The Nine O''Clock Whistle: Stories of the Freedom Struggle for Civil Rights in Enfield, North Carolina
English
By (author): Cynthia Samuelson David Cecelski Mildred Sexton Willa Cofield
After firemen used high-powered water hoses to drive people off the streets, the Black community continued to resist by organizing a successful three-month boycott of the white-owned downtown stores. The movement quickly spread into the surrounding county, morphing into a voter registration campaign, a school integration effort, and a legal battle over author Willa Cofields First Amendment rights, after she was fired from her position as a public school teacher.
The Nine OClock Whistle covers a range of historically and contextually significant stories, including details from Cofields grandfathers early life as an enslaved person and her familys rise to prominence in the Enfield Black community, to the roles the authors played in the local protest movement during the 1960s. Ultimately, Cofield, Samuelson, and Sexton squarely repudiate the assertion that the civil rights movement bypassed communities in northeastern North Carolina, and prove instead that the movement drastically changed the lives of people in towns like Enfield forever. See more
Will deliver when available. Publication date 15 Oct 2024