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Promised Land
The Rise of Oscarville-America's Forgotten Black Paradise (The Oscarville Chronicles, Book 1)
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Narrado por:
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Annie Caldwell
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De:
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David G. Stone
What if I told you that in 1912, the most prosperous community in North Georgia wasn't owned by white plantation families, but by the grandchildren of enslaved people who had built an agricultural and business empire that surpassed anything their former masters had ever achieved?
In the rolling hills of Forsyth County, Georgia, an extraordinary experiment in American freedom was unfolding. Between 1865 and 1912, families who had escaped slavery with nothing but determination and dreams created Oscarville—a thriving community that would become legendary for its scientific farming innovations, successful businesses, and educational excellence that prepared students for colleges across the nation.
This is the forgotten story of America's most successful African American community, where former slaves became agricultural innovators, their children became prosperous merchants, and their grandchildren prepared to become doctors, lawyers, and teachers. Through meticulous research and compelling narrative, "Promised Land" reveals how the Bagley, Strickland, and Brown families transformed a wilderness valley into a model of prosperity that challenged every assumption about race and capability in post-Civil War America.
From the first tentative steps toward land ownership to the sophisticated poultry operations that made Oscarville famous throughout the Southeast, this book chronicles nearly fifty years of unprecedented achievement. You'll discover how these remarkable families developed farming techniques decades ahead of their time, created cooperative businesses that generated wealth while maintaining community values, and established educational institutions that rivaled those in major cities.
But this is more than a success story—it's a revelation of what America could have become if the promise of freedom had been honored for all its citizens.