Description
This book examines the intertwined relationships between the presidents and the African Americans who have been an integral part of the White House since the beginning of the Republic. The book discusses the racial attitudes and policies of the presidents and shows how African Americans helped to shape those attitudes and policies over the years. The analysis starts with the early presidents who had slaves and tells the compelling stories of their interactions, with an emphasis on how these slaves dealt with bondage in the supposed citadel of American freedom and independence. The book moves through the era of Abraham Lincoln, whose views on emancipation were greatly influenced by the African Americans around him, especially by White House seamstress Elizabeth Keckley and valet William Slade. The book covers the Jim Crow era and proceeds through the political and cultural breakthroughs on civil rights accomplished by Lyndon Johnson in partnership with the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. The book ends with an insightful analysis of the rise, election, and administration of Barack Obama, the first African American president, including an exclusive interview with Obama.
Watch Ken Walsh's interview on C-SPAN2 Book TV
Author Info
Kenneth T. Walsh has covered the White House full-time since 1986 and is one of the longest-serving White House correspondents in history. He is former president of the White House Correspondents’ Association and has won the most prestigious awards for White House coverage. He is an adjunct professorial lecturer of communication at American University in Washington, D.C. This is his fifth book. Walsh is a frequent speaker on topics related to the presidency and often serves as an analyst on television and radio.
Reviews
"A keen sense of presidential history combined with meticulous reporting have been hallmarks of Ken Walsh's work. This book brings to life intimate and meaningful moments shared between American presidents and the African Americans who have worked closely with them. He sheds a first light on countless remarkable moments and contributions. Those privileged to work in and around the White House have benefited immeasurably from the dedication of the people featured in this volume and have stood on their shoulders. How these stories were pried loose may be a tale in itself.”
—Thurgood Marshall Jr., former senior White House advisor to President Bill Clinton and principal of Bingham Consulting Group
"Walsh draws on his extensive experience covering the White House as a journalist to examine the history of the presidency through the lens of the African-American experience—from slavery through civil rights. The result is a compelling history of race relations in American politics. Readers interested in the history of the presidency, White House, and civil rights will find much of interest in Walsh's well-researched study."
—Publisher's Weekly
“Ken Walsh knows the White House better than most of the reporters who cover it, and here he gives us a rich history about that place that factors in the uniquely American subject of race. Our history is so affected by race but little do people know about folks who are black who made such an impact on a house called White. Ken’s work will give them fresh insights at a time when we are all stirred by a White House newly and profoundly integrated for the first time in our history.”
—Mike McCurry, former White House Press Secretary for Bill Clinton and principal of Public Strategies Washington
“Kenneth Walsh has established himself as a leading American presidential historian on such subjects as the press and family homes. Family of Freedom takes on the controversial topic of presidential attitudes and policies toward race. Its anecdotes are fascinating, but there will be critics. So read it carefully and check your blood pressure from time to time.”
—Marlin Fitzwater, former White House Press Secretary under presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush
"Ken Walsh has conducted us into a unique and fascinating corner of American history, the long and continuous connection between African Americans and the White House. The very obvious presence of the presidential mansion's current resident is only a small part of the story, although Walsh's interviews with President Obama are rich and revealing. Bringing to this book an instinct that comes from having long covered the White House along with a keen appreciation of history, Ken Walsh tells us a stirring and often touching American story.”
--Ross K. Baker, Rutgers University
"What a fascinating read. Ken Walsh's Family of Freedom is a deeply illuminating look at how African Americans have interacted with the White House since the dark days of slavery to Barack Obama's ascendancy as our 44th president. Walsh does a marvelous job of tracing the currents of every era. An essential book for everybody's library."
--Douglas Brinkley, Rice University