One : The Life and Music of James Brown (9781101561102) (54 page)

Turpentine: Robert B. Outland,
Tapping the Pines: The Naval Stores Industry in the American South
(LSU Press, 2004); George Brown Tindall,
The Emergence of the New South, 1913–1945
(LSU Press, 1992); William Powell Jones, “Cutting through Jim Crow: African American Lumber Workers in the Jim Crow South, 1919-1960” (PhD diss. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2000); Cassandra Y. Johnson and Josh McDaniel, “Turpentine Negro,” in
To Love the Wind and the Rain: African Americans and Environmental History
, Dianne D. Glave and Mark Stoll, eds. (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2006); Josh McDaniel, “Pulling Streaks: Voices from the Turpentine Woods,”
Southern Quarterly
, vol. 46, (Fall 2008); “Faces of the Piney Woods: Traditions of Turpentining in South Georgia” is an impressive website established by Valdosta State University that features oral histories, explanations of techniques, and much more:
www.valdosta.edu/turpentine/index.htm
; Zora Neale Hurston’s interviews with turpentine workers, conducted for the WPA, are preserved by the State Library and Archives of Florida,
www.floridamemory.com/onlineclassroom/zora_hurston/lesson_2.cfm
.

The overfarming and agricultural economy of Barnwell: Melanie A. Cabak and Mary M. Inkrot,
Old Farm, New Farm: An Archaeology of Rural Modernization in the Aiken Plateau,1875-1950
(University of South Carolina, 1997); Chapin,
In the Shadow of a Defense Plant
; Brooks and Crass,
A Desperate Poor Country.

Poverty in Barnwell region: Tonya A. Browder, Richard D. Brooks, and David C. Crass,
Memories of Home: Dunbarton and Meyers Mill Remembered
(University of South Carolina, 1993);
Annual Report of the Barnwell County Department of Public Welfare
, fiscal year ending June 30, 1938.

Chapter Two:
THE TERRY

“A region of the Savannah River Valley.” Strom Thurmond,
Congressional Record,
vol. 142, no. 7 (January 22, 1996).

Augusta, Georgia: Edward J. Cashin,
General Sherman’s Girlfriend and Other Stories About Augusta
(Augusta College History Department, 2001); Cashin,
The Quest: A History of Public Education in Richmond County, Georgia
(R. L. Bryan, 1985); Cashin and Eskew, eds.
Paternalism in a Southern City
; Cashin,
The Story of Augusta
; Cashin was the great historian of the city, and I’m sorry I never got to meet him. Also useful were “Cashin’s Notes,” a bound set of citations from the
Augusta Chronicle
, on file at Reese Library, Georgia State University; Federal Writers’ Project,
Augusta
(Tidwell Printing Company, 1938); Vicki H. Greene, Scott Loehr, and Erick D. Montgomery,
An Augusta Scrapbook: Twentieth-Century Memories
(Arcadia Publishing, 2000); Don Rhodes,
Entertainment in Augusta and the CSRA
(Arcadia Publishing, 2004);
Curt Samson,
The Masters: Golf, Money, and Power in Augusta, Georgia
(Villard, 1999); James C. Cobb, “Politics in a New South City, Augusta, Georgia, 1946-1971,” (Ph.D. diss., University of Georgia, 1975).

“A town with a fascinating case of schizophrenia.” Dorothy Kilgallen, “A Big Night in Augusta,”
Good Housekeeping
, May 1953.

African Americans in Augusta: Carl Lavert McCoy, “A Historical Sketch of Black Augusta, Georgia, From Emancipation to the
Brown
Decision: 1865-1954,” (master’s thesis, University of Georgia, 1984); Cashin,
Old Springfield: Race and Religion in Augusta Georgia
(Springfield Village Park Foundation, 1995);
WPA Guide to Augusta
; Sean Joiner and Gerard Smith,
Black America Series: Augusta Georgia
(Arcadia Publishing, 2004); Lucius Harper, “I Go Back Home After Thirty years,”
Chicago Defender,
June 18, 1949; “Hooded Georgia Mob Tries to Abduct Negro After He Applies for Job on Police Force,”
Los Angeles Sentinel
, September 16, 1948.

The Terry: Diane Harvey, “The Terri, Augusta’s Black Enclave,”
Richmond County History
, Summer 1973; John Mills, “Black Businesses Thrived in City’s Golden Blocks,”
Augusta Chronicle
, April 24, 1995;
Augusta Chronicle
, August 7, 1941. “The Terry” was a term sometimes defining the larger community of African Americans in Augusta, and other times a much smaller geographic area. Nobody ever formally established its boundaries.

Lenox Theater: “Lenox Theater Gives Blacks Seat up Front, Opens Door to Growth,”
Augusta Chronicle
, February 5, 1990; James Carter interview.

Brown’s early years in Augusta: Rhodes,
Say it Loud!
; Hirshey,
Nowhere to Run
; South and Drotning,
Up From the Ghetto
; Gourevitch, “Mr. Brown”; Simon Witter, “James Brown,”
Sky
, September 1990; interviews with Carter, Allyn Lee, Emma Austin, Leon Austin, Henry Stallings.

Susie Brown living in Augusta: Assorted city directories by R. L. Polk & Co.; Don Rhodes, Emma Austin interviews.

“People were real bad there.” Tucker files.

“If you want to be a man, you got to fight to get respect.” Butterfield,
All God’s Children
.

Silas X. Floyd School: “Augusta: City Whose Negro Leaders Point the Way,”
Augusta Chronicle,
Nov. 26, 1939; see also
Chronicle
, Aug. 26, 1934; Butterfield,
All God’s Children
; Laura Garvin interview in Tucker files; Henry Stallings interview.

“Augusta is a good place to live.”
Augusta Chronicle
, April 19, 1936.

“A
poor waif on the streets of Augusta.” “Response to ‘James Brown Editorial’,”
Augusta News-Review
, Nov. 22, 1973.

Swanee quintet and gospel in Augusta: Carrie A. Allen, “‘When We Send Up the Praises’: Race, Identity, and Gospel Music in Augusta, Georgia,”
Black Music Research Journal
, Fall 2007; “Gospel Group ‘Walked in the Light’ for Half a Century,”
Augusta Chronicle
, Dec. 29, 1990; “Lord Provides All, Gospel Singers Say,”
Augusta Chronicle
, Oct. 5, 1985; “Singing the Gospel,”
Augusta Chronicle
, Oct. 4, 1997; Percy Griffin interview.

Arthur Lee Simpkins: “Arthur Lee Simpkins Sings,”
Augusta Chronicle
, Aug. 1, 1934; “Foster Tops Revue,”
Los Angeles Times
, Dec. 6, 1947.

Camp Gordon: “Augusta May Get Cantonment of 20,000 Draftees,”
Augusta Chronicle
, Oct. 11, 1940; “Pay Roll Totals $190,000 As Camp Work Nears Peak,”
Augusta Chronicle
, Oct. 12, 1941.

Cremona Trio: “Singer’s Career Launched in Augusta,” Augusta
Chronicle,
May 3, 1993; Brown interview, Tucker files.

Vice and panic in the Terry: “Night-Sticks Come Into Own in Quelling Negro Soldiers,”
Augusta Chronicle
, August 7, 1941; “Blame for Spread of Disease Denied by Negro Civic Group,”
Augusta Chronicle
, November 8, 1941; “Defends Race Women From Insulting Rap,”
Pittsburgh Courier
, November 15, 1941; “White Soldiers Override Social Lines in Augusta,”
Chicago Defender,
November 22, 1941; “Georgia Cops Nab Women With Soldiers,”
Pittsburgh Courier
, October 24, 1942.

Secret plans for subduing the Terry: “Army Service Forces—Distr. 4, Fourth Service Command—Racial Disturbance Plan, Augusta, 9 Oct 1944,” Defense—Adjutant General—Misc. Files, Georgia Archives, Morrow, Georgia.

“If nobody else loved him,
he
loved him.” Stanley Booth, “James Brown 1933-2006,”
Georgia Music
, Spring 2007.

The air compressor incident: Willie Glenn interview, Tucker files; Fred Daviss interview.

“I knew one thing – that I was different.” Rose,
Living in America
.

Chapter Three:
THE BLACK SATCHEL

“The Bon Air gazes, like the Sphinx, upon Augusta.” Dan Jenkins, “Augusta: Where Georgia Retaliates for Sherman’s March,”
Sports Illustrated
, April 6, 1964.

The Bon Air: Stan Byrdy,
Augusta and Aiken in Golf’s Golden Age
(Arcadia Publishing, 2002); Jeanne M. McDaniel,
North Augusta: James U. Jackson’s Dream
(Arcadia, 2006); Samson,
The Masters
; Picturing Augusta: Historic Postcards from the Collection of the East Central Georgia Regional Library; “Brighter Days Fill History of City Landmark,”
Augusta Chronicle
, June 11, 2011.

Battle royals: Geoffrey C. Ward,
Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson
(Knopf, 2004); Andrew M. Kaye,
The Pussycat of Prizefighting: Tiger Flowers and the Politics of Black Celebrity
(University of Georgia Press, 2004); “The Milk-Ice Fund FIGHT,”
Pittsburgh Courier
, July 14, 1923; “Fighters, Keep Out of Those ‘Battle Royals’,”
Pittsburgh Courier
, Feb. 11, 1928.

Brown the boxer: “Bax Hardy to Weigh 160 Pounds for Bout,”
Augusta Chronicle
, January 26, 1946; “Hardy Captures Decision,”
Chronicle
, January 29, 1946; “Buddy Rose After Knockout,”
Chronicle
, Feb. 12, 1946; “Soul Searching,”
Chronicle
, May 3, 1969.

“Mr. Brown liked to have idols.” Emma Austin interview.

Beau Jack: “Stork Club Champ,”
Time
, November 23, 1942; “Beau Jack Kayoes Tippy Larkin,”
Augusta Chronicle
, December 19, 1942; Grantland Rice, “Concerning Beau Jack,”
Chronicle
, Jan. 20, 1943; “Crack O’ Dawn,”
Chronicle
, Feb. 15, 1943; “Dan Burley’s ‘Confidentially Yours,’”
New York Amsterdam News
, Dec. 26, 1942, and May 29, 1943; “Beau Jack Learns to Read and Write,”
Chronicle
, Oct. 7, 1944; “The Tragic Case of Beau Jack,”
Pittsburgh Courier
, Jan. 29, 1955; Gary Smith, “Still Fighting Old Wars,”
Sports Illustrated
, Feb. 15, 1988; “Beau Jack, 78, Lightweight Boxing Champion in the 1940s,”
The New York Times
, February 12, 2000; “Jack Always Packed Exciting Punch,”
New York Daily News
, February 13, 2000; Carter interview.

Daddy Grace: Marie W. Dallam,
Daddy Grace: A Celebrity Preacher and His House of Prayer
(NYU Press, 2007); Sherri Marcia Damon, “The Trombone in the Shout Band of the United House of Prayer for All People,” (Ph.D. diss., University of North Carolina Greensboro, 1999); Federal Writers Project,
Augusta
; “Negro ‘Bishop Who Cures both White and Black’ Tells Judge of his Troubles From the City,”
Augusta Chronicle
, April 28, 1927; “Order House of Prayer Reopened,”
Atlanta Daily World
, August 5, 1932; “Bishop Grace Hailed by His Augusta ‘Children’,”
Chronicle
, April 25, 1934; “Owner of ‘Harlem Heaven’ to Insist on ‘Good Rent,’”
Chronicle
, March 11, 1938; “Thousands See Daddy Grace Ride,”
Atlanta Daily World
, Sept. 27, 1938; “Is He Charlatan or Saint?,”
Augusta Herald
, September 26, 1956; “Marching, Music and Memories,”
Charlotte Observer
, January 3, 1990; “Sweet Soul Music: The Trombone-Drive ‘Shout’ Sound,”
Charlotte Observer
, July 4, 1993; Al Sharpton interview.

Cracker Party: Cobb, “Politics in a New South City”; James C. Cobb, “Colonel Effingham Crushes the Crackers: Political Reform in Postwar Augusta,”
South Atlantic Quarterly
78, Autumn 1979; “Negroes Indorse McDonald…,”
Augusta Chronicle
, December 19, 1932; “How Augustans Lost Their Democratic Government,”
Chronicle
, Jan. 25, 1939; “Campaign ‘Pay-Off’ System is Revealed in Probe Testimony,”
Chronicle
, May 16, 1934; “Ninety Arrested as Federal Men Descend on Augusta Liquor Dives,”
Chronicle
, May 23, 1931; “Municipal Race Not Necessary,”
Chronicle
, Nov. 4, 1937.

“He’d steal anything that wasn’t tied down.” Carter interview.

Brown’s 1949 prosecution: Record of Indictments Superior Court Richmond County Book 11, Augusta records storage facility.

1949 corruption trial: “Two Police Commissioners Arrested on Bribe Charge,”
Augusta Chronicle
, May 4, 1949; “Bitter Court Battle is Indicated…,”
Chronicle
, June 12, 1949; “Bribe Trials Delayed Till July 18,”
Chronicle
, June 14, 1949.

“Tell daddy, try to get me out.” Willie Glenn interview, Tucker files.

Chapter Four:
TOCCOA

Herman Talmadge: Donald L. Grant and Jonathan Grant,
The Way It Was in the South: The Black Experience in Georgia
(University of Georgia Press, 2003); “Springfield Spectacle,”
Time
, February 24, 1936; “Georgia: Death of the Wild Man,”
Time
, Dec. 30, 1946.

Eugene Talmadge and prison reform in Georgia: William Anderson,
The Wild Man from Sugar Creek: The Political Career of Eugene Talmadge
(Louisiana State University Press, 1975); Harold P. Henderson,
The Politics of Change in Georgia: A Political Biography of Ellis Arnall
(University of Georgia Press, 1991); “Prisons-Director’s Office-Director’s Subject Files, 1940-1975,” Georgia Archives;
Augusta Chronicle
, April 23, 1948 and Dec. 16, 1948.

Talmadge speech in Rome: “Speech by Governor Herman Talmadge, 1949,” folder, Prison Director’s Subject Files, Georgia Archives.

The Rome facility: “Juvenile Training Institute Formed,”
Augusta Chronicle
, Nov. 20, 1946; “Statewide Search Launched for ‘Honor Roll’ Escapees,”
Chronicle,
November 25, 1946; “
Battey General Hospital Transferred to State,”
Chronicle
, February 11, 1947; “Battey Expansion is Well Underway,”
Chronicle
, November 20, 1949; “Georgia Juvenile Training Institute Rome 1950-51” and “Speech by J. B. Hatchett,” folders, Prison Director’s Subject Files, Georgia Archives.

Camp Toccoa:
Toccoa Record
, January 31, 1952;
Rome News-Tribune
, April 6, 1953;
Toccoa Record
, April 23, 1953; “Memo from Walter Matthews,” folder, Prison Director’s Subject Files, 1940-1975, Georgia Archives.

Other books

A Cavern of Black Ice by J. V. Jones
This Gun for Hire by Jo Goodman
Briar's Book by Pierce, Tamora
The Love Potion by Sandra Hill
Quicksand by Carolyn Baugh
Wartime Sweethearts by Lizzie Lane
I Won't Give Up by Sophie Monroe
Vintage Stuff by Tom Sharpe