Leavin' a Testimony: Portraits from Rural Texas (Focus on American History Series,Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin)

Leavin' a Testimony: Portraits from Rural Texas (Focus on American History Series,Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin)

"This is a shocking, powerful, moving, disturbing, ultimately hopeful book. We all stand in debt to Patsy Cravens for having the imagination, the determination, the skill, and the heart to capture this almost-forgotten portion of the past and preserve those fragile memories that could so easily have been lost. They are now, thanks to her, a permanent part of our state's history."

—from the introduction by John Boles, Professor of History at Rice University and editor of the Journal of Southern History

First settled by Stephen F. Austin's colonists in the early nineteenth century, Colorado County has deep roots in Texas history. Mainly rural and agrarian until late in the twentieth century, Colorado County was a cotton-growing region whose population was about evenly divided between blacks and whites. These life-long neighbors led separate and unequal lives, memories of which still linger today. To preserve those memories, Patsy Cravens began interviewing and photographing the older residents of Colorado County in the 1980s. In this book, she presents photographs and recollections of the last generation, black and white, who grew up in the era of Jim Crow segregation.

The folks in Colorado County have engrossing stories to tell. They recall grinding poverty and rollicking fun in the Great Depression, losing crops and livestock to floods, working for the WPA, romances gone wrong and love gone right, dirty dancing, church and faith, sharecropping, quilting, raising children, racism and bigotry, and even the horrific lynching of two African American teenagers in 1935. The Colorado County residents' stories reveal an amazing resiliency and generosity of spirit, despite the hardships that have filled most of their lives. They also capture a rural way of life that was once common across the South, but is now gone forever.





Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 976.4253
EAN: 9780292713055
ISBN: 0292713053
Label: University of Texas Press
Manufacturer: University of Texas Press
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 327
Publication Date: 2006-06-01
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Studio: University of Texas Press



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Summary: Excellent Collection of Personal Experiences Central/South Texas
Comment: From the photo on the cover I originally thought this was going to be a collection of interviews from only one segment of Colorado County's population- but I was mistaken. The book contains interviews from all segments of the population of Colorado County- and the experiences are as widely varied as one can imagine. In reading this book we get to learn about everything from "The Orphan Train" to a lynching, to farming and ranching experiences in Colorado County. It's a great book for people without a lot of time to read, you can read a few interviews, and later when you find another quiet moment, you can read a few more. I love all the photos too! Patsy Craven put together a jewel of Texas History, one any collector of Texas History books should have.


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