rope manufacturer from Kentucky, Shelby operated entirely in the trans-Mississippi West. He served in the Missouri State Guard as a company commander at Carthage, Wilson’s Creek, and Pea Ridge. He then returned to Missouri to raise a regiment. A daring raid to the Missouri River in the fall of 1863 earned him a promotion to brigadier general. Shelby's Brigade fought valiantly at the Battle of Westport, the Gettysburg of the West, and repeatedly saved Gen. Sterling Price's army from capture on the retreat south.
A descendant of a Shelby’s Brigade member, Deryl P. Sellmeyer offers an evenhanded view of this impressive military leader and his men. The author’s decades-long research of Shelby’s life and his principal officers is evident as he details the history of the famous brigade.
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