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

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781469694580 Academic Inspection Copy

One True Church

An American Story of Race, Family, and Religion
Description
Author
Biography
Reviews
Google
Preview
In the summer of 1872, a white doctor and a formerly enslaved African American farmer walked through a field near Newton Grove, North Carolina, and mapped out the dimensions of a new clapboard church. The men, John Carr Monk and Solomon Monk, had been raised together on a nearby plantation. While neighbors attended newly segregated Protestant congregations, the Monks converted to Catholicism, which offered a framework of racial universalism. Alongside the church, the parish ran parochial schools for the area's Black and white children long before state public schools existed. But visits from night riders emphasized the congregation's threat to the social order. Despite these threats and others, the church used their common theology and local history to navigate the nativism of the 1920s and the bishop' s decision to segregate. Then, in 1953, the church community reintegrated. While the parish was far from a utopia, it embraced the daily struggle to embody the true church that its founders believed God desired. Drawing from archives, ethnographic observations, and the living histories of parish members, Susan B. Ridgely offers a rich understanding of the ongoing interplay of race, religion, and rural life in this parish, in North Carolina, and in the United States.
Susan B. Ridgely is professor of religious studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
"A much larger story about racial discrimination in the Jim Crow South . . . Ridgely uncovers a history drawn from living memory, bringing it much closer to our own lived experience."-Gerardo Marti, author of Worship Across the Racial Divide: Religious Music and the Multiracial Congregation "A fascinating local history of a small but extraordinary Catholic community in Newton Grove, North Carolina, and a case study of how global currents shaped a single parish."-John T. McGreevy, author of Catholicism: A Global History from the French Revolution to Pope Francis
Google Preview content