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My Father’s Name

A Black Virginia Family after the Civil War

Armed with only early boyhood memories, Lawrence P. Jackson begins his quest by setting out from his home in Baltimore for Pittsylvania County, Virginia, to try to find his late grandfather’s old home by the railroad tracks in Blairs. My Father’s Name tells the tale of the ensuing journey, at once a detective story and a moving historical memoir, uncovering the mixture of anguish and fulfillment that accompanies a venture into the ancestral past, specifically one tied to the history of slavery.
After asking around in Pittsylvania County and carefully putting the pieces together, Jackson finds himself in the house of distant relations. In the pages that follow, he becomes increasingly absorbed by the search for his ancestors and increasingly aware of how few generations an African American needs to map back in order to arrive at slavery, “a door of no return.” Ultimately, Jackson’s dogged research in libraries, census records, and courthouse registries enables him to trace his family to his grandfather’s grandfather, a man who was born or sold into slavery but who, when Federal troops abandoned the South in 1877, was able to buy forty acres of land. In this intimate study of a black Virginia family and neighborhood, Jackson vividly reconstructs moments in the lives of his father’s grandfather, Edward Jackson, and great-grandfather, Granville Hundley, and gives life to revealing narratives of Pittsylvania County, recalling both the horror of slavery and the later struggles of postbellum freedom.
My Father’s Name is a family story full of twists and turns—and one of haunting familiarity to many Americans, who may question whether the promises of emancipation have ever truly been fulfilled. It is also a resolute look at the duties that come with reclaiming and honoring Americans who survived slavery and a thoughtful meditation on its painful and enduring history.

Read an excerpt: "I Knew My Father."


272 pages | 45 halftones, 2 maps | 6 x 9 | © 2012

Biography and Letters

Black Studies

History: American History

Reviews

"Lawrence P. Jackson’s matter-of-fact prose is accessible and is strangely and beautifully evocative of the Civil War era. We not only learn about the deprivations, inhumanity, and constant humiliations perpetrated on black people in the nineteenth century, but we gain a deeper understanding of what constitutes American culture and society today. It is amazing that Jackson’s family survived to produce such a splendid writer able to share their story with us."

Edward P. Jones, author of The Known World

My Father’s Name is a memorable venture in personal and family history—scrupulous, candid, imaginative, and weighty in its commentary on the abiding conflicts in American culture over the issues of race, injustice, and our common humanity.”

Arnold Rampersad, Stanford University

“Through the Jackson family saga, Jackson recounts the broader African American story of struggle through slavery and Reconstruction. Jackson writes with the detailed precision of a scholar but the emotional attachment of a kinsman.”—Booklist

Booklist

"Jackson’s work becomes a nonfiction Roots in many ways and portrays the difficulty for African Americans in finding their history. However, Jackson’s thorough research sheds light on many issues having to do with slavery, emancipation, and the lives of freedmen."

Historian

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

1    To Danville
2    “I Knew My Father”
3    The Dan River Betimes in the Morning
4    Make Do
5    The Names of Guinea Roads
6    To the Courthouse in June
7    Land of the Civil War
8    The Will
9    The Reckoning
10  My Inheritance

Notes
Index

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