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Tomlinson Hill

Page 43

by Chris Tomlinson


  17. Author’s interview with LaDainian Tomlinson.

  18. Tomlinson, LT & Me, 131.

  19. Ibid., 134.

  20. Ibid., 132.

  21. Author’s interview with LaVar Tomlinson, November 7, 2012.

  22. Ibid.

  23. Ibid.

  24. Ibid.

  25. Barr, Black Texans, 237–38, 240, 245.

  26. Michael Phillips, White Metropolis: Race, Ethnicity and Religion in Dallas, 1841–2001 (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2006), 168.

  27. Barr, Black Texans, 234–35, 237, 239.

  28. Tomlinson, LT & Me, 139.

  29. Ibid., 142.

  30. Texas Department of Public Safety, “Tomlinson, LaVar Tramayne,” SID: 06761774, criminal history search, Austin, TX, 2012.

  31. Author’s interview with LaVar Tomlinson.

  32. Tomlinson, LT & Me, 145.

  33. Author’s interview with LaDainian Tomlinson.

  34. Ibid.

  35. Tomlinson, LT & Me, 145.

  36. Author’s interview with Zelma Tomlinson, January 22, 2013.

  37. Tomlinson, LT & Me, 148.

  38. Author’s interview with LaDainian Tomlinson.

  39. National Football League’s 2001 draft, April 2001, at http://www.nfl.com/draft/history/fulldraft?season=2001 (accessed September 29, 2012).

  40. Ibid.

  41. Tomlinson, LT & Me, 163.

  42. “N.F.L.: Roundup,” New York Times, August 23, 2001.

  43. Washington versus San Diego box score, September 9, 2001, at http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2001090912/2001/REG1/redskins@chargers#tab=analyze (accessed September 29, 2012).

  44. Tomlinson, LT & Me, 176.

  45. Author’s interview with Londria Tomlinson, June 24, 2012.

  46. Author’s interview with Oliver Terry Tomlinson, Jr., September 25, 2012.

  47. Tomlinson, LT & Me, 196.

  48. Author’s interview with Oliver Terry Tomlinson, Jr.

  49. LaDainian Tomlinson profile, 2012, at http://www.nfl.com/player/ladainiantomlinson/2504778/profile (accessed September 29, 2012).

  50. Beth Harris, “Tomlinson Named Male Athlete of the Year,” Associated Press, July 27, 2007.

  51. Lee Jenkins, “Links to Slavery and N.F.L. Star on a Hill in Texas,” New York Times, January 7, 2007.

  52. Author’s interview with LaDainian Tomlinson.

  53. Author’s interview with Londria Tomlinson.

  54. Author’s interview with LaDainian Tomlinson.

  55. Tomlinson, LT & Me, 192.

  56. Author’s interview with LaDainian Tomlinson.

  57. Tomlinson, LT & Me, 194.

  58. Ibid., 195.

  59. Ibid.

  EPILOGUE

  1. Natalie Angier, “Do Races Differ? Not Really, DNA Shows,” New York Times, August 22, 2000.

  2. Frank Snowden, “Images and Attitudes,” in Racism, ed. Martin Bulmer and John Solomos (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999), 27–28.

  3. Reginald Horsman, “Superior and Inferior Races,” in Racism, ed. Martin Bulmer and John Solomos (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999), 45.

  4. George Mosse, “Eighteenth-Century Foundations,” in Racism, ed. Bulmer and Solomos, 40–41.

  5. Ibid., 42.

  6. Ibid., 47.

  7. Ibid.

  8. Derald Wing Sue, “Microaggressions, Marginality, and Oppression: An Introduction,” in Microaggressions and Marginality: Manifestation, Dynamics, and Impact, ed. Derald Wing Sue (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2010), 3.

  9. Ibid., 3–4.

  10. Ibid., 5–6.

  11. Susan T. Fiske, “Are We Born Racist?” in Are We Born Racist? New Insights from Neuroscience and Positive Pyschology, ed. Jason Marsh, Rodolfo Mendoza-Denton, and Jeremy Adam Smith (Boston: Beacon Press, 2010), 10.

  12. Ibid., 11.

  13. Ibid.

  14. Ibid., 12.

  15. David Amodio, “The Egalitarian Brain,” in Are We Born Racist?, ed. Marsh, Mendoza-Denton, and Smith, 48.

  16. Ibid.

  17. Ibid., 51.

  18. Jennifer Holladay, “Promoting Tolerance and Equity in Public Schools,” in Are We Born Racist? ed. Marsh, Mendoza-Denton, and Smith, 64, 67.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Special thanks goes to John Silbersack at Trident Media Group and Marcia Markland at Thomas Dunne Books for believing in this project, supporting it, and providing peerless advice.

  I would like to thank Loreane Tomlinson for accepting me into her heart and family and opening the door for me to meet the African-American Tomlinsons, including her children LaDainian, Londria, and LaVar. They graciously accepted me and generously shared their stories. I owe special thanks to Sandra Tyron for introducing me to her mother, Lizzie Mae Scott, and her uncle Charles and his wife Zelma. They taught me more about the Hill than anyone else. Sandra also introduced me to Sherry and Gladys Scott, who graciously shared the story of their lives. I could not have written this book without their cooperation.

  My expert advisers, Dr. Alwyn Barr and Dr. Fred McGhee, fact-checked my work and helped me keep it in context. Tami Jackson spent hours searching through archival material in Austin and Waco, gathering many of the newspaper excerpts and original documents included in this book. Former Marlin residents Sharon Styles, Steve Swinnea, and Bettie Beard shared their love of Marlin history and provided invaluable assistance.

  The residents of Marlin spent hours telling me their stories and providing me with incredible insight. District Judge Robert Stem, Mayor Elizabeth Nelson, Mayor Norm Erskine, Bishop Lonnie Garrett, Dr. James Bryan, Frank Wyman, Pinkie Taylor Price, David Tinsley, Pam Kelly, and Anna Steele all provided important accounts for this book.

  A special thanks goes to one of my oldest friends, Lisa Kaselak, who participated in many of the interviews as part of the production of the book’s companion documentary film, Tomlinson Hill. Her insights and hard work provided major contributions.

  Most of all, though, I thank my wife, Shalini Ramanathan, whose unflagging support for the project and belief in me as a writer buoyed me through the toughest periods of my life, and she shared in my joy during the most triumphant. More!

  INDEX

  The index that appears in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your e-book. Please use the search function on your e-reading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

  abolitionist movement

  Adair, Garland

  Adolphus Hotel, Dallas

  Afghanistan

  African Americans. See also farming; racism; slaves

  abuse of

  Black Codes and

  education of

  entertainment/arts and

  labor/market shifts and

  land ownership by

  living conditions, post-emancipation, of

  lynching of

  miscegenation and

  organizations formed by

  political participation by

  in prison

  sharecropping by

  wage contract farm work by

  African Methodist Episcopal normal school, Denison

  African National Congress (ANC)

  Alabama

  civil rights marches in

  Albright, J. H.

  Alger, Bruce

  Allen, George

  Allen, Walter

  al-Qaeda

  American Colonization Society

  American Fact-Finding Committee

  American Legion

  the Amigos organization

  Amodio, David

  Anderson, L. C.

  Anthology of American Folk Music

  Anti-Defamation League

  Anti-Lynching bill of 1937

  anti-Semitism

  A. P. Tomlinson Development

  Army Corps of Engineers, Texas

  Arnold, Ed

  Arnold, Phil

  Arrington, George Washin
gton

  Aryan Nations

  Asahi

  Asberry, Alexander

  Associated Press

  Atlanta Compromise

  The Autobiography of Malcolm X

  Bad Aibling, Germany

  Bagosora, Théoneste

  Ballinger, William P.

  Bandito, Johannesburg

  Banks, Nathaniel

  Bartlett and Watkins, Marlin

  Bartlett, Churchill Jones

  Bartlett, Sarah Jones Green

  Bartlett, Tom, Sr.

  Bartlett, Zenas

  Barton, Harry

  Bates, L. J.

  Bayou City (Confederate boat)

  Beall, Charles

  Beall, Squire

  Beaty, John Owen

  Belida, Alex

  Bell, J. H.

  Belton Reporter

  Berry, Robert

  Beulah Church/School for blacks, Falls County

  Beulah Church/School for whites, Falls County

  Big Brothers organization

  Bill Gates Millennium Scholarships

  Billingsley, J. C.

  bin Laden, Osama

  The Birth of a Nation (film)

  Blackburn, W. R.

  Black Codes

  Black History Month

  Blaylock, Louis

  Bluitt, Benjamin

  Bolton, Samantha

  Bomar, Buddy

  Bonner, Junior

  Booker T. Washington High School, Marlin

  Boston Tea Party

  Bowdon, Bill

  Bowling News (Dallas)

  Bowling Supplies, Inc., Dallas

  Boyd, Robert J.

  Boyd, Ruth

  Boys and Girls Club organization

  Brady, Wes

  Bragg, Wesley

  Brazos River, Texas

  flooding along

  Breckinridge, John C.

  Briggs, B. J.

  Briscoe, Dolph

  Broadus, Henry

  Broadus, Ned

  Broadus, Tom

  Brooks, George

  Brown, Henry Billings

  Browning, John

  Brown, John

  Brown v. Board of Education

  Buchanan, Bob

  Buddhism

  buffalo soldiers

  Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands. See Freedmen’s Bureau

  Burrell, Wesley

  Burton, Nelson, Jr.

  Burundi

  Byrd, Dave

  Cain, Darrell L.

  Calhoun, John C.

  Califano, Joseph, Jr.

  Calloway, Cab

  Calvert, Robert

  Cameron, Lucille

  Canby, E. R. S.

  carpetbaggers

  Carter, Amon

  Carter, George

  Carter, Jimmy

  Carter, Robert

  cattle industry

  Cedar Valley, Texas

  Centurion Homes, Waco

  Chapin, Dennis C.

  Chapin, Margaret

  Chapman, Lloyd

  Chappell, Herman

  Cheek, James B.

  Chicago White Sox

  China Grove, Texas

  Cincinnati Reds

  Civil Rights Act of 1964

  civil rights movement. See also African Americans; racism; segregation

  school curriculum and

  Texas Exposition and

  Civil War, U.S.

  Battle at Yellow Bayou in

  Battle of Bull Run in

  Battle of Galveston in

  Battle of Gettysburg in

  Battle of Pleasant Hill in

  economic blockades in

  emancipation of slaves post-

  end of

  origins of

  Red River Campaign in

  remembrance of

  The Clansmen (Dixon)

  Clare, Joan

  Clark, Amos

  Clark, Edward

  Clarke, Edward

  Clements, Bill

  Cline, Walter D.

  Clinton, Bill

  Coates, Lillie

  Coke, Richard

  Colored Farmers Association

  Colored State Grange, Texas

  Colored Teachers State Association

  Comiskey, Charlie

  Comité des Citovens (Citizens Committee)

  Company A, Third Battalion, Seventh Infantry Regiment

  Compromise of 1850 (U.S.)

  Confederate States of America (Confederacy). See also Civil War, U.S.

  conscription enacted by

  economic blockades against

  slaves’ assistance to

  Texas’s membership in

  Congo

  Congress for Racial Equality

  Connally, John

  Connally, Tom

  Convention of Colored Men

  Cooper, Annie Burton

  Cotton, Dave

  cotton industry. See also farming

  decline in

  Cotton States and International Exhibition, Atlanta

  Craft, Juanita

  Crane, Martin McNulty

  Crow, Louis

  Cumbria (Union boat)

  Cuney, N. W.

  Cunningham, William

  Cureton, Calvin

  Curry, Irby

  Curry, Jesse

  Daffan, George

  Dallas Bowling Association

  Dallas County Citizens League

  the Dallas Cowboys

  Dallas Express

  Dallas Herald

  Dallas Morning News

  on KKK

  Dallas Negro Chamber of Commerce

  Dallas, Texas

  Chamber of Commerce

  Kennedy assassination in

  KKK in

  racism in

  segregation in

  shopping mall’s birth in

  World’s Fair in

  Dallas Times Herald

  “Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground”

  Davidson, Lynch

  Davis, Edmund J.

  Davis, Jefferson

  Davis, L. J.

  Davis, Miles

  Dealey, George

  Dean, Aylett

  Dean, John

  Deer Creek Oil and Gas Company, Falls County

  Delano, Asa P.

  Democratic Party, Texas

  as conservative party

  constitution of 1876 by

  KKK and

  liberal shift by

  “New Departure” campaign by

  Democratic Statesman (Austin)

  Denson, Nelson

  Dixon, Thomas, Jr.

  Donahue, Jacky

  Donaldsonville, Fort, Louisiana

  Dred Scott decision

  DuBois, W. E. B.

  Dunagan, Otis T.

  Eddins, Roy

  Eisenhower, Dwight D.

  Emancipation Proclamation, U.S.

  Emerson, D. R.

  Emmett, Dan

  ESPN

  Etheridge, William G.

  death of

  Evans, Hiram Wesley

  Falls Bridge, Falls County

  Falls County, Texas. See also Marlin, Texas

  centennial celebration by

  Courthouse

  economic troubles in

  floods in

  lynching/vigilante justice in

  wars and

  Falls Hotel, Marlin

  Farmers Improvement Society of Texas

  farming. See also cattle industry

  as contracted laborer

  cooperatives

  labor/demographic shifts in

  as land owner

  living conditions, post-emancipation

  as sharecropper

  technology’s impact on

  Fat Frank’s, Johannesburg

  Faust

  Federal Writers’ Project

  Feldman, Mike

  Fendrick, Columbus

  Fendrick, Hattie

  Fer
guson, Jim

  Ferguson, Miriam “Ma”

  Fifteenth Amendment, U.S. Constitution

  Fifth Texas Cavalry Regiment (Confederacy)

  First Baptist Church, Dallas

  First Baptist Church, Marlin

  First Texas Heavy Artillery (Confederacy)

  Fisher, James/Joseph

  Fisher, Mrs. James

  504th Military Intelligence Brigade

  Flake’s Daily Galveston Bulletin

  Flippen, Edgar

  Flippen-Prather firm

  Floyd, Troy

  Fooshee, Marion Fresenius

  Ford, Dan

  Ford Metal Moulding Company

  Fort Jackson (Union steamer)

  Fort Worth Star Telegram

  Forward Dallas Association

  Fourteenth Amendment, U.S. Constitution

  Fox, Phillip

  Franchione, Dennis

  Franks, Tommy

  Frazier, Addie Barlow “Dixie Leber”

  Freedmen’s Bureau

  “freedom colonies”

  Fretz, Emil, Jr.

  Fretz, Emil, Sr.

  Fretz, Jacob

  Fretz, Minnie

  Gall, Franz Joseph

  Galveston Daily News

  Galveston News

  Galveston, Texas, battle for

  Galveston Weekly News

  Gannon, Kathy

  Garcia, Pete

  Garrett, Finis J.

  Garrett, Lonnie

  Gassaway, George

  Gassaway, Henrietta

  Goldwater, Barry

  Gordon, John B.

  Granger, Gordon

  Grant, Ulysses S.

  Gravel Hill, Texas

  Graves, Curtis

  Great Depression

  Greeks

  Green and Bartlett, Marlin

  Green, George

  Greening, Daren

  Green, Sue

  Green, Tom

  Gregory, Edgar

  Griffin, Charles

  Griffith, D. W.

  Grimes, Jesse

  Guardian Life Insurance Company

  Hamby, Charles

  Hamilton, A. J.

  Harlan, John Marshall

  Harriet Lane (gunboat)

  Harris, Benjamin

  Harrison, Ben (sharecropper)

  Harrison, Benjamin (president)

  Harrison, J. E.

  Harris, Willie B.

  Harston, Don

  Harvey, Wash

  Haughn, Charles

  Hay, L. O.

  Hayward, Willie S.

  Hébert, Paul Octave

  Hedrick, Justice

  Hereford, John

  Hill, Henry

  Hilton, Conrad

  Hispanic Americans

  History of Falls County (Old Settlers and Veterans)

  Hobby, William P.

  Hodges, A. M.

  Hodges, Annie

  Hodges, W. E.

  Hogg, James

  Holman, Eliza

  Honduras (Union boat)

  Hopkins, Sam

  Horenstein, Birgit

  Horenstein, Dick

  Horenstein, Lisa

  “A House Divided” speech (Lincoln)

  House & Garden

  Houston Informer

 

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