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With re-search spanning more than hundred years¿from 1865 to 1967, this book is the first ever written record of the African Americans in Jackson County, NC. Victoria has completed a text to accompany the photographs gathered from her research. The photographs shared with you here were not taken by Victoria, but by amateur African Americans and/or white professional photographers. She chose these pictures to present the history of black Jackson County through the years of segregation.
"Before the coming of the four-lane, Jackson County was an insular community defined by geography - wedged in between the Great Smokies and Blue Ridge escarpment, bisected by thousands of miles of streams. The people who settled the area tended to be tough as pine knots but also tended to be salt-of-the-earth. This book offers tales of a time of transition in the area, when arguments over whether someone should opt to have an electric wire run to their home weren't far separated from quibbling over Internet service providers. Inside are tales from logging camps, fields, gardens and lonesome game trails and stories of challenges faced with the unique sense of mountain humor. Local columnist Jim Buchanan tells tales of bear hunts, cool springs and creatures great and small."--Back cover