African-American Odyssey
The Stewarts, 18531963
Albert S. Broussard
272 pages, 15 photographs, 6-1/8 x 9-1/4
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0916-1, $29.95
T. McCants Stewart was a prominent
African-American in his day, a lawyer during the Reconstruction
who later became a minister, politician, and racial activist
and was regarded by his peers as one of the most significant
black leaders of his generation. This book illuminates the professional
career and private lives of Stewart and his descendants over
three generations, providing an epic account of an African-American
family in America.
Albert Broussard researched Stewart family papers and interviewed
nearly every surviving family member to tell their unusual story.
He not only presents the first major study of T. McCants Stewart's
civil rights and political career; he also tells how Stewart's
descendants rejected white society's negative image of blacks
and worked to improve themselves and uplift their race: Stewart's
son Gilchrist became a successful civil rights leader and attorney
and his daughter Carlotta an educator, while granddaughter Katherine
directed a Head Start program and her husband Robert Flippin
was the first black parole officer at San Quentin prison.
The saga of the Stewarts begins in antebellum Charleston but
moves on to New York, Africa, Hawaii, and numerous other locales
to relate how this family fulfilled a mission to provide leadership
and service to its community. Exploring issues of class, intergenerational
relations, and community activism, it provides a wealth of material
on the black community that spans two centuries.
A particular value of Broussards' work is his account of how
Stewart women coped with an overbearing patriarch and forged
meaningful careers in an era when black females usually held
menial jobs. By sharing experiences of both genders, he offers
insights into the different strategies that black men and women
used to meet their personal goals and collective obligations.
Intelligent, ambitious, and entrepreneurial, the Stewarts
have much to tell us about what it was to be African-American
over the last hundred years. By linking their history to the
changing status of African-Americans at home and abroad, this
book weaves the contributions of an extraordinary family into
the larger drama of American race relations.
"An extraordinary glimpse into the turbulent, troubled
world of three generations of an elite African-American family.
Broussard masterfully weaves the Stewarts' century-long, often
frustrating campaign for success and prominence with the bittersweet
history of black people in an increasingly racially stratified
America. I was so fascinated that I read it through in one sitting."--Quintard
Taylor, author of In Search of a Racial Frontier
"An insightful and engaging biography of the inner lives
and the public world of a nineteenth-century black patriarch
and his progeny. Broussard is to be especially commended for
his use of gender and professional class in his analysis. His
insightful chapter on Carlotta Stewart Lai is solidly grounded
in the best scholarship in black women's history and theory.
A major contribution to African-American history, this book deserves
and is certain to attract a wide and diverse readership among
scholars and general readers alike."--Darlene Clark Hine,
author of Speak Truth to Power: The Black Professional Class
in United States History
ALBERT S. BROUSSARD is associate professor of history
at Texas A & M University and author of Black
San Francisco: The Struggle for Racial Equality in the West,
19001954, also published by the University Press
of Kansas.
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