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Susan Ford Wiltshire
My great-grandmother Helen Hambrick was born in 1858 in Rocky Mount, Virginia. Before she died on my fifth birthday in 1946, she told me how as a little girl she had to hide under quilts from the Yankees when they ransacked her house.
Helenâs father, Giles Hambrick, and his brother, Joseph, were recruited at the beginning of the Civil War by Col. Jubal Early to wage war on the federal government.
On Jan. 6, 2021, 160 years later, two other men of Rocky Mount, fellow police officers Jacob Fracker and Thomas Robertson, took part in a second insurrection against the government of the United States. Unlike their predecessors, they made it inside the Capitol and photographed themselves with obscene gestures in front of a marble statue. They were recruited by Donald Trump,
Commentary: In Dr. Seuss, the complexity of racism
Robert Seltzer, For the Express-News
March 13, 2021
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Theodor Seuss Geisel, known as Dr. Seuss, speaks in Dallas in 1987. Dr. Seuss is being seen in a new light over racist imagery in some of his publications. How can such a man be guilty of the very ugliness he condemns? It may be difficult to reconcile this contradiction, but the dynamic reflects the complex nature of racism./Associated PressShow MoreShow Less
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A copy of the book And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, by Dr. Seuss. The book and others will no longer be published due to racist imagery.Steven Senne /Associated PressShow MoreShow Less