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One Man's Castle: Clarence Darrow in Defense of the American Dream (2004)

par Phyllis Vine

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Publisher's description: This tautly told story steps back to a time when Detroit's boosters described their city as one of the most cosmopolitan in the world. It was also a city in which tensions between blacks and whites seemed manageable. Yet all that changed in 1925, when a black family named Sweet bought and moved into a house in a white neighborhood. What began with mothers bringing their children to gawk and stare soon became an angry mob of men, some of them from the local KKK, with stones. The violence that ensued landed Ossian Sweet, a doctor from the "talented tenth," and others from his family in jail and compelled the NAACP -- which had taken up the Sweets' case -- to hire famed attorney Clarence Darrow, who had just finished defending the plaintiff in Tennessee v. John Scopes. Darrow's defense led to one of the most incendiary courtroom dramas in the history of the United States. The outcome was a triumph of cooperation that transcended race in the name of justice.… (plus d'informations)
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Phyllis Vine’s book “One Man’s Castle: Clarence Darrow in defense of the American Dream is the second book I have read in less than a year about one of Clarence Darrow’s cases. Soon I am going to have to read a biography of him but for now I have to say that I think the real title of this book should have been “One Man’s Castle: Dr. Ossian Sweet’s fight for the American Dream”. The story is simple and dramatic, Dr. Sweet and his wife, brothers and several friends were moving into his new home and when a rock throwing mob attacks the house and the men take up arms to protect their castle. It could be a John Wayne movie. Except that the Sweets are Black, the mob was inspired by the KKK, and it was 1920s Detroit.
The one fault I had with the book was the extensive background that Vine gave on the history of violence against African Americans and the reasons for the “Great Migration”. That is not a problem with the book, it was familiar ground and I got bored. Dr. Sweet’s early life and education were, for me, also familiar ground. I was even familiar with the Flexner Report, anyone interested in education and the corrupting practices of for profit schools should be, but I was surprised to learn that a historically Black medical school was rated one of the best schools in the nation by Abraham Flexner. I was impressed, and surprised, to learn that Dr. Sweet studied in Europe, Vienna and Paris, in some of the best medical institutions of the time. Those were not the last surprises Vine’s book held for me.
I waited until writing this review to check the authors credentials, I expected she was a journalist, someone experienced in writing popular articles for the masses, that is how the book reads. It is put together like a novel, the writing flows along as smoothly as a deep wide river. The index and bibliography should have tipped me off that Vine is in fact a scholarly historian who taught at both Sarah Lawrence and the University of Michigan. Her writing could make other historians jealous. Vine also managed to add two titles to my “to be read” pile, Walter White’s “Rope and Faggot: The Biography of Judge Lynch” and Arthur Garfield Hays’ “Let Freedom Ring”. Not many books these days can manage that. ( )
  TLCrawford | Apr 7, 2015 |
The subtitle is somewhat misleading: one might think that the book focussed on Clarence Darrow, when in fact, the life of Ossian Sweet is at the center of the story. A second book on this subject, entitled The Arc of Justice, was written by Kevin Boyle. If the reader is truly interested in the topic, it is worth reading both, since they bring out different details.

Ossian Sweet was a Black doctor who, with his wife, attempted to purchase a home on an otherwise white street. Somewhat misled about their likely reception, the Sweets and nine friends and relatives brought guns with them. The shooting of two neighbors, one of them fatally, lead to all eleven being put on trial for murder. This is a famous case in the history of integrating housing, but in the end, one might say that it all revolved around the ability of African-Americans to get a fair trial. The police and prosecutors, according to the two books about the case, attempted to frame the defendants, coaching witnesses and ignoring evidence. The NAACP came to their aid, hiring lawyers to defend them, most famously Clarence Darrow. In the end, the Sweets kept their house at a terrible price, but it does not appear to have set a precedent.

I found the book extremely interesting. Phyllis Vine talked with surviving relatives of Ossian Sweet to get more information about his life. Vine has a more positive view of Sweet than Boyle does; while Boyle is entirely on Sweet's side in this conflict, he doesn't make him out to be a particularly appealing personality. Boyle also scoffs at Sweet's medical studies in Europe, skeptical that he could have understood instruction in French and German. On the other hand, Boyle presents the story with a little more dramatic flair, and presents more on the economic factors, that along with racism, fueled the conflict.

Altogether, this was a very satisfying book. Particularly recommended for people with an interest in the history of race relations or Detroit. ( )
  PuddinTame | Sep 30, 2008 |
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I, too sing America. I, too sing America.

I am the darker brother.

They send me to eat in the kitchen

When company comes,

But I laugh,

And eat well,
And grow strong.
Tomorrow,
I'll sit at the table
When company comes.
Nobody'll dare
Say to me.
"Eat in the kitchen,"
Then.
Besides,
They'll see how beautiful I am
and be ashamed, --
I, too, am America.

--Langston Hughes, 1926
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One fall morning in October 1925 four men from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People knocked on the door of a brownstone in New York City.
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Publisher's description: This tautly told story steps back to a time when Detroit's boosters described their city as one of the most cosmopolitan in the world. It was also a city in which tensions between blacks and whites seemed manageable. Yet all that changed in 1925, when a black family named Sweet bought and moved into a house in a white neighborhood. What began with mothers bringing their children to gawk and stare soon became an angry mob of men, some of them from the local KKK, with stones. The violence that ensued landed Ossian Sweet, a doctor from the "talented tenth," and others from his family in jail and compelled the NAACP -- which had taken up the Sweets' case -- to hire famed attorney Clarence Darrow, who had just finished defending the plaintiff in Tennessee v. John Scopes. Darrow's defense led to one of the most incendiary courtroom dramas in the history of the United States. The outcome was a triumph of cooperation that transcended race in the name of justice.

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