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Paperback The House at the End of the Road: The Story of Three Generations of an Interracial Family in the American South Book

ISBN: 1617030813

ISBN13: 9781617030819

The House at the End of the Road: The Story of Three Generations of an Interracial Family in the American South

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Book Overview

In defiance of his middle-class landowning family, a young white man named James Morgan Richardson married a light-skinned black woman, Edna Howell. It was 1914 in south Alabama. Together they eventually built a house at the dead end of a road in a rural black community. If you came there to do the Richardson family harm, you faced Jim Richardson's rule of justice, represented by a double-barreled shotgun. And at the end of the road, there was only one way out.

The House at the End of the Road: The Story of Three Generations of an Interracial Family in the American South examines how one pioneering interracial couple developed a love and a racial identity that carried them defiantly through the Jim Crow years. Through interviews and oral history collected from both sides of the Richardson family's racial divide, as well as archival research, The House at the End of the Road probes into the core of the issue of race in early twentieth-century America. At the same time, it takes the lessons of the past and places them under the scrutiny of a contemporary world adjusted to DNA ancestry testing, a more flexible sense of racial and ethnic identity, and a tolerance and acceptance of the racial ambiguity that laws prohibiting Jim and Edna Richardson's marriage sought to eliminate.

Jim and Edna Richardson were Ralph Eubanks's grandparents. Now, decades after interracial marriage became legal, Eubanks takes readers on a journey back to his grandparents' house at the end of the road where he reconstructs their life and times and seeks lessons for America's multiracial future.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

IMPORTANT TOPIC--WELL ARTICULATED

The topic of multi-race identity touches many families--perhaps these days, more than ever. School integration and more open societies that have emerged in the new Civil Rights era have brought together humans who only see and are attracted to what's inside. The results speak for themselves--many new mixtures of biology and culture. The book delves into attitudes and mores of the old South in regards to mixing of the races. The story is told with sensitivity and depth, and without prejudice. Readers will appreciate, especially, the insights learned and expressed in the last two chapters. These were the best! See also:[ [ASIN:1587369265 From Dunbar to Destiny: One Woman's Journey Through Desegregation and Beyond]] and:[ [ASIN:1416543287 The Black Girl Next Door: A Memoir]]

Unique family memoir

The author has taken time to learn quite a bit about his grandparents, Mr. Jim Richardson, his wife and their family. These were interesting people. Their method of coping with a mixed racial marriage in rural Alabama in the early to mid part of the 20th century could, I believe, be called unique. I hope the author continues in his quest to learn about these folks, their time and their area, and lets us share what he learns. I recommend this book.

House at the end of the road by eubanks

The book got here in a timely manner and It was in good shape. It was a very interesting book but not much as I would like about the family now
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