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A Place Called Ilda - by Tom Shoop (Paperback)
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Highlights
- The compelling history of a racially integrated, and now forgotten, community in northern Virginia Established by two Black entrepreneurs and their families, who provided the economic engine for its initial success, the village of Ilda flourished as a racially integrated community before the Jim Crow era.
- About the Author: Tom Shoop is a writer and historian and the former editor in chief of GovExec.
- 242 Pages
- History, United States
Description
About the Book
"The story of a lost mixed-race community in Northern Virginia, drawing together newly discovered historic records, freshly uncovered contemporary accounts, and personal interviews to reveal the lives and experiences of people who struggled to make real the Reconstruction-era promise of freedom and opportunity, and those who insisted that their efforts not be forgotten"--
Book Synopsis
The compelling history of a racially integrated, and now forgotten, community in northern Virginia
Established by two Black entrepreneurs and their families, who provided the economic engine for its initial success, the village of Ilda flourished as a racially integrated community before the Jim Crow era. More than simply a history of a racially and socially pioneering community, this remarkable book tells a broader story, recounting the Black experience in Fairfax County over generations and shedding new light on the racial, economic, political, and bureaucratic factors that drove the development of Northern Virginia and the nation as a whole. Weaving together accounts of horse thievery, attempted murder, savage beatings, hate crimes, and a long-forgotten cemetery, this gripping and often moving narrative provides a rich and unusually detailed record of the rise, decline, and rediscovery of a crossroads whose secrets and mysteries depict an America that might have been, and might still be.
Winner of the Nan Netherton Prize from the Fairfax County History Commission
Review Quotes
This microhistory demonstrates the ways in which a place as small as a crossroads can tell a compelling history, not only about the location itself, but also the broader forces operating in the United States from the colonial period to the present. For Shoop, this history includes slavery and freedom, interracial coalitions and segregationist practices, the expansion of the federal government and suburbanization, and cemeteries and memorialization. . . . A great way to learn about the complex history of Virginia's racialized landscape. This text is particularly important to our growing understanding of Northern Virginia, which, despite its economic importance and population growth, is perennially overlooked in historical stufdies on the state.
--Virginia Magazine of History and BiographyA Place Called Ilda is one of those books that you might feel compelled to finish in one marathon sitting. Author Tom Shoop weaves together a gripping narrative that brings to life a place from which a host of quintessentially American stories are told. For those of us who live steps from what was once a thriving Reconstruction-era integrated community lost to the forces of Jim Crow, it's a reminder of the fragility and uneven nature of progress. In this poignant tale, Shoop captures the essence of resilience and community, leaving readers with a lasting appreciation for the power of history to shape our present.--Braddock Supervisor James Walkinshaw
Shoop has written a public history of the perils of living as freedpeople after the Civil War and of African American perseverance in founding communities, as wider Fairfax County upended their institutions, removed their cemeteries, and revoked the land from their descendants. . . upon reading A Place Called Ilda localities should face the crossroads of public memory by following the ultimate example of Fairfax County, as it changed the way it preserves and interprets history to honor the contributions of African Americans.--Journal of Southern History
About the Author
Tom Shoop is a writer and historian and the former editor in chief of GovExec.