We were one family among the many thousands. Mama and Daddy leaving home, coming to the city, with their hopes and their courage, their dreams and their children, to make a better life.
When Eloise Greenfield was four months old, her family moved from their home in Parmele, North Carolina, to Washington, D.C. Before Jan Spivey Gilchrist was born, her mother moved from Arkansas and her father moved from Mississippi. Both settled in Chicago, Illinois. Though none of them knew it at the time, they had all become part of the Great Migration.
In this collection of poems and collage artwork, award winners Eloise Greenfield and Jan Spivey Gilchrist gracefully depict the experiences of families like their own, who found the courage to leave their homes behind during The Great Migration and make new lives for themselves elsewhere. The Great Migration concludes with a bibliography.
Supports the Common Core State Standards
Resource: https://www.amazon.com/Great-Migration-Journey-North/dp/0061259217/ref=pd_sbs_14_img_0?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=QB85NVG1C87BAXRDHY8C
When Eloise Greenfield was four months old, her family moved from their home in Parmele, North Carolina, to Washington, D.C. Before Jan Spivey Gilchrist was born, her mother moved from Arkansas and her father moved from Mississippi. Both settled in Chicago, Illinois. Though none of them knew it at the time, they had all become part of the Great Migration.
In this collection of poems and collage artwork, award winners Eloise Greenfield and Jan Spivey Gilchrist gracefully depict the experiences of families like their own, who found the courage to leave their homes behind during The Great Migration and make new lives for themselves elsewhere. The Great Migration concludes with a bibliography.
Supports the Common Core State Standards
Resource: https://www.amazon.com/Great-Migration-Journey-North/dp/0061259217/ref=pd_sbs_14_img_0?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=QB85NVG1C87BAXRDHY8C
Brief IntroductionPages: 32
Literature and the Child : Pg 373 Publisher: New York: HarperCollins Publishers Copyright: 2012 Grade Level: 4 - 8 years |
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Coretta Scott King Book Award, 2012 Author
Great Migration |
Reviews from CLCD:
CCBC (Cooperative Children's Book Center Choices, 2012) The Great Migration of African Americans from the South to the North between 1915 and 1930 is the subject of moving poems that chronicle different dimensions of the journey. In The News, southern Blacks hear about the possibilities for a better life up north. Goodbyes features the voices of various individuals bidding farewell to people, places, and attitudes in the South. ( Goodbye, / work all day for almost no pay, / enemy cotton fields, trying / to break my back, my spirit ) The Trip chronicles the journey by train to northern cities. Question asks and then answers if a good life awaits at the end of the journey. Up North documents the arrival: ... the people keep coming, / keep coming, keep on coming, / filling up the cities with / their hopes and their courage. / And their dreams. Author Eloise Greenfield provides an opening commentary explaining the Great Migration, and her closing poem, My Family, touches on her own family s move from North Carolina to Washington, D.C., when she was four months old. The poems are weighted with the emotions associated with goodbyes and new beginnings: sadness, relief, trepidation, and hope. Jan Spivey Gilchrist s collage artwork blends paintings, news clippings, and photographs in images full of tenderness for her subjects and the gravity and hope that the journey embodies. |
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.2.10
By the end of the year, read and comprehend literature, including stories and poetry, in the grades 2-3 text complexity band proficiently, with scaffolding as needed at the high end of the range. |