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An African American Family in the Heartland Shirley Motley Portwood
June 2000 ISBN 0-8093-2313-3 | Cloth | $49.95s ISBN 0-8093-2314-1 | Paper |$19.95t 288 pages | 23 illustrations | 6 x 9 African American Studies, American History, Illinois
Supplemented
by recollections from the present era, Tell
Us a Story is a colorful mosaic of African American autobiography and
family history set in Springfield, Illinois, and in rural southern
Illinois, Missouri, and Arkansas from the 1920s through the 1950s.
Shirley
Motley Portwood shares rural, African American family and community
history through a collection of vignettes about the Motley family.
Initially transcribed accounts of the Motleys’ rich oral history, these
stories have been passed among family members for nearly fifty years. In
addition to her personal memories, Portwood presents interviews with her
father, three brothers, and two sisters plus notes and recollections from
their annual family reunions. The result is a composite view of the Motley
family.
A
historian, Portwood enhances the Motley family story by investigating
primary data such as census, marriage, school, and land records, newspaper
accounts, city directories, and other sources. The backbone of this saga,
however, is oral history gathered from five generations, extending back to
Portwood's grandparents, born more than one hundred years ago. Information
regarding two earlier generations—her great- grandfather and
great-great-grandparents, who were slaves—is based on historical
research into state archives, county and local records, plantation
records, and manuscript censuses.
A
rich source for this material—the Motley family reunions—are week-long
retreats where four generations gather at the John Motley house in
Burlington, Connecticut, the Portwood home in Godfrey, Illinois, or other
locations. Here the Motleys, all natural storytellers, pass on the family
traditions. The stories, ranging from humorous to poignant, reveal much
about the culture and history of African Americans, especially those from
nonurban areas. Like many rural African Americans, the Motleys have a rich
and often joyful family history with traditions reaching back to the slave
past. They have known the harsh poverty that made even the necessities
difficult to obtain and the racial prejudice that divided whites and
blacks during the era of Jim Crow segregation and inequality; yet they
have kept a tremendous faith in self-improvement through hard work and
education.
Shirley
Motley Portwood
is a professor in the Department of Historical Studies at Southern
Illinois University Edwardsville.
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