E book Overview
The Stained Glass Window: A Household Historical past because the American Story, 1790-1958
By David Levering Lewis
Penguin Press: 368 pages, $35
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Anybody who has launched into a seek for their ancestors is aware of the sensation of simply wanting extra — extra data, extra perception, extra proof of lives lived. Who have been these long-gone individuals, past a paper path of census data, wills and marriage licenses? What did they care about? What forces of historical past formed them?
Writer and historian David Levering Lewis, a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner for his biographies of Black mental pioneer W.E.B. DuBois, has spent his life mining the previous, however his data of his family line was incomplete. With greater than a dozen books and most of a lifetime behind him, Levering, 88, resolved to alter that, setting out on a journey to each reclaim his household historical past and anchor it within the story of African People on this nation. He obtained greater than he bargained for.
The story Lewis tells in “The Stained Glass Window” was impressed by an vintage window in an Atlanta church, a portrait of a mom and youngster modeled on the options of his maternal grandmother. That grandmother, Alice King Bell, was raised within the very important and traditionally important Black group of Atlanta and was recognized and remembered by her household. However as Lewis went additional again in time, he discovered forebears whose tales had by no means been absolutely advised. His job examined the boundaries of his experience, so he obtained additional assist from an skilled genealogist, who assisted him with deciphering outcomes from genetic testing.
With that newly accessible data got here a shock. Lewis, an African American, found that he had no less than three white ancestors, the legacy of the slave period, when white enslavers coerced Black ladies into sexual relations. In a revelation that “diminished me to a number of days of incoherence,” he discovered that one in every of his great-grandfathers, James W. Belvin, was white, and that regardless of having a white spouse and youngsters, Belvin had fathered 5 kids with the writer’s enslaved great-grandmother Clarissa King. White individuals, enslaved Black individuals, free individuals of colour — all of them made up Levering’s familial combine, a gaggle of people whose lives personified the lives of Black People from the late 18th to the twentieth centuries. This private street map gave him a framework for telling the story of African People of all social lessons and pores and skin tones, from pre-Colonial occasions to the Nineteen Fifties.
In some ways it’s a brutal account — the terrors of slavery, the violence and injustice of Reconstruction, the post-Reconstruction throttling of Black rights and alternatives that brought about a lot of Lewis’ ancestors to flee the South. It’s additionally a narrative of immense braveness, grit and willpower. Essentially the most revealing thread, when it comes to what Black residents have each endured and achieved, considerations his Atlanta-based household.
Within the late 1800s Lewis’ white great-grandfather Belvin, in declining well being, purchased Clarissa King a property in Atlanta and stipulated that it ought to stay in her household. This enabled Clarissa and her household to flee rural Georgia and transfer to probably the most very important African American group within the South, one which ultimately produced each Lewis’ father, a minister and school president, and his mom, a instructor, artist and social drive in the neighborhood.
Atlanta appreciated to name itself the “metropolis too busy to hate,” however its energy construction challenged even probably the most resolute of its African Americans. Black Atlantans have been regularly denied pathways to alternative and achievement. The historical past of the willful neglect and underfunding of Black schooling, which Lewis chronicles in excruciating element, is surprising and painful. A divide between the Black skilled class and the Black working class hampered the group’s means to unite and kind a political drive. Lewis is astute about the way in which middle- and upper-class Black residents, a lot of them mixed-race, guarded their very own assets and didn’t agitate for full rights for all Black individuals till they have been swept alongside by the unstoppable tide of the civil rights motion of the Nineteen Fifties and Nineteen Sixties.
However in the principle, it is a story of energy and endurance and unselfishness. Following Lewis’ father’s struggles to lift cash for the cash-starved establishments he led, I puzzled on the supply of his braveness and tenacity. Maybe he was paying ahead the unselfishness of Levering’s two aunts, who labored lengthy hours and daunting jobs to assist fund his father’s and uncle’s schooling. The horrific violence unleashed on Black People within the South — whippings, beatings, burnings, shootings, lynchings — within the title of denying them participation within the American democratic experiment exhibits how important voting rights are, and the way simply they are often taken away.
Lewis brings to this ebook his ardour for historical past and his experience in researching little-known nuances of the African American story: Black slaveholders in South Carolina; the predicament of free individuals of colour within the South; the way in which a backlash from a nineteenth century slave revolt choked off hard-won liberties loved by free Black individuals.
As is commonly the case, Levering’s strengths are additionally his weaknesses. He can inform a riveting story, however at occasions the narrative is slowed down by citations and attributions. Because the story strikes ahead to that of his instant relations, it turns into a form of testomony that mentions everybody who touched them: fellow ministers, sorority sisters, institutional colleagues. It involves resemble a household historical past written for a restricted viewers, reasonably than the extra broadly primarily based American saga of the ebook’s earlier sections.
Regardless of these limitations, “The Stained Glass Window” is a serious accomplishment in its attain and scope and reconnection with the previous. Maybe solely an 88-year previous two-time Pulitzer winner may have introduced the mandatory abilities and perspective to the duty. If Lewis felt that he owed a debt to his household in penning this ebook, think about that debt repaid — with curiosity.
Mary Ann Gwinn, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who lives in Seattle, writes about books and authors.