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Some Alabama: How Two Black Boys Upstaged Bigotry In Alabama

CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
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9781536930863
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9781536930863
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When the Civil War ended, Samuel Jenks freed seven hundred slaves and gave them their dwellings. He kept his plantation mansion, but divided the profits from his cotton fields, gins and cotton mill equally with his people. He allowed African ways and African law. The law was enforced by a Tribal Chief, African law with a mix of American justice. The people further adopted the language of English and spoke a slang version that was hard to understand. By 1938, the plantation had grown into a town. The Chief who enforced the law with one hundred warriors, Chief, Jack Sexing, called "Bull Rush" owned the only business in the town the citizens of Some did not reap a profit from. He owned a honky tonk and every woman in it. Any attempt to take one of his brown sugars ended in death. He was the judge, jury and handman. Doctor Jenks, a descendant of Samuel, was the only White man in Some, a doctor, and he cleaned up the Chiefs mess. Jack took the idea of anyone challenging his authority to task. He used the myth of voodoo and conjured up a Witch Doctor named Grizz Moun and used him to control the population. That worked well until the Duke boys come back from the war as heroes. Much attention was given the town to celebrate the brave boys until Alabama lawmakers found out the boys were black. When politicians come to Some and found no equal but separate facilities the law showed up, White law. They took over the town and run Bull Rush into the mountains. White control reigned until all the White lawmen woke one morning with Black skin one morning. That is when the fortunes of Some and in a state of confusion started a gunfight with each other killing several White lawmen. The doctor had a hand in the mystery but could not be found, and an educated Black man from Opp come to town and took control. He used the law of Alabama against itself and gain a government within a government. He helped found an Indian Reservation. That is when the Dukes boys come back home. The man from Opp got the Reservation started by was not elected to run the town. One Duke rose to a powerful CIA position while the other became chief of an Indian Reservation and out of the control of bigoted Alabamian politicians.
  • | Author: Steelyard Scales|Randall Rankin
  • | Publisher: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
  • | Publication Date: Aug 05, 2016
  • | Number of Pages: 182 pages
  • | Language: English
  • | Binding: Paperback
  • | ISBN-10: 1536930865
  • | ISBN-13: 9781536930863
Author:
Steelyard Scales|Randall Rankin
Publisher:
CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
Publication Date:
Aug 05, 2016
Number of pages:
182 pages
Language:
English
Binding:
Paperback
ISBN-10:
1536930865
ISBN-13:
9781536930863