Miss Crandall’s School for Young Ladies and Little Misses of Color by Elizabeth Alexander and Marilyn Nelson, illustrated by Floyd Cooper.
Told in poems, this book chronicles the story of Miss Crandall and her students, many the daughters of freed Canterbury, Connecticut was the target of racist attacks. Only open for less than two years during the 1830s, the girls and their teacher faced poisoned water, arson and general hatred from the white affluent community. Miss Crandall went on to teach both white and black children in another community in New England. But the wonder of her work as a teacher and the vehemence of the hatred they faced as a school is not to be forgotten. Captured in poems, the book is a series of glimpses into the lives of the students and the conditions they faced.
The poetry here is rich and beautifully restrained in its sonnet format. Held in by the structure of the poetry, the emotions are raw and the situations daunting. But equally held up by the structure is the faith, strength and unity of these young girls.
These poems sing and tell, reveal truths and speak volumes in a few words. They capture the essence of learning, the pain of leaving home, and the horrors of hate. They echo in our modern lives, allow us to realize that though much has changed, so much stays the same.
I must also mention the illustrations by Cooper. They are soft and ethereal at exactly the right times and at others offer faces and captured moments that support the poems themselves. The ebb and flow is done with such skill it seems effortless.
Highly recommended for classes learning about the history of this time. The poems will be enjoyed by older elementary students, teens and adults who have some understanding of the struggle being described so vividly.