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David Frost - Witness to injustice

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Witness to Injustice by David Frost, Jr. edited by Louise Westling with an introduction by Charles Reagan Wilson There were two events in particular that had a lasting effect on the life of David Frost, Jr. Watching my parents make moonshine in our back yard in a washpot, he says, and listening to my parents tell the story of how the Peterson boy was lynched here in Eufaula. My parents would tell it like it had just happened. In this compelling account of his life as an African American in Eufaula, Alabama, Frost illuminates the strange world of the rural South. He was a living witness to both the dramatic racial violence and the heroic struggles of the civil rights movement. This world included lynchings as well as the quieter activities of everyday life. His story, told honestly and earnestly, pictures an alternately violent and placid community where whites not only brutalized blacks but also came to their aid. Frost tells of the intricate web of collusion, cooperation, treachery, competition, and sometimes gleeful gamesmanship that wove together the lives of black and white people in this typical southern community. His story recounts his unique perspective on this complex social culture in which strange twists governed daily life, in which a black moonshiner evading the law might take the white sheriff hunting on his property, a culture in which a white doctor, the leader of a lynch mob, spent the rest of his life trying to atone by serving the medical needs of the black community. Although there are multitudinous analyses, narratives, and reports detailing the baffling enigmas of southern history, in this exceptional memoir a fresh, previously unheard voice reveals cultural complexities that most historians have neglected. David Frost, Jr. (deceased) lived in Eufaula, Alabama. Louise Westling is Professor Emerita of English at the University of Oregon. Charles Reagan Wilson is a professor of history and southern studies at the University of Mississippi.

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title Witness to Injustice author Frost David Westling Louise - photo 1

title:Witness to Injustice
author:Frost, David.; Westling, Louise Hutchings.
publisher:University Press of Mississippi
isbn10 | asin:0878058435
print isbn13:9780878058433
ebook isbn13:9780585190556
language:English
subjectFrost, David,--1917- , African Americans--Alabama--Eufaula--Biography, Eufaula (Ala.)--Race relations, Eufaula (Ala.)--Biography, Alabama--Rural conditions.
publication date:1995
lcc:F334.E84F76 1995eb
ddc:976.1/32
subject:Frost, David,--1917- , African Americans--Alabama--Eufaula--Biography, Eufaula (Ala.)--Race relations, Eufaula (Ala.)--Biography, Alabama--Rural conditions.
Page iii
Witness to Injustice
by
David Frost, Jr.
Edited by
Louise Westling
With an introduction by
Charles Reagan Wilson
University Press of Mississippi
Jackson
Page iv
Copyright 1995 by the University Press of Mississippi
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
98 97 96 95 4 3 2 1
The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Frost, David, 1917
Witness to injustice / by David Frost, Jr.; edited by Louise Westling ; with
an introduction by Charles Reagan Wilson.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-87805-820-6 (cloth: alk. paper).ISBN 0-87805-843-5 (pbk.: alk.
paper)
1. Frost, David, 1917- . 2. Afro-AmericansAlabamaEufaula
Biography. 3. Eufaula (Ala.)Race relations. 4. Eufaula (Ala.)Biography.
5. AlabamaRural conditions. I. Westling, Louise Hutchings. II. Title.
F334.E84F76 1995
976.1'32dc20 95-9450
CIP
British Library Cataloging-in-Publication data available
Page v
This book is dedicated to the memory of my loved ones who have
passed on:
My wife, Lillian Catherine Webb Frost
My son, David Frost III
My mother, Mary Bishop Frost
My father, David Frost, Sr.
My sister, Atlean Frost Jones
My brothers, Z. A. Bud Frost
J. D. Frost
Fred Carlos Frost
Rufus Lee Frost
George West Frost
Baby Frost
Page vii
Contents
Editor's Preface
ix
Introduction
xvii
Preface
xxv
One
Earliest Memories:
Lynchings, Moonshine, and Lumber
3
Two
Outlaws, Vigilantes, and Resistance
12
Three
Life on Our Farm, Schooling, and Hard Times
21
Four
Leaving Home and Growing Up
47

Page viii
Five
Birth and Death in the Family
65
Six
Prison and the Breakup of My Family
83
Seven
Reconciliation
96
Index
103

Page ix
Editor's Preface
David Frost, Jr., has spent twenty-five years gathering materials from local newspapers, national African-American publications, library books, TV programs, and genealogical archives to supplement his own knowledge and his tireless oral research among family and neighbors in the Alabama community of Eufaula, where he has spent his life. He says people "call me a packrat; I save up everything." In fact he is a self-taught historian who has amassed a large collection of newspaper clippings, photographs, and family records and has written several different versions of his autobiography. As he explains in his own preface, he sees his life as representative of the saga of his people in the South as they struggled to earn a living and gain the full benefits of citizenship promised by Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 and the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution. In writing his autobiography he is telling an important part of local history that white historians have left out. As he told me in one of our first conversations, "A whole lot of things happened in that day; these white folks, they don't talk about them. They know about them, but they won't talk about them."
What makes David Frost's story different from other first-hand accounts of African-American life in the rural Southmost notably fellow Alabamian Ned Cobb's All God's Dangersis Frost's illegal livelihood of moonshining and the way it illuminates the intricate web of collusion, cooperation, treachery, competition, and sometimes gleeful gamesmanship weaving together the activities of black men and white men. The economic and political dimensions of these relations turn out very often to be personal as well. The same white man who might terrorize blacks on one occasion might stop to help a black man pull his mule and wagon up a hill on another. The black moonshiner
Page x
evading the law might take the white sheriff hunting on his property. The white doctor who leads a lynch mob one night might spend the rest of his life trying to atone by serving the medical needs of the black community. In David Frost's world, local law officers commissioned black men to make moonshine for them and kept the revenuers away, but sometimes turned on their business "partners" and allowed them to be caught at their stills. Civil rights activities created yet more twists in these patterns. Throughout the wryly understated recital of his adventures in this world, Frost maintains an unswerving personal integrity and commitment to justice. He is as determined to get civil justice for his community as he is to get his own story published. That doesn't stop him, however, from loving to make moonshine and outsmart "the laws."
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