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Elkhart , Ind., native Shirley Gordon
Jackson visited her hometown in April 2009 to promote her book “A Place to Be
Someone: Growing Up with Charles Gordone,” a memoir of growing up in Elkhart
during the racially divided 1930s and 40s.
Jackson’s book, published by Texas Tech
University Press, tells the story of Shirley, her brother Charles Gordon, and
their three siblings growing up on the “White” side of Elkhart and being among
only a handful of black students at Elkhart High School.
While Charles and Shirley were lauded
for their academic, athletic, and musical achievements, away from the school
they still felt like outsiders among their white peers. This exclusion would
later propel Charles Gordone to pen “No Place to Be Somebody,” winner of the
1970 Pulitzer Prize for drama. Gordone was acclaimed as the first African
American playwright to receive the coveted award.
During talks at Central and Memorial
high schools, Jackson described childhood incidents that would later drive her
brother to write drama and poetry as a way to display the ignorance of bigotry
and promote the "human race."
Gordone died in Texas in 1995 at the
age of 70 after having an influential role in the Cowboy Renaissance of the
1990s.
In addition to talking to Elkhart
students, Jackson, a 1947 graduate of Elkhart High School, made a presentation
to the Elkhart NAACP. That presentation was attended by several of Jackson’s and
Gordone’s classmates.
Jackson also presided over the public
dedication of a state historical marker erected at the Elkhart Public Library
honoring Elkhart as Gordone’s birthplace. the Elkhart County Historical Society
led the effort to obtain the state designation.
Jackson told Elkhart students she wrote
“No Place to Be Someone” to dispel all the misinformation printed about her
brother. "Biographers don't always check their facts," she stated. "I wanted to
leave an accurate record of his life."
Jackson was an accomplished student and
musician at Elkhart High School herself, but like her brother, felt lonely
outside of the classroom. Her fellow students would ask her to play the piano
for their vocal performances, yet no one wanted to walk down the aisle with her
at graduation.
“A Place to Be Someone,” which was
nominated for the North Texas Book Festival Award, is a candid, sobering look at
the racial divide in Elkhart in the 1940s. Jackson’s heart-wrenching stories
leave the reader appalled at the bigotry of the past and inspired that it could
lead Gordone to a successful future as an actor, playwright, and college
professor and led Jackson to publish her first book at age 79.
“Every time I share the stories of my
childhood, I relive those occurrences, but at the end I feel humbled that both
Gordone and I transcended those experiences,” Jackson said. “In an exaltation of
spirit I can relate them to others, most particularly to students, yet emerge
from the telling with the same relieved sense of having conquered those bitter
forces.
“Should our words inspire other young
people to aim high and do their very best, it is worth the pain of my
remembrances,” Jackson said, adding a lot of her personal angst was lessened and
removed during the writing of "A Place to be Somebody: Growing Up With Charles
Gordone.”
She said the privilege of sharing her
work, and thoughts about the writing process, was a tremendous honor. “The
sensing of an opportunity that I am able to help young people put their thoughts
and feelings down on paper was cathartic for me,” Jackson said of her visit to
Elkhart’s high schools. “This can serve the same purpose for young writers of
today, whatever genre they choose to write in: fiction or non-fiction. It is
the message that is important, not just to yourself, but also to the world.
Once you get it down on paper you then can go wherever your inner spirit
wishes!”
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