Pollard Memorial Library (Lowell)

African American women confront the West, 1600-2000, edited by Quintard Taylor, Shirley Ann Wilson Moore

Label
African American women confront the West, 1600-2000, edited by Quintard Taylor, Shirley Ann Wilson Moore
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [363]-371) and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
African American women confront the West
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
50561824
Responsibility statement
edited by Quintard Taylor, Shirley Ann Wilson Moore
Sub title
1600-2000
Table Of Contents
Introduction -- Chapter 1: The West of African American women, 1600-2000 / Shirley Ann Wilson Moore and Quintard Taylor -- Chapter 2: African American women in Western history: past and prospect / Glenda Riley -- The Spanish-Mexican period / Isabel de Olvera Arrives in New Mexico -- Chapter 3: To be black and female in the Spanish Southwest: toward a history of African women on New Spain's far Northern frontier / Dedra S. McDonald -- The Antebellum West / A Texas slave's letter to her husband, 1862 -- Chapter 4: Mining a mythic past: the history of Mary Ellen Pleasant / Lynn M. Hudson -- A voice from the oppressed to the friends of humanity -- Chapter 5: Rights of passage: gendered-rights consciousness and the quest for freedom, San Francisco, California, 1850-1870 / Barbara Y. Welke -- The Post-Civil war era -- Chapter 6: "Anxious foot soldiers": Sacramento's black women and education in Nineteenth-century California / Susan Bragg / Willianna Hickman's Nicodemus sage -- Homesteading on the plains: the Ava Speese Day story -- Chapter 7: Women of the Great Falls African Methodist Episcopal Church, 1870-1910 / Peggy Riley -- Kate D. Chapman describes blacks in Yankton, Dakota territory -- A black woman on the Montana frontier -- Chapter 8: "Is there no blessing for me?: Jane Elizabeth Manning James, a Mormon African American woman / Ronald G. Coleman -- The Early Twentieth century -- Chapter 9: "The mountains were free and we loved them": Dr. Ruth Flowers of Boulder, Colorado / Susan Armitage -- Nettie J. Asberry: African American Club woman in the Pacific Northwest -- Chapter 10: Susie Revels Cayton, Beatrice Morrow Cannady, and the campaign for social justice in the Pacific Northwest / Quintard Taylor -- Marcus Garvey: A Seattle woman remembers -- Chapter 11: "Try being a black woman!": Jobs in Denver, 1900-1970 / Moya B. Hansen -- Hattie McDaniel wins an Oscar -- Chapter 12: From Peola to Carmen: Fredi Washington, Dorothy Dandridge, and Hollywood's portrayal of the tragic mulatto / Alicia I. Rodriquez-Estrada -- World War II / Lyn Childs confronts a racist act -- Etta Germany writes to the President -- Chapter 13: Women made the community: African American migrant women and the cultural transformation of the San Francisco East Bay area / Gretchen Lemke-Santangelo -- Chapter 14: "Eight dollars a day and working in the shade": an oral history of African American migrant women in the Las Vegas Gaming industry / Claytee D. White -- The Civil Rights era -- Chapter 15: Lulu B. White and the integration of the University of Texas, 1945-1950 / Merline Pitre -- Ada Lois Sipuel Fisher and the U.S. Supreme Court -- Chapter 16: Lucinda Todd and the invisible petitioners of Brown v. Board of education of Topeka, Kansas / Cheryl Brown Henderson -- Chapter 17: Clara Luper and the Civil Rights movement In Oklahoma City, 1958-1964 / Linda Williams Reese / Elaine Brown: Black Panther -- Chapter 18: Black radicalism in 1960s California: women in the Black Panther Party / Jane Rhodes
Classification
Content
Mapped to

Incoming Resources