Freedom’s Child: The Life of a Confederate General’s Black DaughterPosted in Biography, Books, History, Media Archive, Monographs, Slavery, United States, Women on 2012-01-24 20:58Z by Steven |
Freedom’s Child: The Life of a Confederate General’s Black Daughter
Algonquin Books
1998
288 pages
ISBN: 9781565121867
Carrie Allen McCray (1913-2008)
When Carrie Allen McCray was a child, she was afraid to ask about the framed photograph of a white man on her mother’s dresser. Years later she learned that he was her grandfather, a Confederate general, and that her grandmother was a former slave. In her late seventies, Carrie McCray went searching for her history and found the remarkable story of her mother, Mary [Rice Allen], the illegitimate daughter of General J. R. Jones, of Lynchburg, Virginia. Jones would later be cast out of Lynchburg society for publicly recognizing his daughter. Freedom’s Child is a loving remembrance of how Mary spent her life beating down the kind of thinking that ostracized her father. She was a leader in the founding of the NAACP and hosted the likes of Langston Hughes and W.E.B. Du Bois as they plotted the war against discrimination at her kitchen table. Carrie McCray’s memories reward us with an extraordinarily vivid and intimate portrait of a remarkable woman.