Starting with a photograph and some writings left by her grandmother, Thulani Davis goes looking for the "white folk" in her family-a Scots-Irish family of cotton planters unknown to her-and uncovers a history far richer and stranger than she had ever imagined. When Davis's grandmother died in 1971, she was writing a novel about her parents, Mississippi cotton farmers who met after the Civil War: Chloe Curry, a former slave from Alabama, married with several children, and Will Campbell, a white planter from Missouri who had never marriedIn this compelling intersection of genealogy, memoir, and Reconstruction history, Davis picks up where her grandmother left off. Her journey takes her from Missouri to Mississippi to Alabama, back to her home town in Virginia, and even to Sierra Leone. The Campbells lead her to locate not only their pioneer history but to find the previously unknown roots of her mother's family; to Civil War archives, where she discovers the records of the Campbells who fought with Confederate troops; to the Silver Creek plantation in Yazoo, Mississippi, where the two branches of her family history became one; and to a county near her Virginia hometown where both families started their American journey, completely unknown to each other. My Confederate Kinfolk examines the origins of some of our most deeply ingrained notions about what makes a family black or white and offers an immensely compelling, intellectually challenging alternative.
Author(s): Thulani Davis
Publisher: Basic Books (Perseus Books Group)
Year: 2006
Language: English
Commentary: text printout: pagination does not match physical copy
Pages: 324
1 Twenty-first Century Freedwoman Fitting Two Families into History 1
2 Silver Creek, Mississippi, ca. 1875 Chloe Tarrant Curry Comes to Work at the Campbell Plantation 15
3 Clay Pots and a Tiger's Tooth (1850-1861) Where Chloe Came From 43
4 Horses at the Door (1852-1861) Where Will Came From 69
5 Behind Confederate Lines (1861-1863) The Scattered Campbells Go to War 95
6 War from on the Road (1863-1865) Fighting Emancipation, Black Soldiers, and Personal Loss 127
7 "They Still Shoot Negroes" (1865-1868) In Alabama and Mississippi after the War 159
8 Silver Creek (1868-1878) Chloe Leaves Terror in Alabama for Mississippi 195
9 Colonel Campbell's Constituents The Heroes and Villains of a Violent Election 227
10 High Water (1880-1932) Chloe and Will and Life in Yazoo 239
Epilogue 279
Notes 285
Bibliography 305
Acknowledgments 311
Index