Blood At The Root: A Racial Cleansing In America
Patrick Phillips
W. W. Norton
Forsyth County, Georgia, at the turn of the twentieth century was
home to a large African American community that included ministers and
teachers, farmers and field hands, tradesmen, servants, and children.
Many black residents were poor sharecroppers, but others owned their own
farms and the land on which they’d founded the county’s thriving black
churches.
But then in September of 1912, three young black
laborers were accused of raping and murdering a white girl. One man was
dragged from a jail cell and lynched on the town square, two teenagers
were hung after a one-day trial, and soon bands of white “night riders”
launched a coordinated campaign of arson and terror, driving all 1,098
black citizens out of the county. In the wake of the expulsions, whites
harvested the crops and took over the livestock of their former
neighbors, and quietly laid claim to “abandoned” land. The charred ruins
of homes and churches disappeared into the weeds, until the people and
places of black Forsyth were forgotten.
National Book Award
finalist Patrick Phillips tells Forsyth’s tragic story in vivid detail
and traces its long history of racial violence all the way back to
antebellum Georgia. Recalling his own childhood in the 1970s and ’80s,
Phillips sheds light on the communal crimes of his hometown and the
violent means by which locals kept Forsyth “all white” well into the
1990s.
Blood at the Root is a sweeping American tale that
spans the Cherokee removals of the 1830s, the hope and promise of
Reconstruction, and the crushing injustice of Forsyth’s racial
cleansing. With bold storytelling and lyrical prose, Phillips breaks a
century-long silence and uncovers a history of racial terrorism that
continues to shape America in the twenty-first century.
1 comment:
ThThank you for embracing you courage!
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