Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

18 May, 2009

Pulllman Porters - Invisible to Children?

National Public Radio had a terrific piece on May 7th about the history of Pullman Porters. The story explored the labor history and unionization of Pullman porters: Pullman Porters Help Build Black Middle Class One of the main points of the program was that Pullman porters were hired to be invisible. Men who would attend to every need and be completely unintrusive: the perfect servant. Several days after hearing this story, I was giving a CLIC tour to someone with ties to the railways (okay, it was my mother-in-law, whose father, uncle, and grandfather all served on the rails in various capacities.) Recalling the NPR segment, we looked at our holdings on railroad history. I wondered how the history and stories of these remarkable men was expressed in children's literature. Are Pullman porters present in the pictures and text? The call number area, HE2750-90, held some intriguing titles.*

The first book that caught my eye was The Building of the First Transcontinental Railroad by Adele Nathan, published in 1950. This book is part of The Landmark Series, published by Random House. Our copy is the 4th printing, which gives some evidence of the book's popularity. In this book, there are the repeated expressions of "the great white expansion", the battles with "Indians", and a few mentions of Chinese workers, but there is absolutely no reference at all to Pullman porters. I was intrigued by the pencil marks throughout the book of "begin", "end", and "omit". It appears that someone read this book out loud to children, focusing on the most exciting parts.

Move forward 54 years to the new Landmark Series, published again by Random House. Hear That Train Whistle Blow!: How the Railroad Changed the World, by Milton Meltzer, published in 2004. This book has a picture of a Pullman porter right on the book jacket.
The history of Pullman porters is woven into the text, with sections on the creation of the luxurious Pullman cars and the hiring of porters. There is a nicely written chapter on the formation of the porter labor union, activist Asa Philip Randolph, and the planned March on Washington in July of 1941. Although the march never happened, the threat was enough to pressure President Roosevelt into issuing Executive Order 8802 that barred discrimination in defense industries and federal bureaus (the Fair Employment Act). This is a well written book, with period photographs and documents. No particular group is charicatured, allowing the complexities of history to emerge.

Full Steam Ahead: The Race to Build a Transcontinental Railroad by Rhoda Blumberg was published in 1996 by the National Geographic Society. This book includes the political circumstances of the first railroad construction, the actual conditions of Chinese laborers, and the rivalries between the railroad barons. While there appears to be an attempt to be balanced, it is discouraging that "Indians" are not distinguished by people or tribe. No mention of Pullman porters.

In my perusal of picture books about railroads and trains there are no pictures of Pullman porters included as part of the voyage. Sometimes, there is a friendly engineer waving from the engine or passengers in the windows. Huck Scarry's Steam Train Journey, published in 1979, has captivating bits. (Most will be more familiar the work of his son, Richard Scarry.) In the Scarry tradition, all the parts of the trains, their functions, and the various journeys are detailed. But no Pullman porters are anywhere! Considering the current attention and scholarship related to Pullman porters and their contribution to railroad history - and more significantly, to their seminal role in the American civil rights movement - perhaps a wonderful picture book will emerge. Kadir Nelson, are you listening?

The Long Hard Journey: The Story of the Pullman Porter, by Patricia and Frederick McKissack (1989), is part of the Walker American Series for Young People. This book is a complete history. Rich in language and documentation, the history of the Pullman porters is presented 144 pages that you will not be able to put down. This book includes a bibliography of primary and secondary sources. Wonderful!

A book to contrast The Long Hard Jouney is the 1938 book Through By Rail, authored by Charles Hall and published by Macmillan. George Pullman is aggrandized and the text refers to shoe shining and smiling porters who "look after the travelers comfort." Just reading these two books side by side would be enough to elicit, and indeed provoke, a conversation about historical representation.

Most of these books are intended for children ages 9-12. There is a film, 10,000 Black Men Named George, that might engage high school age kids. It's produced by Showtime, and to be candid, the acting and storyline is okay. However, it does explore the working conditions of Pullman porters. More importantly, the contextual background regarding the publication of the socialist journal,The Messenger by Asa Philip Randolph sparks one's interest in early 20th century politics.

Children's literature - for all of us! Informing our cultural values and priorities. Creative works that are truly interdisciplinary.

*Note: In 2008, our library re-classed our children's literature collection from an in-house Dewey system to Library of Congress classification. So, someone browsing the online catalog for railroad history would hopefully notice the children's literature interspersed in the results list. Our aim in The Children's Literature Interdisciplinary Collection, CLIC, is to encourage the use of children's publications in academic study and scholarship.

05 August, 2008

Charlotte's Web

There was a wonderful tribute to E B. White and his book Charlotte's Web on NPR the other day as part of their "In Character" series on Monday, August 4 2008.


There are excerpts of White reading from the book and an acknowledgement of the staying power of this story over the years. I love Charlotte because she is simultaneously self-possessed and self-sacrificing. It is indeed the relationship that we have in our lives that give meaning.


White himself, when he recorded the audiobook in 1970, had trouble getting through the end of the book..."He broke down — just as I did," recalled audiobook producer Joe Berk in a 1991 NPR interview. "We did 17 takes. ... We went on a short walk, and he turned to me, and he said, 'It's ridiculous: a grown man reading a book that he wrote, and being unable to read it aloud because of tears.' "


To read the entire piece go to NRP Charlotte A. Cavatica: Bloodthirsty, Wise And True by Melissa Block

23 July, 2008

The Great Good Thing


One of the best moments of vacation is the realization that the day ahead is deep and wide. When this coincides with a warm breeze through an open window, a comfy chair with an equally comfy foot-rest, and a good book - then heaven and earth intersect for a while.

While staying with friends, on our recent family vacation, I browsed their bookshelves for something to read. I had consumed all the books that I had brought with me and so I was trolling for, oh - something... There on the shelve was a 1911 printing of The Secret Garden by Frances Hodges Burnett. (First published in 1910 it was already in a second printing.) I was startled to find such a thick volume, 374 pages. I have read The Secret Garden, or so I thought. As I began to scan the opening pages, I found that the sanitized, truncated versions that I have read are no where near the real thing. This was real and gritty. A narrative of a neglected child who only survives through universal grace.

The transformative power of Nature, self-reliance, social and economic class structures - this book has it all. A very 1900 turn-of-the-century novel indeed. Towards the end of the story, Dickon, the country boy who befriends Mary and Colin, talks about "The Great Good Thing." He is attempting to describe how he views his life and the world around him. The connections that are possible between people and the natural world are expressed in a life-affirming, yet non-sentimental, way. A very 2000 turn-of-the-century novel indeed. If you would like to think about "good things" then lean into your own comfy chair, put your feet up and read the original Secret Garden.