Item #12318 Mississippi Harmony: Memoirs of a Freedom Fighter. Winson Hudson, Constance Curry, Derrick Bell, Foreword.

Mississippi Harmony: Memoirs of a Freedom Fighter

New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2002.

Paperback. 8 1/4" X 5 1/2". xxiii, 150pp. Wear to pictorial paper wraps with rubbing, toning, and shelf wear to covers, corners, and edges. Dust-spotting to edges of text block. Sticker to rear cover. Pages are free of marks and notation. Binding is sound.

ABOUT THIS BOOK:
In 1963, Winson Hudson finally registered to vote in Leake County, Mississippi, when she interpreted part of the state constitution by saying, “It meant what it said and it said what it meant.” Her first attempt had been in 1937. A lifelong native of the rural, all-black community of Harmony, Winson has lived through some of the most racially oppressive periods in her state’s history--and has devoted her life to combatting discrimination. With her sister Dovie, Winson filed the first lawsuit to desegregate the public schools in a rural county. Helping to establish the county NAACP chapter in 1961, Winson served as its president for 38 years. Her work has included voting rights, school desegregation, health care, government loans, telephone service, good roads, housing, and childcare--issues that were intertwined with the black freedom struggle. Winson’s narrative, presented in her own words with historical background from noted author and activist Constance Curry, is both triumphant and tragic, inspiring and disturbing. It illustrates the virtually untold story of the role that African American women played in the civil rights movement at the local level in black communities throughout the South.(Publisher). Good. Item #12318
ISBN: 1403964076

Price: $20.00