| International Standard Book Number |
9780316572743 (hardcover)
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| International Standard Book Number |
0316572748 (hardcover)
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| Personal Name |
Clyburn, James E., 1940- author.
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| Title Statement |
The first eight : a personal history of the pioneering Black congressmen who shaped a nation / James E. Clyburn.
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| Edition Statement |
First edition.
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| Production, Publication, Distribution, Manufacture, and Copyright Notice |
New York : Little, Brown and Company, 2025.
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| Physical Description |
xxii, 280 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.
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| Bibliography, Etc. Note |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 243-265) and index.
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| Formatted Contents Note |
Part I: Reconstruction. Freedom (1861-1865) -- "Reconstruction begun" (1865-1867) -- "Where there is no vision, the people perish" (1867-1868) -- Firsts (1868-1870) -- Alarm bells (1871-1872) -- Part II: Redemption. Political tides turning (1873-1875) -- Political polarization (1875-1877) -- Redemption takes hold (1877-1879) -- The assault from without and within (1880-1884) -- Part III: Jim Crow. Tillmanites take control (1885-1894) -- The first eight era ends (1895-1935) -- Epilogue -- Profiles of the first eight.
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| Summary, Etc. |
"Today, South Carolina congressman James E. Clyburn is renowned as a Democratic kingmaker and our nation's most august Black political leader. But behind him stand eight other remarkable men: the first Black politicians to go to Congress from his home state, and who blazed a path for his own ascent. Since his own arrival in Congress in the early nineties, Congressman Clyburn has been guided by the wisdom and example of these men, and also instructed by their struggles -- especially with the demon of American racism. South Carolina's first eight Black congressmen all rose to office following the Civil War and emancipation, but then the dark veil of Jim Crow fell across the South. It would take nearly a century before the ninth Black representative, Clyburn himself, was elected. In The First Eight, Congressman Clyburn shares these men's stories, and their message of liberty, with the nation they served. Among them are Joseph Rainey, the first Black politician to be elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in our nation's history, who was born enslaved in 1832; Robert Smalls, iconic for his heroism during the Civil War, when he fled the Confederacy, stole a ship, and fought for the Union Army; and Richard Cain, who ran a widely read newspaper for Black South Carolinians and is associated with the Emanuel AME Church, one of the oldest and most distinguished Black churches in America, and where neo-Nazi Dylan Roof killed nine Black congregants in a mass shooting in 2015. Through the trials, tribulations, triumphs, and challenges that all nine men faced, Congressman Clyburn reveals a whole new way of understanding the period between the Civil War and the present. A unique blend of history and memoir, The First Eight is both a monument to the legacies of these eight trailblazing Americans, and also a clear-eyed appraisal of how far we've come, and how far we have left to go, in our nation's ongoing struggle for true democracy." -- Provided by publisher.
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| Subject-Personal Name |
Rainey, Joseph H., 1832-1887.
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| Subject-Personal Name |
Smalls, Robert, 1839-1915.
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| Subject-Personal Name |
Cain, Richard Harvey, 1825-1887.
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| Subject-Corporate Name |
Emanuel AME Church (Charleston, S.C.)
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| Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
African American legislators.
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| Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Racism against Black people.
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| Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
African American politicians.
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| Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Legislators South Carolina.
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| Subject Added Entry - Geographical Term |
South Carolina History.
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| Index Term-Genre/Form |
Informational works.
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