Beside the Troubled Waters

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A01=Jack D. Ellis
A01=Sonnie Wellington Hereford III
African American history
Author_Jack D. Ellis
Author_Sonnie Wellington Hereford III
Black Studies
Category=NHK
Category=WQH
civil rights
desegregation
diversity
Diversity in the South
doctors
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
health activism
health care
healthcare
history of medicine
hospitals
medical profession
medical rhetoric
medicine
North Alabama
nursing
patient care
racism
social justice
white supremacy

Product details

  • ISBN 9780817357894
  • Weight: 318g
  • Dimensions: 158 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Jul 2014
  • Publisher: The University of Alabama Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Beside the Troubled Waters is a memoir by an African American physician in Alabama whose story in many ways typifies the lives and careers of black doctors in the south during the segregationist era while also illustrating the diversity of the black experience in the medical profession. Based on interviews conducted with Hereford over ten years, the account includes his childhood and youth as the son of a black sharecropper and Primitive Baptist minister in Madison County, Alabama, during the Depression; his education at Huntsville’s allblack Councill School and medical training at Meharry Medical College in Nashville; his medical practice in Huntsville’s black community beginning in 1956; his efforts to overcome the racism he met in the white medical community; his participation in the civil rights movement in Huntsville; and his later problems with the Medicaid programme and state medical authorities, which eventually led to the loss of his license.

Hereford’s memoir stands out because of its medical and civil rights themes, and also because of its compelling account of the professional ruin Hereford encountered after 37 years of practice, as the end of segregation and the federal role in medical care placed black doctors in competition with white ones for the first time.
Sonnie Wellington Hereford III is a retired physician and civil rights leader who has taught at Alabama A&M University and Calhoun Community College, and has served as campus physician for those schools, as well as Oakwood College.

Jack D. Ellis is Professor Emeritus of History at the University of Alabama in Huntsville and author of The PhysicianLegislators of France: Medicine and Politics in the Early Third Republic, 1870–1914.

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