My Remembers: A Black Sharecropper's Recollections of the Depression
- Special Violet Crown Award Citation, 1996
December, 1995
Published
144
Pages
18 Illus. Index.
Features
Open Access
Read Online
Recommended Text
Ideal for Classrooms
About Stimpson's My Remembers
My Remembers: A Black Sharecropper’s Recollections of the Depression is now available as a free e-book at the UNT Digital Library.
“I grow up a dirt farmer and retired a dirt farmer. Never got rich and didn’t want to be. My childhood stomping ground is now concrete, stores and houses. I remember the good times and bad. It was not the money we made but how to stretch that last dime. It was not the wind, rain or snow. It was about the love that flow. It was not the hot sunshine nor the clouds that hung low. It was the grace of God that help us swang that hoe. I want my grandchildren to understand. My grands, your grands and their grands.”
In 1929, near Plano, Texas, Eddie Stimpson, Jr., weighing 15-1/2 pounds, was born to a 19-year-old father and a 15-year-old mother. The boy, his two sisters and mother all “grew up together,” with the father sharecropping along the old Preston Road, the route used by many freedmen trying to escape Texas after the Civil War.
His childhood was void of luxuries, but full of country pleasures. The editors have retained the simplicity of Stimpson’s folk speech and spelling patterns, allowing the good-natured humility and wisdom of his personality to shine through the narrative. “Tough time never last,” he writes, “but tough people all way do.”
The details of ordinary family life and community survival include descriptions of cooking, farming, gambling, visiting, playing, doctoring, hunting, bootlegging, and picking cotton, as well as going to school, to church, to funerals, to weddings, to Juneteenth celebrations.
This book will be of extraordinary value to folklorists, historians, sociologists, and anyone enjoying a good story.
“My spelling is bad, my hand writing is bad, and my language is bad,” Stimpson writes. “But my remembers is still in tack.”
“Stimpson’s simple story is eloquent beyond far more learned ones.” —Judyth Rigler, Lone Star Library
“Stimpson provides an opportunity for readers to view rural life in Texas during the Depression and its aftermath. Thoughtful readers will quickly realize that the black family of that time and place had a stability often overlooked today. Stimpson’s almost Biblical cadence further enriches the reading, as does the imagery used to call up emotional response to the good times and the bad that mark his life.” —School Library Journal
Paperback printed in January 1999.
Classroom Adoption
My Remembers: A Black Sharecropper's Recollections of the Depression is a recommended text for use in classrooms where the following subjects are being studied: History, Texas.
“Stimpson provides an opportunity for readers to view rural life in Texas during the Depression and its aftermath. Thoughtful readers will quickly realize that the black family of that time and place had a stability often overlooked today. Stimpson’s almost Biblical cadence further enriches the reading, as does the imagery used to call up emotional response to the good times and the bad that mark his life.”—School Library Journal.
Adopted By
[“Southwestern University for a course in Texas history”]
About the Author
EDDIE STIMPSON, JR., born in 1929, lived on a dirt farm while attending Shepton School, Allen Colored School and Plano Colored School. He spent 21 years in the Army, then became a farmer again after retirement. He was the father of three children, grandfather of seven, and great-grandfather of one; he wrote this book for them.