Something must be done about Prince Edward County: a family, a Virginia town, a civil rights battle

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NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER

Combining hard-hitting investigative journalism and a sweeping family narrative, this provocative true story reveals a little-known chapter of American history: the period after the Brown v. Board of Education decision when one Virginia school system refused to integrate.

In the wake of the Supreme Court’s unanimous Brown v. Board of Education decision, Virginia’s Prince Edward County refused to obey the law. Rather than desegregate, the county closed its public schools, locking and chaining the doors. The community’s white leaders quickly established a private academy, commandeering supplies from the shuttered public schools to use in their all-white classrooms. Meanwhile, black parents had few options: keep their kids at home, move across county lines, or send them to live with relatives in other states. For five years, the schools remained closed.

Kristen Green, a longtime newspaper reporter, grew up in Farmville and attended Prince Edward Academy, which did not admit black students until 1986. In her journey to uncover what happened in her hometown before she was born, Green tells the stories of families divided by the school closures and of 1,700 black children denied an education. As she peels back the layers of this haunting period in our nation’s past, her own family’s role—no less complex and painful—comes to light.

At once gripping, enlightening, and deeply moving, Something Must Be Done About Prince Edward County is a dramatic chronicle that explores our troubled racial past and its reverberations today, and a timeless story about compassion, forgiveness, and the meaning of home.

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9780062268679
9780062268693

Table of Contents

From the Book - First edition.

Separate but not equal. A perfectly charming Southern town ; Homecoming in Black and white ; Prince Edward joins "Brown v. Board of Education" ; My family's part ; Locked out
The Lost Generation. The Segregation Academy ; Waiting and seeing ; Nigger lovers ; "You go where your parents tell you to" ; Elsie's other life ; The hour is late ; A bus ticket and a world away; Then and now ; "Brown" stokes the flames ; Two steps forward, one step back ; Building a life without a foundation
Integration. "We are all God's children" ; The schools today ; "We all wish it hadn't happened" ; A healing place for the community ; The new normal.

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These sobering books vividly recall resistance to school integration. The Class of '65 portrays racist violence in Georgia, while Something Must be Done About Prince Edward County reports on a Virginia family affected by a school system's refusal to integrate. -- Katherine Johnson
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Something Must be Done about Prince Edward County focuses on a Virginia school system's refusal to integrate, while How I Shed my Skin is a memoir of school integration in North Carolina. Both are compelling, thought-provoking, and vividly described. -- Katherine Johnson
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While The Family Tree focuses on lynching and Something Must Be Done about Prince Edward County explores school integration, both books offer impassioned personal perspectives combined with well-researched, eye-opening general accounts of episodes in the racial history of 20th-century America. -- Katherine Johnson

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