Carroll's Yesteryears

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Carroll's Yesteryears The Baltimore Sun “Backtracks” Articles November 17, 1996 25 Years Ago Plimpton's W.M.C. Role On T.V. - George Plimpton, the unquenchable amateur, tries his hand as a rookie quarterback for the Baltimore Colts on "Plimpton! The Great Quarterback Sneak," a one-hour ABC television network special Friday, November 26 at 9:00 p.m. on WJZ-TV (channel 13). From the start of the training season, at the Colts' camp in Westminster through all the classes, scrimmages, calisthenics and inevitable trips to the infirmary, George observed and whenever humanly possible, participated. He had donned football helmet and shoulder padding before to do research for a book—the best-selling "Paper Lion." Democratic Advocate , November 22,1971. 50 Years Ago VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS TO BUILD - Ground Broken On Pool Road, Donated By Patsy Donofrio; Rev. Cooper Offered The Invocation - Armistice Day will well be remembered here by the breaking of the ground for the proposed home for Molleville Farm Post No. 467, Veterans of Foreign Wars. There were about 50 persons present for the service. The ceremony was held at the location, an acre of ground on Pool road, donated by Patsy Donofrio, father of one of the post members. Commander William Freyman of Molleville Post, in his opening remarks, said the post was proud to start the building of a veterans' home and they expected to carry through with the completion of the building. He then turned the program over to P. G. Coffman, chairman of the building committee.Democratic Advocate, November 15, 1946. 75 Years Ago ARMISTICE'S DAY HERE - PARADE AND DEMONSTRATION BY MACHINE GUNS. - Armistice Day was celebrated in this city by a parade headed by the Westminster Band followed by Company H, and horses, pulling machine guns, W.M.C. Military students and Westminster Fire Department. Nearly every business place was closed during the afternoon. Services were held at Park Square under the auspices of Molleville Farm Post No. 160. Veterans of Foreign Wars and Carroll Post No. 31, American Legion, Chaplain M. L. Smith, of the Veterans, offered the invocation and the address was delivered by Chaplain M. J. Shroyer, of the Legion. A demonstration was given with machine guns on Liberty street extended which was interesting to the crowd that watched the machines in action. A target was placed on the hill below Dr. Fitzhugh's which was riddled by bullets from the guns, showing the good marksmanship of the men. The bullets could be seen sailing through the air toward the target. The day was closed with a dance in the Armory under the direction of Company H, which was well attended. Democratic Advocate, November 18, 1921. 100 Years Ago THE WESTMINSTER FIREMEN, They Have Arranged for a Parade On Thanksgiving Day, the Dedication of the Town Clock and the Unveiling of a Memorial Tablet. — Next Thursday is Thanksgiving Day. All good citizens who can will attend divine worship, and afterwards will enjoy the usual extra dinner. The Firemen's fair and festival will be in full blast, and an excellent dinner will be served there. Many families, it is thought, will give their domestics holiday on Thanksgiving Day, and enjoy their dinner at the Fire Department Building, and at the same time will be aiding a noble work. In the afternoon there will be a firemen's parade. It will start promptly at 2:10 o'clock and will move west on Main street to Pennsylvania avenue, to Union street, to Main, to Washington, to Green, to Church, to Main, to Court, to Willis, to Centre, to Green, to Fowble, to Main, to Firemen's Building. The procession will be in the following order: Platoon of police, Carroll County Band, 36 pieces, Mayor and City Council in © Historical Society of Carroll County www.hsccmd.com - (410) 848-6494 - 210 East Main Street, Westminster MD 21157 Page 1 The Baltimore Sun “Backtracks” Articles carriages, Democratic Drum Corps, new 4-wheel hose carriage, Manchester Fire Department, Republican Drum Corps, Union Bridge Fire Department, President Hamilton and other Maryland State Firemen's Association officers in carriages, Westminster Fire Department, with hook and ladder truck. At 3:30 the exercises pertaining to the dedication of the Town Clock and unveiling of the bronze memorial tablet will take place. The exercises will consist of an address by State Senator J. W. Hering, prayer by Rev. Joel Brown, of Centenary M. E. Church, and singing by the Western Maryland College Glee Club. Citizens generally are requested to display the national flag and to decorate their business houses and residences as much as convenient.Democratic Advocate, November 21, 1896. © Historical Society of Carroll County www.hsccmd.com - (410) 848-6494 - 210 East Main Street, Westminster MD 21157 Page 2 .
Recommended publications
  • Connecticut College Alumni Magazine, Summer 1976 Connecticut College
    Connecticut College Digital Commons @ Connecticut College Linda Lear Center for Special Collections & Alumni News Archives Summer 1976 Connecticut College Alumni Magazine, Summer 1976 Connecticut College Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.conncoll.edu/alumnews Recommended Citation Connecticut College, "Connecticut College Alumni Magazine, Summer 1976" (1976). Alumni News. Paper 197. http://digitalcommons.conncoll.edu/alumnews/197 This Magazine is brought to you for free and open access by the Linda Lear Center for Special Collections & Archives at Digital Commons @ Connecticut College. It has been accepted for inclusion in Alumni News by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Connecticut College. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The views expressed in this paper are solely those of the author. Connecticut College AIumni Magazine Summer 1976/Volume 53 Number 4 Summer Report The campus celebrates: Seniors file into Palmer Auditorium to receive degrees; two alumnae observe reunion activities from a vantage point in Cummings Arts Center; balloons brighten a dormitory's granite wall. ,~.. ~. Coming back p.5 Reunion '76 in notes and photographs Finishing up p.I The class of 1976 goes out in style Getting out Richard Kadzis '76 looks ahead with mixed emotions VOWME 53 'UMBER' CONNECTICUT COLLEGE ALUMNI MAGAZINEISUMMER REPORT 1976 The happiness of pursuit Rain brought commencement exercises While most of the graduates wore caps into a crowded Palmer Auditorium but and gowns (above right), one eschewed had no effect on the spirit of celebration the traditional outfit in favor of a more that hundreds of students, parents, friends conspicuous white suit and panama hat and alumni brought to the campus.
    [Show full text]
  • On Norman Mailer
    LITERATURE 3 Scavenger of eternal truths Norman Mailer in the 1960s THOMAS MEANEY Norman Mailer COLLECTED ESSAYS OF THE 1960S 500pp. Library of America. £29.99 (US $35). 978 1 59853 559 4 FOUR BOOKS OF THE 1960S 950pp. Library of America. £39.99 (US $45). 978 1 59853 558 7 Edited by J. Michael Lennon I went to Wharton with Donald Trump. We were both from praetorian families in Queens – his more martial than mine – in the first line of defense on the crabgrass frontier. We went out one night together to a hotel behind Rittenhouse Square. His date was a wised-up girl from Phila- delphia society who dreamed of becoming a stripper; mine was a retreating waitress, with a hyena body that gave off a whiff of the inquisi- tive. After the drinks – Don drank seltzer – we took them to a room we’d booked upstairs. My date gashed my face with her high-heel after I tried to shuffle her into one of the bedrooms. There was panting from Don’s quarters, the sound of a teetering vase, then mechanical chanting, until a final flesh-on-flesh “Whaa- aap!” A volley of sweet-talk followed. “If you want to be a dancer, there’s nobody who’s going New York City, 1968 to stop you, not even your father,” Don whis- pered. “I know some of the best dancers in this in a Trump Air commercial, which left him of Walt Whitman and Leon Trotsky, your the haste to give pleasure. It was cool in mood, town.
    [Show full text]
  • Norman Mailer
    Norman Mailer: An Inventory of His Papers at the Harry Ransom Center Descriptive Summary Creator: Mailer, Norman Title: Norman Mailer Papers Dates: 1919-2005 Extent: 957 document boxes, 44 oversize boxes, 47 galley files (gf), 14 note card boxes, 1 oversize file drawer (osf) (420 linear feet) Abstract: Handwritten and typed manuscripts, galley proofs, screenplays, correspondence, research materials and notes, legal, business, and financial records, photographs, audio and video recordings, books, magazines, clippings, scrapbooks, electronic records, drawings, and awards document the life, work, and family of Norman Mailer from the early 1900s to 2005. Call Number: Manuscript Collection MS-2643 Language: English Access: Open for research with the exception of some restricted materials. Current financial records and records of active telephone numbers and email addresses for Mailer's children and his wife Norris Church Mailer remain closed. Social Security numbers, medical records, and educational records for all living individuals are also restricted. When possible, documents containing restricted information have been replaced with redacted photocopies. Administrative Information Provenance Early in his career, Mailer typed his own works and handled his correspondence with the help of his sister, Barbara. After the publication of The Deer Park in 1955, he began to rely on hired typists and secretaries to assist with his growing output of works and letters. Among the women who worked for Mailer over the years, Anne Barry, Madeline Belkin, Suzanne Nye, Sandra Charlebois Smith, Carolyn Mason, and Molly Cook particularly influenced the organization and arrangement of his records. The genesis of the Mailer archive was in 1968 when Mailer's mother, Mailer, Norman Manuscript Collection MS-2643 Fanny Schneider Mailer, and his friend and biographer, Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Worlds Apart: How the Distance Between Science and Journalism Threatens America's Future
    Worlds Apart Worlds Apart HOW THE DISTANCE BETWEEN SCIENCE AND JOURNALISM THREATENS AMERICA’S FUTURE JIM HARTZ AND RICK CHAPPELL, PH.D. iv Worlds Apart: How the Distance Between Science and Journalism Threatens America’s Future By Jim Hartz and Rick Chappell, Ph.D. ©1997 First Amendment Center 1207 18th Avenue South Nashville, TN 37212 (615) 321-9588 www.freedomforum.org Editor: Natilee Duning Designer: David Smith Publication: #98-F02 To order: 1-800-830-3733 Contents Foreword vii Scientists Needn’t Take Themselves Seriously To Do Serious Science 39 Introduction ix Concise writing 40 Talk to the customers 41 Overview xi An end to infighting 42 The incremental nature of science 43 The Unscientific Americans 1 Scientific Publishing 44 Serious omissions 2 Science and the Fourth Estate 47 The U.S. science establishment 4 Public disillusionment 48 Looking ahead at falling behind 5 Spreading tabloidization 48 Out of sight, out of money 7 v Is anybody there? 8 Unprepared but interested 50 The regional press 50 The 7 Percent Solution 10 The good science reporter 51 Common Denominators 13 Hooked on science 52 Gauging the Importance of Science 53 Unfriendly assessments 13 When tortoise meets hare 14 Media Gatekeepers 55 Language barriers 15 Margin of error 16 The current agenda 55 Objective vs. subjective 17 Not enough interest 57 Gatekeepers as obstacles 58 Changing times, concurrent threats 17 What does the public want? 19 Nothing Succeeds Like Substance 60 A new interest in interaction 20 Running Scared 61 Dams, Diversions & Bottlenecks 21 Meanwhile,
    [Show full text]
  • My Dear Mrs. Ames : a Study of the Life of Suffragist Cartoonist and Birth Control Reformer Blanche Ames Ames, 1878-1969
    University of Massachusetts Amherst ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Doctoral Dissertations 1896 - February 2014 1-1-1996 My dear Mrs. Ames : a study of the life of suffragist cartoonist and birth control reformer Blanche Ames Ames, 1878-1969. Anne Biller Clark University of Massachusetts Amherst Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations_1 Recommended Citation Clark, Anne Biller, "My dear Mrs. Ames : a study of the life of suffragist cartoonist and birth control reformer Blanche Ames Ames, 1878-1969." (1996). Doctoral Dissertations 1896 - February 2014. 1228. https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations_1/1228 This Open Access Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. It has been accepted for inclusion in Doctoral Dissertations 1896 - February 2014 by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. For more information, please contact [email protected]. MY DEAR MRS. AMES: A STUDY OF THE LIFE OF SUFFRAGIST CARTOONIST AND BIRTH CONTROL REFORMER BLANCHE AMES AMES, 1878-1969 A Dissertation Presented by ANNE BILLER CLARK Amherst in Submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Massachusetts partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY May 1996 History © Copyright by Anne Biller Clark 1996 All Rights Reserved MY DEAR MRS AMES; A STUDY OF THE LIFE OF SUFFRAGIST CARTOONIST AND BIRTH CONTROL REFORMER BLANCHE AMES AMES 1878-1969 A Dissertation Presented by ANNE BILLER CLARK Approved as to style and content by im'ce Berkman, Chair Margo Culle?y. Member David Glassberg, Menw^ Kathy Peiss, Member Bruce Laurie, Department Head History Department ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The author wishes to thank the staff of the Sophia Smith Collection for their valuable assistance and unfailing courtesy during the research stage of this study.
    [Show full text]
  • AM Plimpton Bio & Timeline FINAL
    Press Contact: Natasha Padilla, WNET 212.560.8824, [email protected] Press Materials: http://pbs.org/pressroom or http://thirteen.org/pressroom Websites: http://pbs.org/americanmasters , http://facebook.com/americanmasters , @PBSAmerMasters , http://pbsamericanmasters.tumblr.com , http://youtube.com/AmericanMastersPBS , #AmericanMasters American Masters Plimpton! Starring George Plimpton as Himself Premieres nationally Friday, May 16, 9-10:30 p.m. on PBS (check local listings) George Plimpton Bio & Career Timeline George Plimpton (bio courtesy of The Paris Review ) George Plimpton (1927–2003) was the editor of The Paris Review from its founding in 1953 until his death in 2003. A graduate of Harvard University and Kings College, Cambridge, Plimpton was recruited to Paris by Peter Matthiessen in 1952 and signed onto the project shortly thereafter. “I’ve decided to stay over here in Paris and run this magazine,” he wrote to his parents. “I think I’d be a fool not to.” Aside from his lifelong commitment to The Paris Review , Plimpton is best known for his forays into the world of professional athletics: he earned a bloody nose while sparring with Archie Moore in 1959; he exhausted himself during an outing as a pitcher against a series of MLB All Stars in 1960; he lost thirty yards during a stint as quarterback for the Detroit Lions in 1963; and he was trounced in golf by Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus in 1967...despite a personal handicap of 18. His knack for participatory journalism also led him to test his acrobatics as an aerialist for the Clyde Beatty-Cole Brothers Circus—he failed miserably—and to try his hand as a percussionist with the New York Philharmonic (where a miss-hit on the gong earned him the immediate applause of conductor Leonard Bernstein).
    [Show full text]
  • The Man Who Counts the Killings Page 1 of 30
    The Man Who Counts the Killings Page 1 of 30 , THEAtlaD-tic online Ttle Allanti( Monlhly I Olgllal Edilion Horne MAY 1997 Cu rFe n:t:'~~f::Y~;:: Archi ... :e:;n~'" , Fa rurili;;::::::{',» Site -;9~;~g~:- - THE MAN WHO F~=r~ d ti~ _~_~;:, S:~W~:~rfba:i~:;;:'<­ S'e;a-k8':<" - COUNTS THE KILLINGS ~~t~ill~~~:ili~L;_~~i</: ",' 'S:6:bk $ -,-~~'tCrjfit;~­ George Gerbner, who thirty years ago founded the FfCtiort;:.::J;;­ Food,{)i;;<' Cultural Indicators project, which is best known for its Fore/~ri;;Affair$ estimate that the average American child will have LanQ:Y~¢~,_:_ watched 8,000 murders on television by the age of twelve, Poet;rtf!Pig'e's'" Politf;;~ &-;$od€itv is so alarmed about the baneful effects of TV that he Scierf¢1;i:.& TE!,;hnology describes them in terms of "fascism" Traver:~;:Pursbit::: by Scott Stossel •. N the unlikely event that a major Hollywood studio were to make a movie based on the life of George I Gerbner, it might go something like this: Return to the Table of Contents. A passionate young Hungarian poet, dismayed by the rise of fascism in his country in the late 1930s, emigrates to America. Cut to 1942. The ex-poet, motivated by his hatred of fascism, enlists in the U.S. Army. He volunteers for the Office of Strategic Services and ends up in a group of • fifteen men trained, like William Holden and his comrades in The Bridge on the River Kwai, in the techniques of blowing up bridges and roads.
    [Show full text]
  • Diary of the Coolville Killer: Reflections on the Bush Years, Rendered in Fictional Prose
    Diary of the Coolville Killer: Reflections on the Bush Years, Rendered in Fictional Prose A dissertation presented to the faculty of the College of Arts and Sciences of Ohio University In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy Sherman W. Sutherland June 2008 2 This dissertation titled Diary of the Coolville Killer: Reflections on the Bush Years, Rendered in Fictional Prose by SHERMAN W. SUTHERLAND has been approved for the Department of English and the College of Arts and Sciences by Darrell K. Spencer Stocker Professor in Creative Writing Benjamin M. Ogles Dean, College of Arts and Sciences 3 ABSTRACT SUTHERLAND, SHERMAN W., Ph.D., June 2008, English Diary of the Coolville Killer: Reflections on the Bush Years, Rendered in Fictional Prose (214 pp.) Director of Dissertation: Darrell K. Spencer This dissertation consists of an allegorical novel, written in the form of a diary, set mostly in southeastern Ohio. The critical introduction explores the effect of temporal perspective on first-person interpolated stories such as diaries and epistolary narratives. Based on the work of narratologists such as Gerard Genette and Gerald Prince, the introduction discusses the need for thoughtful consideration of temporal position and distance in the composition of first-person interpolated narratives. Approved: _____________________________________________________________ Darrell K. Spencer Stocker Professor in Creative Writing 4 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Thanks to Drs. Darrell Spencer, David Burton, Zakes Mda and Robert Miklitsch for their support and guidance. Thanks also to Joan Connor and Dr. Andrew Escobedo for their continued encouragement. Thanks to Dr. William Austin, Alan Black, Richard Duggin, Dr. John J.
    [Show full text]
  • Robert F. Kennedy and the African American Civil
    ROBERT F. KENNEDY AND THE AFRICAN AMERICAN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT Joseph Aloysius Hennessey 1 DEDICATED TO HELEN KEYES “History is progress through the transmission of acquired skills from one generation to another.” - EDWARD HALLET CARR. “Only through education does one come to be dissatisfied with his own knowledge, and only through teaching others does one come to realize the uncomfortable inadequacy of his knowledge. Being dissatisfied with his own knowledge, one then realizes that the trouble lies with himself, and realizing the uncomfortable inadequacy of his knowledge, one then feels stimulated to improve himself.” - CONFUCIUS. “It is vital for us as much as them that our young feel that change is possible, that they will be heard, that the follies and the cruelties of the world will yield, however grudgingly, to the sacrifices they are prepared to make.” - ROBERT F. KENNED 2 INTRODUCTION Two popular beliefs exist about Robert F. Kennedy and his experience with the Civil Rights Movement. The first belief, articulated in such accounts as Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.'s Robert F. Kennedy and His Times, and Carl Brauer's John Kennedy and the Second Reconstruction, is that Robert Kennedy was fully aware of the injustice of racial and civil bigotry upon taking over as the Attorney General and that he moved boldly in coordination with Civil Rights Leaders to address the deprivation of civil rights for African-Americans in this country. The other account, made popular through such books as Jack Newfield's Robert F. Kennedy: A Memoir, claim that the period of grief and introspection following the death of Bobby's brother John Kennedy caused Robert Kennedy to earnestly and spiritually embrace civil rights through an identification and sympathy with the "have nots" of American society.
    [Show full text]
  • An Oral History on the Rumble in the Jungle Fight
    The Knockout That Shocked the World: An Oral History on the Rumble in the Jungle Fight Between George Foreman and Muhammad Ali on October 30, 1974 Interviewer: Will Yore Interviewee: Jerry Izenberg Instructor: Alex Haight February 11, 2019 Yore Table of Contents Interviewer Release Form ………………………………………………………… 2 Interviewee Release Form………………………………………………………… 3 Statement of Purpose……………………………………………………………… 4 Biography…………………………………………………………………………. 5 Rumblings in the Jungle and in the U.S…………………………………………... 7 Interview Transcription…………………………………………………………. 18 Interview Analysis……………………………………………………………….. 49 Bibliography……………………………………………………………………... 55 Appendix………………………………………………………………………… 57 Yore Yore Yore Statement of Purpose The purpose of this project is to obtain a historical comprehension of the fight between George Foreman and Muhammad Ali on October 30th, 1974. Interviewing Mr. Jerry Izenberg provides a firsthand account of the experience of attending the fight as well as personal memories between him and the fighters. This interview will allow historians to compare and contrast evidence provided by history books with that of someone who experienced the event live and was able to gain a full understanding of the perspectives of each boxer. Furthermore, this interview will contribute to historical discussions about the lives of Muhammad Ali and George Foreman as well as provide personal insight on what the fight meant to the participants along with those watching. Yore Biography Jerry Izenberg was born in 1930 in Neptune City, New Jersey. He attended Rutgers University on the Newark campus. During his education at Rutgers, Mr. Izenberg began his journalism career in 1951 when he got a job with the Newark Star Ledger. After working there for only one summer, he enlisted in the Korean War and served for two years.
    [Show full text]
  • GOOD ~.Forning, MR. ORWELL"-­ a LIVE NEW YEAR's DAY SATELLITE SPECTACULAR FEATURING PERF0R!'-1ERS Frmf Nelv YORK and PARIS
    • FOR DfP.IED IATE RELE.-\.SE 11/NET /THIRTEEN TO PRESENT "GOOD ~.fORNING, MR. ORWELL"-­ A LIVE NEW YEAR'S DAY SATELLITE SPECTACULAR FEATURING PERF0R!'-1ERS FRmf NElV YORK AND PARIS-- To Air Nationally Ove r PBS Sunday, January 1 at Noon LI VE from New York and Paris, WNET/THIRTEEN presents ~am June Paik's "Good Morning, Mr. Orwell," a satellite spectacular welcoming the dawn of 1984 with music, dance and poetry. Hosted by George Plimpton, this event will be seen in America over PBS on Sunday, January 1 at 12 Noon,* and will also be seen in Europe via FR3 French National Television. (In New York the pro g ra~ will be seen on THIRTEE N at that time.) "George Orwell was the first media prophet and philosopher," expla ins Paik. "However, he emphasized only the negative aspects of the media: TV as Big Brother. 'Good Morning, Mr. Orwell' the first global interactive use of the satellite among international artists, celebrates the positive possibilities of the media by showcasing both established and new young talents from both sides of the Atlantic. This show is symb olic of how television can cross international borders and provide a liberating information/communi­ cations service." (more) *Please check local PBS listings in your area. Harold Holzer. Director of Public Information. (212) 560-3004, WNET/ THIRTEEN . 356 West 58 Street, New York, NY 10019 - 2 - ProQram host George Plimpton believes 1n experiencing first-hand the areas of his writing . F6r his various books Plimpton has played quarterback for the Detroit Lions, pitched against major league baseball players, boxed against Archie ~oore and played basketba l l with the Bos ton Celtics.
    [Show full text]
  • Slavery and the Civil War in Cultural Memory
    Slavery and the Civil War in Cultural Memory The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation Adkins, Christina Katherine. 2014. Slavery and the Civil War in Cultural Memory. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:13070064 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#LAA Slavery and the Civil War in Cultural Memory A dissertation presented by Christina Katherine Adkins to the Committee on Higher Degrees in American Studies in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the subject of American Studies Harvard University Cambridge, Massachusetts August 2014 © 2014 Christina Katherine Adkins All rights reserved. Dissertation Advisor: Professor John Stauffer Christina Katherine Adkins Slavery and the Civil War in Cultural Memory Abstract That slavery was largely excised from the cultural memory of the Civil War in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, particularly by white Americans, is well documented; Slavery and the Civil War in Cultural Memory moves beyond that story of omission to ask how slavery has been represented in U.S. culture and, necessarily, how it figures into some of the twentieth century’s most popular Civil War narratives. The study begins in the 1930s with the publication of Gone with the Wind—arguably the most popular Civil War novel of all time—and reads Margaret Mitchell’s pervasive tale of ex-slaveholder adversity against contemporaneous narratives like Black Reconstruction in America, Absalom, Absalom!, and Black Boy/American Hunger, which contradict Mitchell’s account of slavery, the war, and Reconstruction.
    [Show full text]