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Hardcover Love Cemetery: Unburying the Secret History of Slaves Book

ISBN: 0060779314

ISBN13: 9780060779313

Love Cemetery: Unburying the Secret History of Slaves

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

By the eve of the Civil War, there were four million slaves in North America, and Harrison County was the largest slave-owning county in Texas. So when China Galland returned to research her family history there, it should not have surprised her to learn of unmarked cemeteries for slaves. "My daddy never let anybody plow this end of the field," a local matron told a startled Galland during a visit to her antebellum mansion. "The slaves are buried there." Galland's subsequent effort to help restore just one of these cemeteries--Love Cemetery--unearths a quintessential American story of prejudice, land theft, and environmental destruction, uncovering racial wounds that are slow to heal. Galland gathers an interracial group of local religious leaders and laypeople to work on restoring Love Cemetery, securing community access to it, and rededicating it to the memories of those buried there. In her attempt to help reconsecrate Love Cemetery, Galland unearths the ghosts of slavery that still haunt us today. Research into county historical records and interviews with local residents uncover two versions of history--one black, one white. Galland unpacks these tangled narratives to reveal a history of shame--of slavery and lynching, Jim Crow laws and land takings (the theft of land from African-Americans), and ongoing exploitation of the land surrounding the cemetery by oil and gas drilling. With dread she even discovers how her own ancestors benefited from the racial imbalance. She also encounters some remarkable, inspiring characters in local history. Surprisingly, the original deed for the cemetery's land was granted not by a white plantation owner, but by Della Love Walker, the niece of the famous African-American cowboy Deadwood Dick. Through another member of the Love Cemetery committee, Galland discovers a connection to Marshall's native son, James L. Farmer, a founder of Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) and organizer of the 1961 Freedom Riders. In researching local history, Galland also learns of the Colored Farmers' Alliance, a statewide group formed in the 19th century that took up issues ranging from low wages paid to cotton pickers to emigration to Liberia. By telling this one story of ultimate interracial and intergenerational cooperation, Galland provides a model of the kind of communal remembering and reconciliation that can begin to heal the deep racial scars of an entire nation.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Amazing True Story About A Woman's Journey

I literally could not put this book down. Don't let the title fool you, it's not just about resurrecting a cemetery, it's about resurrecting your soul. It's a feel good book that everyone needs to read.

opening of the heart and mind

I have read all of Ms. Galland's books and found life-changing hope there. They create within me renewed commitment to find a place in the world that might bring a bit of healing. As a Louisiana native who has recently moved to Maine, so much of the material is familiar to me, yet seen from a slightly different lens can be life altering. The message of unity and love stated and acted out in so many small and large ways is so important right now in our polarized nation. Many thanks to the author. Elizabeth Owen

Choosing Love

Here is a readable, moving, fascinating example of how a "grain of sand" can, indeed, contain the universe. The grain in this case is an out-of-the-way, overgrown, all-but-forgotten graveyard in East Texas. A true storyteller, Galland chronicles the work of a small, inter-racial group (which she convened) to regain access to Love Cemetery and then clear away forty years of enforced neglect to reveal markers and graves of African-Americans all the way back to slave times. In order to truly understand the deepest implications of the story that had claimed her, Galland "unburies" the complex history of racism in the U.S. with particular focus on the years between the end of hostilities in the Civil War and the end of federally protected reconstruction, a time in which hope flourished and black literacy, land-ownership and political access became a reality. But behind the story of Love Cemetery, Galland shows us, lie decades of land-theft, re-disenfranchisement and exclusion that began when federal troops were withdrawn from the South and, along with the slavery that preceded it, cast a long shadow over the present. But most importantly, she shows us that reconciliation is possible if we are able to "choose love when there is reason to hate."

Must read story on race and reconciliation

Galland books is both moving and thought provoking. An important summer read, for families, students, historians, and social activists grappling with America's relationship with past and current civil rights.
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