A PEOPLE’S HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES

by Howard Zinn

Known for its lively, clear prose as well as its scholarly research, A People’s History of the United States is the only volume to tell America’s story from the point of view of — and in the words of — America’s women, factory workers, African Americans, Native Americans, working poor, and immigrant laborers.

(from the cover)

WHITE TRASH

The 400-year Untold History of Class in America, by Nancy Isenberg

“The wretched and landless poor have been a part of American culture from the time of the earliest British colonial settlement. In her ground-breaking history of the class system in America, Nancy Isenberg explodes our comforting myths about equality in the land of opportunity, uncovering the crucial legacy of the ever-present poor white trash.

Surveying political rhetoric and policy, popular literature, and scientific theories over four hundred years. Isenberg upends assumptions about America’s supposedly class-free society — where liberty and hard work were meant to ensure real social mobility. Some of the founding fathers believed poor people were subhuman, and wanted to apply strategies used in agriculture and animal husbandry to improve the stock. Poor whites were central to the rise of Lincoln’s Republican Party, and in addition to slavery, the Civil War itself was fought over class issues. Reconstruction pitted poor white trash against newly freed slaves, which was a factor in the rise of eugenics — a widely popular movement embraced by Theodore Roosevelt that targeted poor whites for sterilization. Those poor were at the heart of New Deal reforms and LBJ’s Great Society. Now they are offered to us in reality TV shows like Here Comes Honey Boo Boo and Duck Dynasty, and the label is applied to celebrities ranging from Dolly Parton to Bill Clinton. Marginalized as a class, white trash have always been near the center of major debates over the character of the American identity.

The contemporary focus on the “one percent” has animated public discussion about power dynamics, but without context. We have been taught to overlook the fact that privilege runs deep in our history. Without pause, America has been ignoring, if not hating, its underclass since the seventeenth century. Today we acknowledge racial injustice as an ugly stain on our nation’s history. With Isenberg’s landmark book, we will have to face the truth about the enduring nature of class as well.”

(From the flap of the book)

WHITE CARGO

The Forgotten History of Britain’s White Slaves in America by Don Jordan and Michael Walsh

White Cargo is the forgotten story of the thousands of Britons who lived and died in bondage in Britain’s American colonies. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, more than 300,000 people became slaves there in all but name. Urchins were swept up from London’s streets to labor in tobacco fields, where life expectancy was no more than two years. Brothels were raided to provide “breeders” for Virginia. Transported convicts were paraded for sale like livestock.

Drawing on letters crying for help, diaries, and court and government archives, Don Jordan and Michael Walsh demonstrate that the brutalities usually associated with black slavery alone were perpetrated on whites throughout British rule.

The trade ended with American independence, but the British still tried to sell convicts in their former colonies, which prompted one of the most audacious plots in Anglo-American history.

This saga of exploitation and cruelty, which spanned 170 years, has been submerged by the overwhelming memory of black slavery. White Cargo brings the brutal, uncomfortable story to the surface.”

(From the back cover of the book)

THE FIRST EMANCIPATOR

The following is taken Verbatim from the Jacket of Andrew Levy’s book, “The First Emancipator”: The Forgotten Story of ROBERT CARTER the Founding Father Who Freed His Slaves:

A GROUNDBREAKING WORK OF HISTORY THAT WILL CHANGE THE WAY WE THINK ABOUT THE FOUNDING FATHERS AND SLAVERY

Robert Carter III, the grandson of Tidewater legend Robert “King” Carter, was born into the highest circles of Virginia’s Colonial aristocracy. He was neighbor and kin to the Washingtons and Lees and a friend and peer to Thomas Jefferson and George Mason. But on September 5, 1791, Carter severed his ties with this glamorous elite at the stroke of a pen. In a document he called his Deed of Gift, Carter declared his intent to set free nearly five hundred slaves in the largest single act of liberation in the history of American slavery before the Emancipation Proclamation.

How did Carter succeed in the very action that George Washington and Thomas Jefferson claimed they fervently desired but were powerless to effect? And why has his name all but vanished from the annals of American history? In this haunting, brilliantly original work, Andrew Levy traces the confluence of circumstance, conviction, war, and passion that led to Carter’s extraordinary act.

At the dawn of the Revolutionary War, Carter was one of the wealthiest men in America, the owner of tens of thousands of acres of land, factories, iron works — and hundreds of slaves. But incrementally, almost unconsciously, Carter grew to feel that what he possessed was not truly his. In an era of empty Anglican piety, Carter experienced a feverish religious vision that impelled him to help build a church where blacks and whites were equals. In an age of publicly sanctioned sadism against blacks, he defied convention and extended new protections and privileges to his slaves. As the war ended and his fortunes declined, Carter dedicated himself even more fiercely to liberty, clashing repeatedly with his neighbors, his friends, government officials, and, most poignantly, his own family.

But Carter was not the only humane master, nor the sole partisan of freedom, in that freedom-loving age. Why did this troubled, spiritually torn man dare to do what far more visionary slave owners only dreamed of? In answering this question, Andrew Levy teases out the very texture of Carter’s life and soul — the unspoken passions that divided him from others of his class, and the religious conversion that enabled him to see his black slaves in a new light.

Drawing on years of painstaking research, written with grace and fire, The First Emancipator is a portrait of an unsung hero who has finally won his place in American history. It is an astonishing, challenging, and ultimately inspiring book.

(from the jacket)

MUSICIANS

PERFORMERS AND COMPOSERS –DUKE ELLINGTON; DON SHIRLEY; LALO SCHIFRIN; LEONARD COHEN; MILES DAVIS; CHARLIE HAYDEN; QUINCY JONES; DAVE BRUBECK; STEVIE RAY VAUGHN; ALAN TOUSSAINT; VAN MORRISON; RAY CHARLES; MUDDY WATERS; HOWLIN’ WOLF; CHARLIE PARKER; CHET BAKER; PHILLIP GLASS; FRANK SINATRA; MIRIAM MAKEBA; HARRY BELAFONTE; AARON NEVILLE; BOB DYLAN; CAROLINA CHOCOLATE DROPS; OUR NATIVE DAUGHTERS; JOHN LENNON; SWEET HONEY IN THE ROCK; ROY ORBISON; STEVIE WONDER; THE LAST POETS;

DAVE BRUBECK

ALL TIME GREATEST HITS1974-LP

BRUBECK ON CAMPUS -1972-LP





CHARLIE BYRD

FOR WE KNOW -LP

THE WORLD OF CHARLIE BYRD-LP

GUITAR ARTISTRY–LP

LATIN BYRD -LP

JOHNNY CASH

I WALK THE LINE -LP

JOHNNY CASH -AMERICAN IV: THE MAN COMES AROUND -2003 -CD

RAY CHARLES

A MESSAGE FROM THE PEOPLE – 1972- LP

MILES DAVIS

THE MASTER OF STYLE -1984 -CS

KIND OF BLUE -1997 -CD

BOB DYLAN

SLOW TRAIN COMING -1979-LP

THE TIMES THEY ARE A- CHANGING- LP

HIGHWAY 61 REVISITED- CS

LOVE AND THEFT-2001-CD

PAT GARRETT AND BILLY THE KID (SOUNDTRACK)-1973-CD

THE FREEWHEELIN’ BOB DYLAN-2003-CD

DUKE ELLINGTON

THE DUKE AT TANGLEWOOD -LP

DUKE ELLINGTON’S 70th BIRTHDAY CONCERT -LP

THE ELLINGTON SUITES -LP

BLACK, BROWN AND BEIGE -LP

MY PEOPLE -CS

DUKE ELLINGTON’S GREATEST HITS -LP

PETE FOUNTAIN

THE BEST OF PETE FOUNTAIN -LP

ERROL GARNER

EASY TO LOVE -CS

CONCERT BY THE SEA -CS,LP

SOLILOQUY -LP

THE ELF -1976-LP

PHILIP GLASS

EINSTEIN ON THE BEACH -CS

GLASSWORKS -1982-LP

SONGS FROM LIQUID DAYS -CS

JACKIE GLEASON

MERRY CHRISTMAS -LP

MUSIC FOR LOVERS ONLY -LP

REBOUND-LP

BENNY GOODMAN

ALL-TIME GREATEST HITS 1972-LP

TRIO AND QUARTET-LIVE 1937-38-LP 1976, 1985

BENNY -LP -1986

THE FAMOUS 1938 CARNEGIE HALL JAZZ CONCERT , VOL.2-LP

DON SHIRLEY

THE DON SHIRLEY TRIO IN CONCERT -LP

POINT OF VIEW -1972-LP

DON SHIRLEY PRESENTS MARTHA FLOWERS- LP

THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO DON SHIRLEY -LP

DON SHIRLEY, PIANIST EXTRAORDINARY-1960-LP

DON SHIRLEY TRIO -1960-LP

NINA SIMONE

BLACK GOLD AND TO BE YOUNG , GIFTED AND BLACK-LP

NINA SIMONE IN CONCERT-1964 -LP

NUFF SAID -1968-LP

BALTIMORE -LP

NINA SIMONE AT TOWN HALL -LP

THE AMAZING NINA SIMONE -LP

HIGH PRIESTESS OF SOUL -LP

EMERGENCY WARD -1972 -LP

SILK AND SOUL -1967 -LP

HERE COMES THE SUN- LP

UP FRONT-LP

TO LOVE SOMEBODY -1969 -LP

LEONARD COHEN

LIVE IN LONDON -2008-DVD

YOU WANT IT DARKER -2016-CD

VARIOUS POSITIONS -1984 -CD

I’M YOUR MAN -1988-CD

TEN NEW SONGS -2001 -CD

THE FUTURE -1992 -CD

NEW SKIN FOR THE OLD CEREMONY 1974 -CD

SONGS FROM A ROOM -1969 -CD

LALO SCHIFRIN

MARQUIS DE SADELP

TOWERING INFERNOLP

RAVI SHANKAR

SOUND OF THE SITAR – LP

CONCERT FOR SITAR AND ORCHESTRA -LP

THE SOUNDS OF INDIA -LP

TONY SCOTT

MUSIC FOR ZEN MEDITATION -LP

GEORGE SHEARING

IN THE MOOD/WITH DAKOTA STATON -LP

STEVIE RAY VAUGHN

ALLEN TOUSSAINT

AMERICAN TUNESCD

THE BRIGHT MISSISSIPPICD

VOCALISTS

  • SARAH VAUGHN
  • BILLIE HOLIDAY
  • JOAN BAEZ
  • HARRY BELAFONTE
  • TONY BENNETT
  • BROOK BENTON
  • CHUCK BERRY
  • ALEX BRADFORD
  • HADDA BROOKS
  • OSCAR BROWN JR.
  • CHARLES BROWN
  • RUTH BROWN
  • RAY CHARLES
  • SAVANNAH CHURCHILL
  • JIMMY CLIFF
  • NAT “KING” COLE
  • SAM COOKE
  • SAMMY DAVIS JR.
  • NEIL DIAMOND
  • BO DIDDLEY
  • FATS DOMINO
  • BOB DYLAN
  • BILLY ECKSTEIN
  • ELLA FITZGERALD
  • THE INK SPOTS
  • ROBERTA FLACK
  • ARETHA FRANKLIN
  • AL GREEN
  • ROY HAMILTON
  • RICHARD HARRIS
  • JOHNNY HARTMAN
  • RICHIE HAVENS
  • ISAAC HAYES
  • AL HIBBLER
  • LENA HORNE
  • IVORY JOE HUNTER
  • JANIS IAN
  • THE JACKSON FIVE
  • MAHALIA JACKSON
  • ETTA JAMES
  • AL JARREAU
  • ELTON JOHN
  • JANIS JOPLIN
  • LOUIS JORDAN
  • JOHN W. ANDERSON (KASANDRA)
  • GLADYS KNIGHT
  • LADYSMITH – BLACK MAMBAZO
  • FRANKIE LAINE
  • HUDDIE LEDBETTER
  • ABBEY LINCOLN
  • NELLIE LUTCHER
  • MIRIAM MAKEBA
  • BOB MARLEY
  • JOHNNY MATHIS
  • THE MILLS BROTHERS
  • JOHNNY MOORE
  • VAN MORRISON
  • WILLIE NELSON
  • RANDY NEWMAN
  • ODETTA
  • THE ORIOLES
  • PETER, PAUL AND MARY
  • LEONTYNE PRICE
  • ARTHUR PRYSOCK
  • THE RAVENS
  • JOHNNIE RAY
  • LIONEL RICHIE
  • PAUL ROBESON
  • LINDA RONSTADT
  • JIMMY RUSHING
  • BUFFY SAINTE-MARIE
  • GIL SCOTT-HERON
  • PETE SEEGER
  • SIMON AND GARFUNKLE
  • NINA SIMONE
  • FRANK SINATRA
  • PHOEBE SNOW
  • DAKOTA STATON
  • BARBRA STREISAND
  • STING
  • JOE TURNER
  • TINA TURNER
  • JOE COCKER
  • ARLO GUTHRIE
  • ELVIS PRESLEY
  • THE DIXIE CHICKS
  • MERL HAGGARD
  • IRIS DE MINT
  • LOUIS ARMSTRONG
  • JAMES CLEVELAND

VOCALISTS — NINA SIMONE; SARAH VAUGHN; BILLIE HOLLIDAY; ROBERTA FLACK; BARBRA STREISAND; NANCY WILSON; JOAN BAEZ; ARETHA FRANKLIN; NAT KING COLE; LEONARD COHEN; JOE COCKER; JOHNNY CASH; RICHARD HARRIS; NEIL DIAMOND; JOHNNY MATHIS; AL GREEN; MERLE HAGGARD; TONY BENNETT; PAUL ROBESON; LOUIS ARMSTRONG; B.B. KING; ALEX BRADFORD; JAMES CLEVELAND; IRIS DE MENT; THE DIXIE CHICKS; BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN;

Informational Sources

PERIODICALS — “IN THESE TIMES”; “UTNE READER”; “THE NATION”; “FREE INQUIRY”; “LOWDOWN”; “THE PROGRESSIVE POPULIST”; “THE ATLANTIC”; “MOTHER JONES”;”FUNNY TIMES”;

RADIO AND TELEVISION — KKFI – “ALTERNATIVE RADIO”; “DEMOCRACY NOW”; “LAW AND DISORDER”; “BETWEEN THE LINES”; “THE BIONEERS”; “JAWS OF JUSTICE”; KCUR – “UP TO DATE”; “CENTRAL STANDARD”; “BBC”; “ALL THINGS CONSIDERED”; “HERE AND NOW”; KCPT – “POV”; “FRONTLINE”; “INDEPENDENT LENS”;

INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISTS — PETER KORNBLUH; GLEN GREENWALD; GREG PALAST; JEREMY SCAHILL;

DOCUMENTARY FILMS —FAHRENHEIT 11/9; SICKO; WHAT THE BLEEP DO WE KNOW?; HARVEST OF SHAME; THE PANAMA DECEPTION; HIDDEN COLORS, VOLS . 1,2,3, & 4; MAAFA 21 (BLACK GENOCIDE IN 21ST CENTURY AMERICA);

BOOKS — PEOPLE’S HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES (HOWARD ZINN); INDIGENOUS PEOPLE’S HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES (ROXANNE DUNBAR-ORTIZ); WHITE TRASH (NANCY ISENBERG); HARVEST OF EMPIRE (JUAN GONZALEZ); THE FIRST EMANCIPATOR (ANDREW LEVY); WHITE CARGO (DON JORDAN AND MICHAEL WALSH); JUST MERCY (BRYAN STEVENSON); THE CROSS AND THE LYNCHING TREE (JAMES H. CONE); THE HISTORY OF WHITE PEOPLE (NELL IRVING PAINTER); OPEN VEINS OF LATIN AMERICA (EDUARDO GALEANO); DEVIL IN THE GROVE (GILBERT KING); GOD – A Human History (REZA ASLAN); BREAKING THE SPELL-Religion as a Natural Phenomenon (DANIEL C. DENNETT); PATIENCE WITH GOD-Faith for People Who Don’t Like Religion (or Atheism) (FRANK SCHAEFFER);

OTHER SOURCES–MALCOLM X; MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR,; DICK GREGORY; MORT SAHL; LENNY BRUCE; PAUL MOONEY; RICHARD PRYOR; LEWIS BLACK; PAUL ROBESON; TOM LEHRER; BILL MAHER; BILL MOYER; JOSEPH CAMPBELL; GEORGE CARLIN; KAHLIL GIBRAN; THOMAS MERTON; RAM DASS; SHELLEY BERMAN; W.E.B.DUBOIS; LERONE BENNETT; MUHAMMAD ALI; CARTER G. WOODSON; BRIGADIER GENERAL SMEDLEY D. BUTLER; ARUNDHATI ROY; MICHAEL MOORE; VANDANNA SHIVA;

AUTHORS AND POETS

WRITERS — Langston Hughes; James Baldwin; Ta-Nahesi Coates; James Cone; Philip Appleman; Howard Zinn; Chris Hedges; Mark Lane; Ralph Nader; Michelle Alexander; Bryan Stevenson; Mark Twain; Richard Williams;J.A. Rogers; Henry Louis Gates, Jr.; James Loewen; Martin Luther King, Jr.; James W. Douglass; Malcolm X; Elaine Pagels; Seymour Hersch; Chester Himes; Paul Lawrence Dunbar; Richard Wright; Richard Wolff; Alice Walker; Walter Mosley; Kahlil Gibran; Rumi; Sonia Sanchez; Nikki Giovanni;Langston Hughes

  • DOCUMENTARIES
  • Michael Moore
  • John Pilger
  • Oliver Stone

THE HUB

THE HUB

A BRIEF, INCOMPLETE STORY OF A BOOKSTORE

Hey there! Have you ever heard of me? I’m the space that was known as the HUB BOOKSTORE, and I was “born, lived and died” in Kansas City, Kansas. I was the northern portion of Cundiff’s Drug Store on the northeast corner of 5th and Quindaro Boulevard, and before I breathed life as the HUB, I had been known as Duvall’s Grocery Store and then as Porter’s Grocery Store. That was a few years ago and when those businesses closed I was left standing as a huge, empty building, address 2103 North 5th Street…just waiting to “become”, … and turned out to become the HUB BOOKSTORE.

I came to life in the late 1960’s … the time when all kinds of activities were occurring around the country. If you remember, this was a time when Black people, African Americans, Negroes, (they hadn’t decided yet what they wanted to be known as) were getting active, trying to learn exactly who they were, where they came from and where they were headed in this country. This was: the time of the Vietnam War; after the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, Medgar Evars, and Malcolm X; during the Lyndon Johnson administration; in the midst of Freedom Riders, sit-in’s, protests and anti-war demonstrations. There were still protests against school integration, and Civil Rights movements, and church bombings. The news of the day featured Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., the Black Panthers and J.Edgar Hoover and his FBI with their COINTELPRO operations, etc. At the same time, nationally, a Black Renaissance was underway and Kansas City, Kansas was not excluded. There was a group of Afro-Americans who were searching for information about themselves, their history and accomplishments and found it difficult to obtain, locally. Their only source of books relating to blacks came from the paperback selection at the local Katz Drugstore because libraries, at that time, carried very limited material relative to blacks.

A few activists, namely James McField and his wife, Dorothy, Chester Owens, Jr. and his wife, Lillie, Andre Swancy and his wife, Evelyn and a few others got together and decided to gather as much material on Black History, Literature, and Art as they could find so that they could display it to the public. Using their personal collections and funds they shared their materials by and about black people. Mr. Robert Roe from Kansas City, Missouri shared his huge collection of slave artifacts and African American memorabilia; some people shared books from their personal libraries; local artists provided their art works; records by various black musicians were played; African art pieces were shared by persons who had collected them through the years; and in addition, films were rented from B’nai Brith and other Civil Rights Organizations and shown, and for enticement home baked cookies and lemonade were served. They called it “Project Heritage” and presented these programs on Sunday afternoons at the public space at Juniper Gardens.

Project Heritage was rather well received by the community, but as the search for more books about and by Negroes continued, the fact was that neither Kansas City, Kansas nor Kansas City Missouri had much of a selection. In fact, the search revealed that in Kansas City, Kansas there was NO bookstore at all, except for a Christian one, which dealt with, as one would expect, “Christian” subjects. That lack of reading material in the Greater Kansas City area put an idea in the head of McField, who said, to himself, “Let’s open a Bookstore!”

And so, I began as most living entities begin … as a seed … this time in the mind of James R. McField. Since the McFields and the Owens were already partners in AF-AM Enterprises (owning two apartment houses) it was a small step to convince the Owens that they ought to partner in opening a “BOOKSTORE”. So off they went … McField, in 1968 (working at the VA Hospital as a Research Assistant to Dr. James Davis, in Platelet Aggregation and Hematology, but eventually quitting to open and manage the Bookstore); his wife, Dorothy, unemployed, a stay-at-home mother of three, their last child only 3 years old; and Owens, working as an Agent at H.W. Sewing Insurance Company, and his wife, Lillie, mother of three girls, associated with Crusader Life Insurance Company, at the time. (NOTE: Crusader later became American Woodman Life Insurance Company and Lillie became ‘head honcho’). And so they began. (ANOTHER NOTE: BOTH families had 3 kids and mortgages. JESS A. PHOOL was born concurrent with James R quitting his job at the VA and opening the Bookstore!)

First, an empty space was needed to house this idea that was trying to be born into life. That’s where I came in … the empty space that they were able to rent from Mrs. Cundiff, the owner of the building. McField described me as this “great big, empty, high-ceilinged space that needed a huge cleaning.” James, with partners, families and friends mopped me, scrubbed me, and cleaned my windows, while James proceeded to build bookshelves, racks and counters, section off the office space from the rest of the store with burlap and paneling and furnish me with used furniture including showcases obtained from Mr. Morgan (a used furniture dealer and friend), and with the rest of the “crew” transform me into a “store that sold books”. They also created space for sitting around a coffee or tea pot for just “chewing the fat”. This venture or adventure was shaping up to be something radically different from anything else that had been available in the area of 5th and Quindaro Blvd. in anyone’s recent memory.

Second, there needed to be some books to sell from this store. So at their home, the McFields started checking out the Public Library’s BOOKS IN PRINT, where they started identifying books by and about African Americans, contacting the Publishing Companies to learn what their minimum requirements were, and using their meager savings, proceeded to purchase as many books as their stash of cash would allow. This didn’t give them a huge inventory … but it was a start. The books were delivered to their home. A few booksellers/agents came to the house and after learning exactly what the plans for the bookstore were, expressed the notion that “unless ‘Bosoms and Thighs’ or ‘Tits and Asses’ were sold, the store would never be financially successful”. But since the intent was never about making a living out of a bookstore, I understood that these salesmen were sent on their way with a “NO THANKS, WE’LL DO IT OUR WAY”. It was just as well they hadn’t planned on “making a living selling books”, for in the process of gathering information on the bookselling business, they learned that the markup on book sales was so meager, it could hardly support one family of five, let alone two families. Thank goodness the Owens’ already had an income, but it would fall upon McFields to “run the bookstore” with “help” from the Owens. For business’ sake a “salary” for his wife of $25.00 per week was allocated. Wow! Talk about operating on FAITH!

The license to operate was obtained; the lights, heat, and water were turned on and my space was readied for an OPEN HOUSE as THE HUB BOOKSTORE, a “General Bookstore Specializing in African American History and Literature”. The monetary value of the initial inventory was not known to me, but books at that time sold for about $1.25 to $5.00 and there was a good variety of literature for adults and children, covering… history, culture, art, etc., almost exclusively by or about African Americans. Lots of research was occurring at the same time, discovering “black” Bookstores in other cities in the United States, like SOSTRE’S and others in the East, ELLIS’S in Chicago, among others, and to their knowledge, none west of Kansas City until California. Connecting with them was enlightening and productive; sharing ideas, sources, promotional and managerial ideas felt really good to the owners and even I could feel the exciting spirit growing inside my walls.

New books arranged on the freshly painted shelves, used cash register shining on the counter, tea pot and cups readied on the side; appropriate music from McField’s record collection at the ready meant that an OPEN HOUSE was in the offing. Plans were made to hold this open house on Sunday, April 7, 1968. The shocking news that REVEREND DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. HAD BEEN ASSASSINATED IN MEMPHIS ON THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1968, (exactly one year to the day that he gave his most memorable speech at the Riverside Church in opposition to the war in Vietnam and American foreign policy), required rescheduling the opening. On the night of King’s assassination, McField and family came to the bookstore and set up a display in the window: a clock, indicating the time of his death, was draped in black, along with King’s picture, and the announcement that the OPEN HOUSE would be delayed until the following Sunday … Easter! (I learned from the comments and news media that things were really hot in the town on that night and McField told the story of waking up the next morning and discovering Army trucks bivouacked on the street at the north intersection by his house! Scary stuff, I imagined!)

THE HUB BOOKSTORE: WOW! LOOK AT ME! In addition to members of the two families and their friends, my Open House brought in many guests who were local dignitaries, local persons of interest and position, and family members and residents from the surrounding neighborhood, offering both positive and dubious responses. Some people came out of excitement, enthusiasm and/or curiosity and some showed up, just wanting to know what the heck these crazy people were doing, trying to open a book store on 5th and Quindaro…and asking themselves, “Who did they expect to buy books from them?” All in all the Open House was an exciting, successful event that was well-attended.

Although my presence became more widely known in the Greater Kansas City Area, there were still many mixed receptions and responses to my presence. The parents of McField and Owens were supportive of the venture, while still a bit apprehensive about the current climate and the store’s future. Some of the family members had not quite adjusted to the times … the days of the Black Panthers and all the Civil Rights activities. They had heard of the crackdowns on the current protest movements and were concerned that the store and its emphasis on black subject matter might affect the safety of their loved ones. Their anxieties were relieved a bit when the KANSAS CITY KANSAN newspaper wrote and printed a very positive article, “Bookstore Becomes a Symbol of Hope”, with pictures, praising the BOOKSTORE; you know, like a “stamp of approval” had been placed upon the HUB…and it helped.

I turned out to be a gathering place for lots of exciting events, some more exciting than others. Generally speaking, I attracted some really powerful, notable personages to the space between my walls: black authors (Dudley Randall, Don L. Lee, Alex Haley, H.W. Sewing, Lerone Bennett); African writer Chinua Achebe, who was brought to the Bookstore by Professor Priscilla Tyler (UMKC); other University professors (Thomas Copeland (KU) and Ed Chasteen (William Jewell); professors and instructors from Junior College, Arrowhead School; black politicians (Ron Dellums, George Haley); ministers (Porteous, Beverly, Murray, Banks, Father Stitz); neighborhood families (Breedloves, McGee’s, Burlesons, Quinns, Betts, Fergusons, Cates, Riggins, Kelseys, McCords, Francis, and many others); and many other notables. And all the while the hangers-on at the Gas Station across the street took up chairs to watch the daily comings and goings.

Some of the most requested books were those by J.A. Rogers, one of the most well-known historians in the country, including, but not limited to “Africa’s Gift to America”, “Sex and Race” (3 vol.), “Nature Knows No Color Line”, “5 Negro Presidents”, and “From Superman to Man”. Orders were received from School Districts and individuals in varied places throughout the country, including California, Arizona, New Mexico, Florida, and others.

Visitors and customers often came with suggestions of additions that might be made to the space. Because the suggestions were often heeded, many items, other than books, were added and began to attract other customers with different desires. Lil Bucknam suggested gourmet foods and hooked the owners up with Liberty Imports, who as a vendor provided escargot, steak and kidney pies, pickled okra, baby corn, English shortbreads, Kona and Jamaican coffee and gourmet teas; Nation of Islam patrons suggested daishikis, candles, jewelry and African carvings; individual artists, like Sydney Cothran, Lonnie Powell, Phillip Richardson, Andre Swancy, and Arthur Locke, brought their artwork, jewelry and other creations for display and sale; concert lovers suggested selling tickets to local concert and dance events, which was done as an outlet for Foster’s Record Shop; patrons seeking greeting cards with brown faces, may have provided the impetus for Hallmark and other greeting card companies to produce ethnic cards; music lovers suggested varieties of artists’ records for sale; children wanted candy and gum; many patrons needed keys cut and re-cut, and this service was available because James had taken a Locksmithing Course; customers looked for newspapers and so papers like the Kansas City Call, and others not usually available locally like, Los Angeles Sentinel, Pittsburgh Courier, Muhammad Speaks, the Black Panther Paper, were carried.

Some enthusiastic supporters of the HUB contributed significant items they felt would add to the HUB’s appeal. Latell Jennings, who owned a miniature ranch near Quindaro Park, donated an antique wooden wagon wheel, with a pronounced hub, symbolic of the HUB bookstore; Father Stitz, from Atchison, set up a reading room and purchased large numbers of books to make available to persons who visited his space; following a trip he made to Africa, he donated a collection of genuine African artifacts for the HUB to display; a farmer from Leavenworth made a connection and brought fresh farm products which he sold at the HUB; the Sisterhood set up bake sale items on a weekly basis for a short period of time.

From time to time, small groups gathered to talk and sip tea; a group of students from Strickland’s Peppermint Nursery visited the HUB; often children who were suspended from school came in, settled in corners and read books, asked questions, studied maps, did homework, and spent their time inside, instead of out on the street; owners developed a traveling exhibit and on numerous occasions, when requested took it to events throughout the area … and so it went!

I understand that so much about Bookstore business was learned through experience as this venture progressed through the years, such as how much of a drain the unexpected expense of repair and maintenance would have on limited finances. Who knew, for example, that the huge plate glass windows cost a fortune to replace if a rock pierced a portion of it? That information explained why a number of stores in “inner city” areas had front windows that were segmented into multiple panes and why others had boards with only small amounts of window showing. It led the owners to explore the possibility of acquiring a loan. I understand that these idealists spoke with one lender who was only interested in making a loan much larger than the small loan that they desired. This lender would have required that they move their location to a more “desirable” area with a larger amount of foot traffic, and a greater possibility of financial success, (in other words, a greater likelihood of repaying the loan). That was a “no-no” … this location was special, it was a HUB! They already knew enough not to get entangled in that red tape. However they did acquire a small loan from the Small Business Administration for operational expenses. They learned about the costs of doing business: the fees for business license and insurance; the sales taxes for local, county, state, federal, income, withholding, unemployment, and all the others that seemed to appear out of the blue. In addition they quickly learned about people’s attitudes concerning small businesses, that is the seemingly never-ending requests for ADS and donations. (“You’re a BUSINESS, aren’t you?”). To make sure that they didn’t screw up, they created their CAN SYSTEM. (On one occasion the owners were visited by a Business Economics Class from KU who were curious to know how a bookstore in the inner city could survive. They wanted to know what business model was being used …and were told about the CAN SYSTEM! The class had never heard of such a system, so the owners explained, with tongue in cheek: “There was a CAN FOR SALES TAX, ONE FOR FEDERAL TAX, ONE FOR COUNTY TAX, ONE FOR STATE TAX, etc. ad infinitum, and the way it worked was that after each sale the amount due to these places was placed in a CAN, so when it was time to pay up, the funds were there.” The Class shook their heads in bewilderment, thanked the owners and left, while the owners smiled and said “Good day!”)

They also learned that some items were returnable, so neighborhood children and family were recruited to strip newspaper headings and magazine fronts to return to publishers for credit. To cut down on expenses, like replacing busted plate glass windows, there was only one paid (if you can call it “pay”) employee, and all the rest of the help were unpaid volunteers…mostly the McField and Owens children. Cindy Owens accompanied her father and McField on Saturdays to Kansas City News Distributors, our source for periodicals, records and paperback books, to pick up supplies. The unpaid volunteers also dusted book shelves, called customers who had ordered books, checked books in and out and sold items from the store. And there was a brief time when a few children in the neighborhood were actually paid a small wage for their services in the store. It did have to be explained to the questioning “family member volunteers” that the reason they didn’t get a “wage” was because they got to eat supper at home on a regular basis … and this did seem to calm the potential storm.

To say that the HUB BOOKSTORE was controversial was to be understated. Almost as soon as the HUB opened, the owners hung the red, black and green flag of Black Nationalism beneath the American flag outside every day. It was called “Communist” or the “Viet Cong flag” by numbers of people who had no clue, ignorant skeptics who didn’t bother to check with the BOOKSTORE to learn something. And to really confuse the “gang” that hung out across the street, one day a couple of Afghanistani motorcyclists stopped in to say “howdy” because they saw the red, black and green flag outside and informed the owners that the flag of Afghanistan was also red, black and green. Remember that this is the 1960’s with all the agitation going on around the country and the HUB in the middle of it with their choices of reading materials and visitors. And speaking of visitors, there were some questionable ones, three I can especially recall: first, a very vocal young militant who ranted about the need for the owners to carry books and manuals about arming individuals so they could ‘prepare for the revolution”; second, a tall, dark, caped, suspicious stranger wanting to know the names of the “most militant organizations” in the city and the names of their leaders; and third, a strange, female with a ‘prison’ odor, who swept in, surveilled the place in swift motions and left the impression that she was a provocateur of sorts, who could only mean trouble. And then there was the FBI, including agent (Hank Boyd) who came from time to time. to share a cup of tea or coffee and listen to outsiders’ assessment of current politics. They told me about the phone taps, the strange cars reported outside the McField and Owens residences, the phone calls made and reached before either party actually touched the phones … strange, so strange, but considering the atmosphere around the country, not unanticipated. The HUB was shunned by most local preachers and active politicians, patronized by some individuals whose intent was uncertain and by others who didn’t want to be ‘left out of the loop’, in case there was a ‘loop’; the store was ‘protected’ from would-be devilment by local young folks of uncertain reputation; watched by the establishment through local police presence…just in case the owners were ‘up to something’; and watched from a distance by ‘upstanding citizens’, waiting for the arrests, so they could say, with conviction, “I told you so.” And lukewarm support was given by the black bourgeoisie.

And if there was not enough excitement going on in the area, in 1971, McField, who’d been showing up at local meetings carrying charts showing the lack of diversity of School Board and city government representatives and calling for District Representation in both, decided to run for Mayor. Contradictory reports suggest McField coerced Owens into being his campaign manager … (and this, too, is a story all its own). Suspicions of drugs being placed in the store prompted contacts with the FBI to make them aware…(the owners had read about one Black Bookstore owner out east, Sostre, who had been illegally charged with drug possession, given lots of problems and jailed).

It’s now the 70’s and locally some individuals decided to give the HUB some competition. A couple of other Bookstores opened up…guess they thought the HUB was making money hand-over-fist…but they must have really been surprised because they closed up before they got going good. Nationally, the mood was swinging in another direction…in addition to big box bookstores opening up with the ability to purchase in volumes and having return privileges, they were attracting the same customers and competing with the HUB; Black Capitalism was being pushed by President Nixon; more emphasis was being put on economics than before and other cultures were beginning to raise their voices. The HUB had started carrying materials from other cultures, as after all these were also minorities who had been underrepresented. Anyway, signs started arriving that it might be time for a shift, a change in circumstance.

And then there was a break-in! The first! The few things that were missing were easily peddled items…tickets to concerts, jewelry, records…but not surprisingly…no books! The owners had survived: the shoplifting; some youngsters’ threats to disrupt business; agent provocateurs; being ignored by those ‘higher echelon, saditty’ black folks who couldn’t bother to frequent such an area as 5th and Quindaro without sufficient protection and certainly not after dark. The HUB survived much with the help of neighbors like LT and some of the guys that hung around and protected the store. But with the break-in, the time seemed to be at hand to call a halt to this grand adventure.

So somewhere close to a holiday in 1975, over a weekend, (I was never open on Mondays, anyway), books were boxed up, shelves dismantled, furniture was removed and with the help of some of the ‘faithful’ I breathed my last breath and died. Just as James had sat and screwed shelves together, he sat and unscrewed them and in one short weekend, it all disappeared; overnight it seems, the HUB was transformed once again into the huge, empty high-ceilinged hollow space it once was. Everything was cleared out, nothing left undone. Its debts had all been repaid, including and especially the SBA Loan (which had not been the case of other SBA loans taken out by other small businesses at the same time as the HUB); no publishers or vendors were owed any money and all the taxes and other debts were paid.

The HUB was born, lived and died in a few short years; however my memory lives on in the minds of its creators and many of the patrons who partook of its services. I did make an impression … one example of the impression that I made on some people was a story that one of the owners told to me: It seems that at a local seminar in the late 1990’s, a young lady expressed loudly of her pride that Kansas City, Kansas had a Bookstore … on the corner of 5th and Quindaro … called “THE HUB”… to which the owner inquired, “How long has it been since you were at the HUB?…It closed 20 years ago.”

Ah, such was the impact I made…LONG LIVE THE HUB!