My last few blogs have been heavy on text, so I thought I would do something different for the next two weeks. Today I'm going to share some of the photographs I consult while writing Half-Truths. Next week, you'll meet a few of my experts--from "back in the day," and now.
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With the help of Pinterest and The Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County, these images help me create the story of Lillie Harris, my light-skinned African American protagonist who lives in Charlotte, NC in 1950.
Johnson C Smith University
1947 Homecoming
African American Album
http://www.cmstory.org/african/album/volume1/079.htm
Rose Morgan - Founder of Rose Meta House of Beauty, one of the largest and most visible African American beauty salons in the U.S. in the 1950s and 1960s. From Ideas to Independence: A Century of Entrepreneurial Women | NWHM. entrepreuners.nwhm.org
Pinned from Etsy, this is my model for Lillie's little sister, Gloria.
The Tate Family, 1910
A prominent Charlotte African American Family
Several of Thaddeus' Tate daughters
passed for white.
http://www.cmstory.org/african/album/volume1/009.htm
"The Tate family lived in this elegant home at 504 East 7th Street. Thaddeus Tate opened a barber shop in 1882 which prospered for over sixty years. He co-founded several of Charlotte's leading black businesses, including the Afro-American Mutual Insurance Company and the Mecklenburg Investment Company." http://www.cmstory.org/african/album/volume1/010.jpg
Second Ward High School
served black students from 1923-1969.
It was torn down when busing began.
http://www.cmhpf.org/S&Rs%20Alphabetical%20Order/SurveyS&Rjeffers.htm
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Second Ward cheerleaders, 1940 http://www.cmstory.org/african/album/volume1/educat10.htm |
A view of homes along East 8th Street in Brooklyn. Area was demolished during urban renewal in the 1960's-1970's. Photo courtesy of Second Ward Alumni Association.
http://www.cmstory.org/aaa2/places/content_brooklyn.htm
Bertha Pinckenpack in front of her house on Alexander Street
with her great-granddaughters,
Geraldine and Beverly, c. 1950.
http://www.cmstory.org/african/album/volume1/013.htm
Bishop Daddy Grace
was the leader of the United House Of Prayer For All People,
a Pentecostal denomination that met in the Brooklyn neighborhood.
http://www.cmstory.org/aaa2/places/main_menu.htm
I study pictures like these for all types of information: people Lillie might have heard about or met; hair, clothing, and shoe styles; neighborhoods she would have walked through; what her school looked like. I never know which image might provide an interesting detail that will inform my work.
How about you? What resources do you use when researching a book?