The Original Black Elite: Daniel Murray and the Story of a Forgotten Era
Written by Elizabeth Dowling Taylor
Narrated by Karen Chilton
3.5/5
()
Education
African American History
Family
Segregation
Civil Rights
Power of Education
Rags to Riches
American Dream
Fish Out of Water
Coming of Age
Power of Community
Importance of Family
Fight Against Discrimination
Power of Knowledge
Family Legacy
Race Relations
Racial Discrimination
Discrimination
African-American History
Family & Community
About this audiobook
Elizabeth Dowling Taylor
Elizabeth Dowling Taylor is the New York Times bestselling author of A Slave in the White House: Paul Jennings and the Madisons. She received her PhD from the University of California at Berkeley, and over her twenty-two-year career in museum education and research has held the positions of director of interpretation at Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello and director of education at James Madison’s Montpelier. She is now an independent scholar and lecturer and a fellow at the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities in Charlottesville.
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Reviews for The Original Black Elite
9 ratings1 review
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Feb 24, 2021
This book tells the story of upwardly mobile African Americans who prospered and formed their own upper class in Washington, DC during Reconstruction and then how it declined as Jim Crow laws became the rule in the United States.
The book uses one family, that of Daniel Murray (1851 - 1925) to illustrate how the success of this group of African-Americans became regarded as a threat to the larger white society and how laws (as well as institutional norms) were erected to hold them back and to assure the superiority of white Americans.
They more I read books about black history in this country, the more I wonder why white people in this country are so insecure and afraid.