The Star Creek Papers
Horace Mann Bond author Julia W Bond author Adam Fairclough editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Georgia Press
Published:1st Dec '11
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Star Creek Papers is the never-before-published account of the complex realities of race relations in the rural South in the 1930s.
When Horace and Julia Bond moved to Louisiana in 1934, they entered a world where the legacy of slavery was miscegenation, lingering paternalism, and deadly racism. The Bonds were a young, well-educated and idealistic African American couple working for the Rosenwald Fund, a trust established by a northern philanthropist to build schools in rural areas. They were part of the "Explorer Project" sent to investigate the progress of the school in the Star Creek district of Washington Parish. Their report, which decried the teachers' lack of experience, the poor quality of the coursework, and the students' chronic absenteeism, was based on their private journal, "The Star Creek Diary," a shrewdly observed, sharply etched, and affectionate portrait of a rural black community.
Horace Bond was moved to write a second document, "Forty Acres and a Mule," a history of a black farming family, after Jerome Wilson was lynched in 1935. The Wilsons were thrifty landowners whom Bond knew and respected; he intended to turn their story into a book, but the chronicle remained unfinished at his death. These important primary documents were rediscovered by civil rights scholar Adam Fairclough, who edited them with Julia Bond's support.
An accessible and poignant work which will attract interest of anyone interested in the evolution of the black family and rural race relations.
* author of Lynching in the New South: Georgia and Virginia, 1880–1930ISBN: 9780820340838
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 12mm
Weight: 318g
200 pages