Here Lies Jim Crow: Civil Rights in Maryland Review

Here Lies Jim Crow: Civil Rights in Maryland
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
C. Fraser Smith has made a very important contribution to the knowledge and understanding of the Civil Rights struggle in Maryland. This book could serve as a textbook for a high school history honors class or college history class. But its readability takes it far beyond the textbook category. Very well written. More Americans, regardless of their race or ethnicity need to to understand what a long and arduous struggle it has been to "implement change" in improving rights for blacks. This book explains that struggle largely within the context of the State of Maryland's own story.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Here Lies Jim Crow: Civil Rights in Maryland

Though he lived throughout much of the South-and even worked his way into parts of the North for a time-Jim Crow was conceived and buried in Maryland. From Chief Justice Roger Brooke Taney's infamous decision in theDred Scott case to Thurgood Marshall's eloquent and effective work onBrown v. Board of Education, the battle for black equality is very much the story of Free State women and men. Here,Baltimore Sun columnist C. Fraser Smith recounts that tale through the stories, words, and deeds of famous, infamous, and little-known Marylanders. He traces the roots of Jim Crow laws fromDred Scott toPlessy v. Ferguson and describes the parallel and opposite early efforts of those who struggled to establish freedom and basic rights for African Americans. Following the historical trail of evidence, Smith relates latter-day examples of Maryland residents who trod those same steps, from the thrice-failed attempt to deny black people the vote in the early twentieth century to nascent demonstrations for open access to lunch counters, movie theaters, stores, golf courses, and other public and private institutions-struggles that occurred decades before the now-celebrated historical figures strode onto the national civil rights scene.Smith's lively account includes the grand themes and the state's major players in the movement-Frederick Douglass, Harriett Tubman, Thurgood Marshall, and Lillie May Jackson, among others-and also tells the story of the struggle via several of Maryland's important but relatively unknown men and women-such as Gloria Richardson, John Prentiss Poe, William L. "Little Willie" Adams, and Walter Sondheim-who prepared Jim Crow's grave and waited for the nation to deliver the body.

Buy NowGet 18% OFF

Click here for more information about Here Lies Jim Crow: Civil Rights in Maryland

0 comments:

Post a Comment