Keys to the Archive: Miss Jane PittmanMain MenuAboutIntroductionKeyword EntriesThe CollectionsBibliographyDavid Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-11-30T05:16:39+00:00Kiley Brinkman12ad1f33388ba1c1f9839b7446aa56cd4e97ef05Oprah Links Miss Jane and Obama20While campaigning for Barak Obama in 2007, Oprah calls him “the One,” referencing the character Jimmy whose story makes up the fourth book of the novel. Her rhetorical use of Miss Jane illustrates both the historical importance of the novel and its on-going relevance to the American political imagination. (Start at 19:45 for the Gaines segment.)plain2020-02-04T17:14:19+00:00BarakObamadotcom12/08/2007David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-11-19T21:56:31+00:00Kiley Brinkman12ad1f33388ba1c1f9839b7446aa56cd4e97ef05Emancipation Proclamation16Two years into the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, declaring “all persons held as slaves” in the Confederate states free. The Proclamation paved the way for full abolition of slavery after the War.plain2020-02-18T05:48:32+00:00Library of Congress1/1/1863David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
1media/KKK Members Parade in Virginia in 1922_thumb.jpg2019-11-19T22:07:32+00:00Aleya Washingtonbb23f453e4fdb56f291988fc1c3d9006858cec34Second Wave Ku Klux Klan12The parade pictured here contributed to the second, and largest, wave of Ku Klux Klan activity, which emerged in the 1920s. This event took place just outside of Washington D.C. The KKK elected hundreds of officials into every level of government in every region of the United States. They were known as the “Invisible Empire” during this time and worked to terrorize Blacks, Jews, Catholics, and immigrants.media/KKK Members Parade in Virginia in 1922.jpgplain2020-03-12T02:06:57+00:00Library of Congress3/18/1922The Ku Klux Klan (KKK) is an organization founded by a small group of former Confederate soldiers in Pulanski, Tennessee in 1866. Originally the group was created to invoke fear into freed slaves and the white people that helped them, but it expanded into much more. They are known for horrendous acts like the bombing of the church in Birmingham, Alabama that killed four young girls. They are also known for their symbols and strange titles (Grand Duke, Imperial Wizard, Grand Cyclops, etc). The use of these symbols was “to pose as ghosts or ‘spectral’ figures, drawing on then-resonant symbols in folklore to play ‘pranks’ against African Americans and others” (David Cunningham). They used hoods, masks, and burned crosses. The symbol of the burning cross was only added in to their symbols after The Birth of A Nation depicted a cross burning scene and the KKK adopted it to spur membership. Scandals and the rigidity of the KKK caused for membership to have difficulty increasing. However, they remain affiliated with other, similar groups (Neo-Nazis, and other organizations that use the Klan name). Today, though some continue to be blatant in their approach, others try to disguise their racist tactics through rhetoric (“rights for whites”). The KKK continues to be relevant today in many ways including through support of the current president.David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
1media/Medium sized JPEG_thumb.jpg2019-11-19T21:28:34+00:00Jaleesa Harriseba4efd7d677e37f373ea422f78682da76b96d8bLouisiana Code Noir of 172412The Louisiana Code Noir included restrictive measures aimed at regulating the lives of free Blacks and prohibiting interracial marriage. One outcome of the prohibition on interracial marriage was the emergence of so-called Quadroon Balls, which facilitated sexual liaisons between wealthy white men and mixed-race women.media/Medium sized JPEG.jpgplain2020-01-30T17:34:14+00:00The Law Library of LouisianaFazende, Brusle'Louisiana03/01/1724David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
1media/Loving (2016)_thumb.jpg2019-11-19T21:53:16+00:00Melanie R. Johnson2c9ba6fa07e0ce1284170f6de4ea920f41e3626cLoving v. Virginia11The United States Supreme Court struck down state laws banning interracial marriage in their decision on Loving v. Virginia. The plaintiffs, Richard and Mildred Loving, took the case to the Supreme Court with the help of the ALCU, where the justices ruled unanimously that so-called anti-miscegenation statutes violated the 14th Amendment.media/Loving (2016).jpgplain2020-02-04T15:20:07+00:007/12/1967Associated PressDavid Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-11-19T23:43:44+00:00Jaleesa Harriseba4efd7d677e37f373ea422f78682da76b96d8bCreole Slave Owners9Creoles of color emerged in antebellum Louisiana as a distinct group of free people who enjoyed some of the same rights as whites, including the right to own slaves. For instance, thirteen members of the Metoyer family collectively owned 215 slaves in Natchitoches Parish. Augustine Metoyer issued this bill of sale, written in French, to M. In. Baptiste Florantin in 1818. The matriarch of the family was notable medic, planter, and business woman Marie Thérèse Metoyer.plain2020-02-04T18:29:51+00:00Metoyer, Nicolas Augustin, 1768-1856.Natchitoches Parish, La.10/28/1818David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-11-19T21:57:09+00:00Anne-Julia Price3b5fc3a3e57b7e09e5db707cc08dfcab69b518a2Great Mississippi Flood of 19279The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 inundated 27,000 square miles in Arkansas, Mississippi, and a majority of the Mississippi Delta, including twenty parishes in Louisiana. This picture shows flooding in Melville, LA from the Atchafalaya River, a distributary of the Mississippi.plain2020-02-04T03:21:26+00:00Louisiana LibrariesMelville, Louisiana04/01/1927David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-11-19T22:22:42+00:00Anne-Julia Price3b5fc3a3e57b7e09e5db707cc08dfcab69b518a2Jackie Robinson Breaks the Color Line9Jackie Robinson broke the color line in professional baseball when he started for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. His move from the Negro League to the Major League marked an early step in the process of desegregating prominent United States institutions, making him a symbol of the Civil Rights Movement. He joined the Hall of Fame in 1962.plain2020-02-04T04:14:24+00:00Library of CongressBob Sandberg04/15/1947David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
1media/cwilliams_thumb.jpg2019-11-19T21:36:43+00:00Jaleesa Harriseba4efd7d677e37f373ea422f78682da76b96d8bSegregated South8Jim Crow laws enforced segregation across the South. This 1956 photo of photographer Cecil J. Williams in South Carolina, drinking from a WHITE ONLY water fountain, illustrates a common way segregation laws discriminated against African Americans. Williams’s friend Rendall Harper made the image while they were returning from an assignment for Jet Magazine.media/cwilliams.jpgplain2020-02-04T17:34:00+00:00NEHRendall HarperSouth Carolina1/1/1956David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-11-19T22:33:36+00:00Nonah Cagney Palmer9b89990d58ccaba7d4aa3c4af3dabcc7a93bf335Beginnings of the Transatlantic Slave Trade8The transatlantic slave trade created a triangular circuit between Europe, Africa, and the Americas. The longest part of the trade route, known as the Middle Passage, transported enslaved Africans to the West Indies starting in the 1500s.plain2020-03-01T19:20:21+00:00Crispus Attucks Museumatlantic ocean06/15/1550David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-12-03T01:40:48+00:00Nonah Cagney Palmer9b89990d58ccaba7d4aa3c4af3dabcc7a93bf335Slave Auction8Enslavers sold Africans in the Americas through a variety of venues. Advertisements such as this one, from Charleston, SC, legally solicited the widespread sale of enslaved people in the United States until the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863.plain2020-01-30T03:28:35+00:00National Geographic05/06/1760David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-11-19T22:12:44+00:00Meredith McKinnie1284a69ec8b7207da7db2cfb500455b382ad6608Huey P. Long Assassinated7Huey P. Long, also known as "The Kingfish," served as Louisiana's 40th governor from 1928 to 1932. A political rival’s son shot him on September 8, 1935 in the Louisiana State Capitol building, while Long was a United States Senator. He died at the hospital two days later. Long is remembered for his left-leaning policies to help the poor and build public infrastructure.plain2020-02-04T17:31:42+00:00Library of Congress9/08/1935David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
1media/ENGL 596 scaler timeline Miss-Jane-Pittman-DVDcover_thumb.jpg2019-11-30T04:53:55+00:00Kiley Brinkman12ad1f33388ba1c1f9839b7446aa56cd4e97ef05Miss Jane Pittman Adaptation Airs7CBS aired a television-movie adaptation of The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman in 1974, about three years after the novel’s publication. Cicely Tyson starred as Miss Jane and won two Emmy awards for her work. The film also won an Emmy for costume design, in part for its notable use of makeup to transform Tyson as her character aged from 23 to 110 years old.media/ENGL 596 scaler timeline Miss-Jane-Pittman-DVDcover.jpgplain2020-02-04T16:57:54+00:00Classic Media01/31/1974David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-11-19T22:30:39+00:00Meredith McKinnie1284a69ec8b7207da7db2cfb500455b382ad6608The Spanish-American War6The Spanish-American War lasted nearly four months in 1898, between the months of April and August. An explosion on board the U.S.S. Maine, pictured here, in February of that year precipitated the war, although no clear evidence suggested the Spanish caused the explosion. Fighting ended on August 12 with a formal treaty ratifying peace on December 10, 1898.plain2020-01-31T23:49:26+00:00Library of CongressApril 21, 1898David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
1media/Gaines - Quarters_thumb.jpg2019-12-17T22:12:17+00:00David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674Ernest Gaines Born6Gaines was born in Oscar, LA on January 15, 1933. He wrote about sitting on the porches of Cherie Quarters as a child, drafting letters for his elders. His exposure to their stories informed much of his writing and provided a link to slavery in the United States. Although his family moved to California when he was a teen, he visited in the 1960s to see his people and take pictures of the area, such as this image of “The Quarters” of Riverlake Plantation. He later described it as “where we lived for five generations.”media/Gaines - Quarters.jpgplain2020-02-04T03:37:13+00:00"Home: A Photo Essay," Callaloo 3 (1978): 52-76.Ernest J. GainesPointe Coupee Parish01/15/1933David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-11-19T22:37:03+00:00Lillian Kingdcc87736c93dc79a223aaa8ae855be85116b365dFrederick Douglass's First Speech5Frederick Douglass delivered his first speech on August 11, 1841, a few years before sitting for this 1847 daguerreotype. Abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison invited Douglass to give the speech at the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Convention. That event, and Douglass’s successful oration, set him on the path toward becoming a spokesman for abolition.plain2020-01-30T15:39:33+00:00Frederick Douglass08/11/1841This image has been digitally altered. Original digital image available online at the National Portrait Gallery: https://npg.si.edu/object/npg_NPG.80.21David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
1media/Marie Laveau Baptismal Certificate-082.jpg_thumb.png2019-11-19T23:09:18+00:00Francisco Rodriguez5a40fa29c7b5a2469c9fd41143537d2d876e7c0fMarie Laveau Baptismal Certificate4Marie Laveau was baptized on September 16, 1801 (no birth certificate exists). Known popularly as “the Voodoo Queen” of New Orleans, she is, arguably, the most famous practitioner of folk magic in American history. She was born at the end of Spanish control of Louisiana, shortly before the Louisiana Purchase, which explains why her baptismal certificate appears in Spanish. Her entry appears at the top of the page, under entry 320.media/Marie Laveau Baptismal Certificate-082.jpg.pngplain2020-01-30T14:37:47+00:0009/16/1801David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
1media/Booker T. Washington_thumb.jpg2019-11-30T03:18:31+00:00Aleya Washingtonbb23f453e4fdb56f291988fc1c3d9006858cec34Booker T. Washington3Booker T. Washington established Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute (now Tuskegee University) in Alabama. The school emphasized trade skills needed to succeed at farming and industries common throughout the South. In addition to vocational training, students worked and attended Sunday services.media/Booker T. Washington.jpgplain2020-01-31T23:17:34+00:0007/04/1881David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-11-19T22:24:07+00:00Cait Marshall5aaeff6dd16a844b8418bf68332309f3ffdc4df4Plessy v. Ferguson3The United States Supreme Court ruled in favor of “separate-but-equal” public accommodations for people of color in the Plessy v. Ferguson decision. Their ruling sanctioned segregation and gave rise to the Jim Crow Era. The case derived from Homer Adolph Plessy’s complaint that an 1890 Louisiana law violated his 14th Amendment rights.plain2020-01-31T23:30:05+00:00The AdvocateHomer Adolph Plessy05/18/1896David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-11-19T23:00:55+00:00Lillian Kingdcc87736c93dc79a223aaa8ae855be85116b365dThe Confessions of Nat Turner3William Styron’s 1967 novel The Confessions of Nat Turner initiated the genre of neo-slave narrative. Styron, a white author, came in for criticism because the novel perpetuated racial stereotypes, sparking controversy about how to represent slavery in literature. Some scholars read Miss Jane Pittman, along with contemporaries such as Roots, as a response to Styron’s vision of kindly slaveowners and a blundering revolutionary.plain2020-03-07T17:39:09+00:009/1/1967William StyronRandom HouseDavid Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-12-04T16:16:14+00:00David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674Student Protests at Southern University3Southern University students in Baton Rouge, LA protested for more teachers and resources in the early 1970s. The demonstrations came to a head on November 16, 1972 when police shot and killed two students.plain2020-02-04T15:25:13+00:00John B. Cade Library, Southern University11/16/1972David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-12-07T22:37:44+00:00David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674Reconstruction Ends3After about thirteen years of federal policy to rehabilitate the South’s economy, rebuild its civic structures, and transform its socio-political institutions, the United States government formally terminated Reconstruction with the Compromise of 1877.plain2020-01-30T17:45:51+00:00Reconstruction Era photograph, two Harpers Weekly Reconstruction related pictures, and a Freedmen's Bureau picture.3/31/1877David Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
12019-11-19T22:33:57+00:00Cait Marshall5aaeff6dd16a844b8418bf68332309f3ffdc4df4Brown v. Board of Education2The Supreme Court reversed its Plessy v. Ferguson precedent in 1954 when it decided in Brown v. Board of Education that the “separate-but-equal” standard violated 14th Amendment protections. This landmark civil rights case did not fully desegregate schools. However, it did end an era of state-sanctioned segregation in public schools.plain2020-02-04T04:27:57+00:0005/17/1954Library of CongressDavid Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674