Lily's Ride: Saving her Father from the Ku Klux Klan

Fiction & Literature, Historical
Cover of the book Lily's Ride: Saving her Father from the Ku Klux Klan by Michael W. Perry, Michael W. Perry
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Michael W. Perry ISBN: 9781587420856
Publisher: Michael W. Perry Publication: May 7, 2014
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Michael W. Perry
ISBN: 9781587420856
Publisher: Michael W. Perry
Publication: May 7, 2014
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Lily’s Ride dramatizes the nation’s first civil rights movement. Set in North Carolina just after the Civil War, it tells of those who bravely defied white supremacy and fought for racial equality.
Comfort Servosse is a Union officer who has moved South to make a difference. John Walters is a poor white who wants his daughters to get a good education and has formed an alliance with recently freed slaves to establish honest government and good schools. Jerry Hunt is a black pastor who openly defies the Klan.
At the heart of this story is Lily Servosse, an extraordinarily brave teenaged girl. Warned that the Klan intends to kill her father that very night, she rides his thoroughbred stallion on the same roads over which a hundred Klan are traveling. The San Francisco Chronicle said: “The night ride of young Lily Servosse is one of the finest and most thrilling incidents that has ever been told in history or romance.”
This book is based on A Fool's Errand, a bestselling 1879 novel by Albion Tourgée. It was so influential, segregationists were still trying to counter its message over thirty years later with films such as The Birth of a Nation. Lily’s Ride has been adapted for today’s readers by removing chapters intended for a nineteenth-century audience and focusing on the key characters. A historical background has been added.
Those who want to grasp why the Civil War ended so badly will find their answers here. The Yale Literary Review wrote that it, “gives information on a subject on which there has been a woeful lack of real knowledge… the actual state of Southern society in the period following the war.”
As a North Carolina judge, Albion Tourgée was an eyewitness to those events. He was also one of the nineteenth century's foremost champions of racial equality. As a lawyer, he argued against segregation in the U.S. Supreme Court decision, Plessy v. Ferguson (1896).
Today we joke about Klansmen in their white sheets. This novel will take you back to an era when they terrified even the bravest. In fact, one soldier in this story warns, “I would rather charge up the Heights of Gettysburg again than be the object of a raid by that crowd.” When Lily makes her bold ride, she must risk facing that terrifying crowd all alone on a lonely road late at night.
Working on this book has taught me to appreciate my Hallmark ancestors—rebels against the rebellion. Two were murdered during the Civil War for defying what they called a “rich man’s war, a poor man’s fight.” A third, my great-great grandfather Hopwood Hallmark, was murdered in 1874 during the final drive to establish white supremacy in the South by “ballots or bullets.”
Those who want understand the historic roots of racism will find this book, written by one of the bravest champions of racial equality, a must read and the added commentary helpful. It’s also excellent for students in high schools and universities.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Lily’s Ride dramatizes the nation’s first civil rights movement. Set in North Carolina just after the Civil War, it tells of those who bravely defied white supremacy and fought for racial equality.
Comfort Servosse is a Union officer who has moved South to make a difference. John Walters is a poor white who wants his daughters to get a good education and has formed an alliance with recently freed slaves to establish honest government and good schools. Jerry Hunt is a black pastor who openly defies the Klan.
At the heart of this story is Lily Servosse, an extraordinarily brave teenaged girl. Warned that the Klan intends to kill her father that very night, she rides his thoroughbred stallion on the same roads over which a hundred Klan are traveling. The San Francisco Chronicle said: “The night ride of young Lily Servosse is one of the finest and most thrilling incidents that has ever been told in history or romance.”
This book is based on A Fool's Errand, a bestselling 1879 novel by Albion Tourgée. It was so influential, segregationists were still trying to counter its message over thirty years later with films such as The Birth of a Nation. Lily’s Ride has been adapted for today’s readers by removing chapters intended for a nineteenth-century audience and focusing on the key characters. A historical background has been added.
Those who want to grasp why the Civil War ended so badly will find their answers here. The Yale Literary Review wrote that it, “gives information on a subject on which there has been a woeful lack of real knowledge… the actual state of Southern society in the period following the war.”
As a North Carolina judge, Albion Tourgée was an eyewitness to those events. He was also one of the nineteenth century's foremost champions of racial equality. As a lawyer, he argued against segregation in the U.S. Supreme Court decision, Plessy v. Ferguson (1896).
Today we joke about Klansmen in their white sheets. This novel will take you back to an era when they terrified even the bravest. In fact, one soldier in this story warns, “I would rather charge up the Heights of Gettysburg again than be the object of a raid by that crowd.” When Lily makes her bold ride, she must risk facing that terrifying crowd all alone on a lonely road late at night.
Working on this book has taught me to appreciate my Hallmark ancestors—rebels against the rebellion. Two were murdered during the Civil War for defying what they called a “rich man’s war, a poor man’s fight.” A third, my great-great grandfather Hopwood Hallmark, was murdered in 1874 during the final drive to establish white supremacy in the South by “ballots or bullets.”
Those who want understand the historic roots of racism will find this book, written by one of the bravest champions of racial equality, a must read and the added commentary helpful. It’s also excellent for students in high schools and universities.

More books from Historical

Cover of the book The Iron Corsair by Michael W. Perry
Cover of the book Le repos du guerrier by Michael W. Perry
Cover of the book My Mississippi Miss by Michael W. Perry
Cover of the book Il napoletano che domò gli afghani by Michael W. Perry
Cover of the book Und über uns die Ewigkeit - Deutsche Kampfflieger in England by Michael W. Perry
Cover of the book Prinny and His Pals by Michael W. Perry
Cover of the book Dog Diaries #7: Stubby by Michael W. Perry
Cover of the book The Journal of a Disappointed Man by Michael W. Perry
Cover of the book The Adventuress by Michael W. Perry
Cover of the book Dreams from Many Rivers by Michael W. Perry
Cover of the book Una stupida avventura by Michael W. Perry
Cover of the book The Colonel and Little Missie by Michael W. Perry
Cover of the book Мятежный лорд by Michael W. Perry
Cover of the book La besace de haine Illustrée by Michael W. Perry
Cover of the book Harlequin Historical May 2015 - Box Set 2 of 2 by Michael W. Perry
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy