Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781469689999 Academic Inspection Copy

The Legend of Wyatt Outlaw

From Reconstruction Through Black Lives Matter
Description
Author
Biography
Google
Preview
Wyatt Outlaw's story was one of Black success: He was a Union League leader, business owner, and the first Black town constable and commissioner in Graham, a small town located in North Carolina's Alamance County. But in 1870, Outlaw was murdered by the Ku Klux Klan, setting off a dramatic series of events: more lynchings, a Republican-led "war" against the Klan, and a white supremacist crackdown on Black political power that continues today. As a child, Black activist, musician, and Graham native Sylvester Allen frequently passed the site where Outlaw was killed without ever learning his name. Belle Boggs, white and also from the South, taught high school in Alamance County without knowing Outlaw's importance. Allen and Boggs both sought to discover why Outlaw had been erased from mainstream history books. In The Legend of Wyatt Outlaw, they share what they found in artful detail and connect Outlaw's story to the violence against Black people in Alamance and throughout the United States, from Reconstruction through Jim Crow, the civil rights era, and Black Lives Matter. Drawing on archival research, interviews, and their own personal stories, Allen and Boggs join the conversation begun by historian Peniel Joseph and activist William Barber II about a third Reconstruction in America, but they also offer ways to move forward for any community struggling with a history of racism.
Sylvester Allen Jr. is a writer, composer, and director based in Graham, North Carolina. Belle Boggs is professor of English at North Carolina State University, and author of several books, including The Gulf and The Art of Waiting: On Fertility, Medicine, and Motherhood.
Google Preview content