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9 Reviews
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This book looks into the soul of a very brave family.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Silver Rights (Hardcover)
Silver Right is a moving and telling story of my family struggle to achieve equality in America. This book does a very good job of relating the feeling, fear and turmoil that I felt during those four long years of being the only black family at an all white school in the Mississippi Delta in the sixites. Silver Rights goes beyond the actions of people during that time. It looks at the cilvil right movement on a personal level. This book will make you laugh, and it will also make your cry
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I was there,
This review is from: Silver Rights: The story of the Carter family's brave decision to send their children to an all-white school and claim their civil rights (Paperback)
In the 1965-66 school year I was in Mrs. Harpole's second grade class at AW James Elementary School in Drew, Mississippi. That year two little black girls, Beverly and Deborah Carter, enrolled at the same school. Beverly was a third grader, Deborah was in the first grade. Their sister Pearl was there as well. She seemed much older and was in the fifth or sixth grade.
That was the beginning of a series of changes in the Drew Public Schools. In 1964 the graduating class of Drew High School was all white. Across Highway 49, the Class of 64 of Hunter High School was all black. In 1971 the first "desegregated" class graduated from Drew High. In the in five years in between most of the white children left the public schools. By 1976 the graduating class picture was evenly split between black and white faces. Many years later I read "Silver Rights" in a motel room in Greenville, Mississippi. I read it cover to cover in one sitting. I didn't sleep much that night. Instead, I thought about all the things I had read, and all the things that were done by the people I knew. I knew Mae Bertha and Matthew Carter and I knew them to be good people. I didn't know how hard they had worked or how much they suffered so their children could receive the same education as any other Mississippi child. I had no idea of the resistance they faced every step of the way. I won't discuss the rightness or wrongness or deeper meanings of this book. I'm not about to get into the concepts of social justice and civil rights. I do know these things, though. Matthew and Mae Bertha Carter did what was right for their children. That is the highest calling any parent could have. To the best of my knowledge, the story in this book is true in every point. The people involved were my Little League coaches, Sunday School teachers, and the parents of my friends. This is a very good book that tells a great story of how two people did the right thing for their children and in the process did the right thing for thousands of other children.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Silver Rights in the Mississippi Delta,
By Robin Friedman (Washington, D.C. United States) - See all my reviews (TOP 50 REVIEWER) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Silver Rights: The story of the Carter family's brave decision to send their children to an all-white school and claim their civil rights (Paperback)
In the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Congress mandated the desegregation of all public schools receiving Federal aid. Mississippi tried to "comply" with the law by a "Freedom of Choice" program which allowed students over a certain age and parents to designate the schools they wished to attend. While, perhaps, facially appealing, the "Freedom of Choice" program served as a means to intimidate blacks from attempting to register in what were at the time all-white schools. Those with the courage to do so faced danger to their livelihood, property, and persons. The "Freedom of Choice" program ultimately was invalidated through litigation.
Constance Curry's inspiring book "Silver Rights" (1995) tells the story of a family of black sharecroppers in the heart of the Mississippi Delta, Mae Bertha and Matthew Carter and seven of their thirteen children (all their children then of school age). The Carter's took the "Freedom of Choice" program at its word. In 1965, the seven children enrolled in the primary and secondary schools of Drew, Mississippi, a small town with a then-deserved reputation for violence and lawlessness. Ms. Curry worked as a field representative for the American Friends Service Committee from 1965-1975. She got to know the Carter family well and was instrumental in providing the assistance necessary to get them through their difficult times. The book includes excellent pictures of life in the Mississippi Delta, for both white and black people, in the early to mid-twentieth century. The book shows a feel for the place, for sharecropping life on the farms and for life in the dusty towns, for the blues culture of the Delta, and for its history. The book offers substantial discussion of the notorious Emmett Till case and of other lynchings and of early attempts to organize civil rights activities in the Delta. Ms. Curry eloquently evokes the spirit of the Delta at the opening of her story: "In trying to describe the Mississippi Delta, I seem to find only superlatives -- the flattest land, the blackest dirt, the hottest summers, the nicest people, the poorest people. In defining the delta's past and even its present, I am aware of these extremes and also of its incongruities: the violence and the peacefulness, the beauty and the ugliness, the stillness and the tension. It is a place complex almost beyond comprehension." (p. xxi) In telling her story, Ms. Curry lets her protagonists do most of the talking. The opening chapters set the stage and explain the Carter's ambitions for an education, and an end to the hardships of sharecropping, for their children. The second section of the book explores the backround of Mae Bertha Carter and her mother Luvenia's early life as the wife of a Delta sharecropper. The book discusses throughout the experiences of the Carter family as they faced violence and shootings in the early stages following their enrollment in the formerly white schools. Throughout their period in the public schools the children endured harassment, name-calling and ostracism. The Carter family was forced off the plantation and Matthew Carter lost his job. The book shows the courage and perseverance of the family and the aid offered by the AFSC and other organizations. The book includes interviews with each of the thirteen Carter children and discussions of the family members fared after their graduation from the public schools. There are some moving scenes when Ms. Curry reestablished contact with the Carter family in 1988, thirteen years after her work with the AFSC came to an end. Mae Bertha Carter remains determined and forceful and has received honors from institutions within the State of Mississippi that would have been unthinkable in the 1960s. This book tells an important story of the silver rights movement. It is a work of both history and memory and describes beautifully the changes wrought with time.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Outstanding narrative.,
By
This review is from: Silver Rights: The story of the Carter family's brave decision to send their children to an all-white school and claim their civil rights (Paperback)
Silver Rights was an excellent historical narrative that exceeded my expectations. A well-written story filled with anecdotes, this novel by Constance Curry was a historically inspiring recount of one family's journey and how they both shaped and played a part in the historic Civil Rights Movement. The Carter family endured unimaginable hardships and adversity in not only sending their children to an all-white school during the desegregation process in rural Mississippi, but also in the daily making-ends-meet tasks that were compounded in difficulty by social injustice. The story was filled with many valuable insights and firsthand accounts, providing takeaway experiences and motivating lessons that are no less relevant today than half a century ago.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Silver Rights: How a family thought different,
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This review is from: Silver Rights: The story of the Carter family's brave decision to send their children to an all-white school and claim their civil rights (Paperback)
Honestly, I got this because of a school project, and I'm so glad that i decided to get this book. It turned out to be a great book following a great family as they struggled to get a proper education. You, the reader, are catapulted into the lives of all of the Carter's lives and live it with them as they work to get an education, or to make sure that your children get an education and how can i make it easier for them to do so. This is a great book but it does jump around a bit and does not have a linear progression.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Silver Rights Review,
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This review is from: Silver Rights: The story of the Carter family's brave decision to send their children to an all-white school and claim their civil rights (Paperback)
Silver Rights was a really exceptional book to read. I had many emotions while reading it. From glad to angry to sad. Contance Curry did a wonderful job portraying the journey that the Carter's went through when they decided to send their children to an all-white school. I highly recommend reading if you enjoy hearing about historical events from the people's sides who actually went through the event.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Lesser-Known Story that Should be Known By All,
This review is from: Silver Rights: The story of the Carter family's brave decision to send their children to an all-white school and claim their civil rights (Paperback)
In our History and Civics classes, we learned about the Brown versus Board of Education case where the Supreme Court declared the unconstitutionality of racially segregated schools. Some classes likely needed to memorize the date enacted; some needed to memorize the names of the Justices on the Supreme Court at the time. Did we ever even attempt to learn the names of any of the black students that were the first ones to walk through the doors of an all-white school? Did we ever stop and consider what it must have been like to be those students?
Constance Curry does a remarkable job at informing us of who these boundary crossers actually were. Curry introduces us to Mae Bertha Carter and tells us how she pushed her seven children to push open the doors for themselves, which in turn opened the doors for hundreds of thousands to follow. We meet each of the seven children, now grown adults with degrees beyond high school, and learn how every day was a struggle in school because of the discrimination they dealt with, just to be able to receive a decent education. I have no reservation in recommending this book to anyone that wants enlightenment about what happened to a small family that decided to push the status quo.
5.0 out of 5 stars
My Thoughts,
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This review is from: Silver Rights: The story of the Carter family's brave decision to send their children to an all-white school and claim their civil rights (Paperback)
This book describes how Mae Bertha and Matthew Carter took the chance and put 8 of their 13 children into an all white school. They went through many struggles and threats including when their leader from the plantation came to pressure them into taking their kids out of the school. They did not stand for it especially Mae Bertha being the strong women that she is just shrugged it off and went and got her record player to play the "Civil Rights" speech made by John F. Kennedy, loud and clear for the man with her arms firmly crossed. Mae and Matthew were brave and knew what they had to do and the children did as well and never let anyone tell them different. They wanted a better education and fought for their rights to get it. This book also brings up many of the other events that made an effect to this family and other African Americans at the time including the Emmett Till case, Rosa Park standing up for her right to sit in a white persons spot on the bus, the great preacher Martin Luther King Jr., and the four black students who took the chance of sitting at the lunch counter in a small town in North Carolina. This book is very moving and classifies how we see things today and learned how to take respect into others and treat others with respect. We can now live in one civil union and move forward being able to work with others of a different race.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Challenging and Beating Sunflower County Mississippi,
By
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This review is from: Silver Rights (Hardcover)
This overwhelmingly sensitive and warm story of Mae Bertha and Matthew Carter's fight to live through and overcome the discrimination and oppression of segregation in Sunflower County, Mississippi, is beautifully written and shared with the reader by Constance Curry.
Ms. Curry, the field service representative of the American Friends Service Committee, saw the Carter family through their placing of their seven youngest children in the Drew, Mississippi, white schools as the first and only blacks to do so in Sunflower County in the years 1965-1968. This story follows the family and the children through their long years of sticking in out all the way through the integration of Ole Miss. The story is hard to imagine in that Mae Carter finished only the third grade in the truncated education of sharecroppers but her and her husband's spirit and drive to get their 13 children out of the cotton fields drove her and her husband to get their children education. Their first five children finished high school and left the South. The surviving seven received all of the necessary support to overcome and rise up. This story is so moving that it is difficult to keep a dry eye throughout as the pluck and inner strength necessary to overcome white Mississippi is and was so brutal in its oppression of its black citizens. |
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Silver Rights: The story of the Carter family's brave decision to send their children to an all-white school and claim their civil rights by Constance Curry (Paperback - October 10, 1996)
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