Freedom was in sight! A graphic history of Reconstruction in the Washington, D.C., region

Kate Masur

Book - 2024

"The Reconstruction era was born from the tumult and violence of the Civil War and delivered the most powerful changes the United States had seen since its founding. Black Americans in Washington, D.C., and its surrounding region were at the heart of these transformations, bravely working to reunite their families, build their communities, and claim rights long denied them. Meanwhile, in the capital, government leaders struggled to reunite and remake the nation. Famous individuals such as Frederick Douglass and Ida B. Wells played central roles, as did lesser-known figures like Emma Brown, the first African American teacher in Washington's public schools, and lawyer-journalist William Calvin Chase, longtime editor of the Washingto...n Bee. Freedom Was in Sight! draws on the words and experiences of people who lived during Reconstruction, powerfully narrating how the impacts of emancipation and civil war rippled outward for decades. Vividly drawn by award-winning graphic artist Liz Clarke and written by Pulitzer Prize-finalist Kate Masur, a leading historian of Reconstruction, this rich graphic history reveals the hopes and betrayals of a critical period in American history"--

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Subjects
Genres
Nonfiction comics
Educational comics
Historical comics
Graphic novels
Illustrated works
Ouvrages illustrés
Bandes dessinées autres que de fiction
Bandes dessinées éducatives
Bandes dessinées historiques
Published
Chapel Hill : The University of North Carolina Press [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Kate Masur (author)
Other Authors
Liz Clarke, 1982- (illustrator)
Item Description
"A Ferris and Ferris book" -- title page.
Physical Description
xiii, 171 pages : color illustrations, color map ; 26 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781469683881
9781469680187
  • Introduction
  • Freedom Was In Sight
  • 1. Emancipation
  • 2. Education
  • 3. Politics
  • 4. Community
  • 5. Reaction
  • 6. Endings And Beginnings
  • Reconstruction: A Rrief Overview
  • Chronology Of Local And National Events
  • Selected Primary Sources
  • Nellie Arnold Plummer Describes Her Family's Escape from Slavery, Published in 1927
  • Sergeant George W. Hatton Writes to the Christian Recorder, June 13, 1864
  • President Andrew Johnson Vetoes Legislation for Black Men's Enfranchisement in the District of Columbia, January 5, 1867
  • Emma V. Brown Writes to Her Former Teacher, February 3, 1867
  • The Washington Bee Covers the Murder of Addison Coleman by an Officer ofthe Washington Metropolitan Police, August 22, 1885
  • The Washington Bee Touts Harpers Ferry as a Destination for Black Tourists, June 16, 1888
  • Helen A. Cook Reports on the Activities of the Washington Colored Woman's League, Early 1894
  • Frederick Douglass Speaks at the Opening of Jennie Dean's Manassas Industrial School, September 3, 1894
  • Further Reading
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A graphic history of American Reconstruction, followed by a brief text overview, a chronology, and an appendix of primary sources. Historians have traditionally seen Reconstruction as a set period that began at the close of the Civil War in 1865 and concluded with the start of the Hayes presidency in 1877. However, Northwestern history professor Masur suggests in the introduction that Reconstruction actuallystarted with the Civil War and ended definitively in the 1890s after "biracial political coalitions had been systematically defeated." Rather than using a narrative history to make her points, Masur "speaks" through Emma V. Brown, a real-life teacher and advocate for Black education who lived through both the war and Reconstruction. Co-author Clarke, a South African illustrator, brings Brown's narration to life in colorful comic book--style illustrations that capture the turbulent 19th-century world in which Brown lived. The narrator begins by referencing ex-slave Harriet Jacobs' influential memoir,Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, which was published just before the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861. After that, she focuses primarily on the struggles the Black community faced to build new post-enslavement lives in 1865. Some, like Brown, fought to establish schools to educate Black children; others, like George T. Downing, fought to give Black men the vote. Still others, like social reformer Frederick Douglass and journalist Ida B. Wells, rose to national prominence through their efforts to fight the growing tide of racism that, by the 1890s, was manifesting as mob violence and federal laws that curbed the national government's power "to protect people's rights when local and state authorities refused to do so." Recalling this earlier time of profound social division in America's history, Masur and Clarke's unusual collaboration celebrates the men and women who battled the forces of white supremacy to gain their rightful place as citizens. Engaging reading for all ages. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.