African Americans in Congress
A Documentary History
Other Titles in:
Race and Social Policy
Race and Social Policy
October 2007 | 543 pages | CQ Press
From the first steps toward enfranchisement through modern lawmakers&BAD:rsquo; vision for America, a new book from CQ Press is the first single-volume reference to provide the complete story of African Americans making U.S. political history. In African Americans in Congress: A Documentary History, authors Eric Freedman&BAD:mdash;a Pulitzer Prize winner&BAD:mdash;and Stephen A. Jones, have assembled a vital collection of original narrative supported by more than 120 of the most important historical documents tracing the African American political experience and the history of African American legislators in the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. Throughout this comprehensive work, the stories of notable African Americans who have served in Congress are told, including: Hiram R. Revels of Mississippi, the first African American senator; Shirley A. Chisholm of New York, the first black woman to serve in Congress; Charles B. Rangel of New York, the chair of the House Committee on Ways and Means and a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus; and Barack Obama of Illinois, the only African American senator in the 110th Congress. The first part of the book features chronological chapters on the history of African American involvement in U.S. politics and on Capitol Hill, while the second part features thematic chapters on the African American political experience. The issues and events covered include: The debate over slavery, the Civil War and ReconstructionThe civil rights movement and political empowermentThe maturation of the Congressional Black CaucusElections and investigationsWar, peace, patriotism and international affairsThe struggle for economic justiceIt also details some little-known stories, including future Rep. Robert Smalls&BAD:rsquo; heroism in commandeering a Confederate ship during the Civil War and piloting it into Union custody and the controversy when President Herbert Hoover&BAD:rsquo;s wife invited the wife of Rep. Oscar De Priest to a White House tea.The appendixes contain lists of African Americans in the 110th Congress and those since the 41st Congress, a chronology of significant events and an extensive bibliography.