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Author Hamburger, Robert, 1943- author.

Title Our portion of hell : Fayette County, Tennessee: an oral history of the struggle for Civil Rights / Robert Hamburger
Published Jackson : University Press of Mississippi, [2022]

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Description 1 online resource (ix, 236 pages) : illustrations
Contents Preface to the new edition -- Introduction -- Part I: "Thinking for myself" -- the beginning:1959-1960 -- Part II. "Going on to register"" -- 1960-1961 -- Part III. "A few movements to improve things" -- 1963-1965 -- Part IV. "It's gonna take bone determination" -- School integration: 1965-1967 -- Part V. "It's a power structure type of operation" -- Federal aid: 1966-1971 -- Part VI. "Black man don't get no justice here" -- The Hobson incident. 1969 -- Part VII. "Doin something you knew was right" -- Trouble in the schools: 1969-1970 -- Part VIII. "We oughta take all these sonsofbitches off and kill 'em" -- 1969-1970 -- Part IX. "I don't know how I can stop" -- Afterword to the new edition -- Acknowledgments -- List of illustrations
Summary "Our Portion of Hell: Fayette County, Tennessee: An Oral History of the Struggle for Civil Rights offers an unrivalled account of how a rural Black community drew together to combat the immense forces aligned against them. Author Robert Hamburger first visited Fayette County as part of a student civil rights project in 1965 and, in 1971, set out to document the history of the grassroots movement there. Beginning in 1959, Black residents in Fayette County attempting to register to vote were met with brutal resistance from the white community. Sharecropping families whose names appeared on voter registration rolls were evicted from their homes and their possessions tossed by the roadside. These dispossessed families lived for months in tents on muddy fields, as Fayette County became a "tent city" that attracted national attention. The white community created a blacklist culled from voter registration rolls, and those whose names appeared on the list were denied food, gas, and every imaginable service at shops, businesses, and gas stations throughout the county. Hamburger conducted months of interviews with residents of the county, inviting speakers to recall childhood experiences in the "Old South" and to explain what inspired them to take a stand against the oppressive system that dominated life in Fayette County. Their stories, told in their own words, make up the narrative of Our Portion of Hell. This reprint edition includes twenty-nine documentary photographs and an insightful new afterword by the author. There, he discusses the making of the book and reflects upon the difficult truth that although the civil rights struggle, once so immediate, has become history, many of the core issues that inspired the struggle remain as urgent as ever"-- Provided by publisher
Notes Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on November 10, 2022)
Subject Civil rights -- Tennessee -- Fayette County
Civil rights movements -- Tennessee
African Americans -- Tennessee -- Fayette County -- Interviews
African Americans -- Suffrage.
Community organization -- Tennessee -- Fayette County
Sharecropping -- Tennessee -- Fayette County -- History -- 20th century
HISTORY / African American
African Americans
African Americans -- Suffrage
Civil rights
Civil rights movements
Community organization
Race relations
Sharecropping
SUBJECT Fayette County (Tenn.) -- Race relations
Subject Tennessee
Tennessee -- Fayette County
Genre/Form History
Interviews
Form Electronic book
LC no. 2022030310
ISBN 9781496842398
1496842391
9781496842367
1496842367
1496842375
9781496842381
1496842383
9781496842374