Tuesday, October 22, 2019
Rosewood essays
Rosewood essays In Levy County, FL, blacks and whites live uncomfortably but serenely beside each other in the towns of Sumner and Rosewood. The movie starts out by showing the very clean town of Rosewood, FL. In the beginning they show the Rosewood First A.M.E. Church, a for sale sign for 5 acres of land to be auctioned off on January 1, 1923 (New Years Day) by J. Bradley, Prince Hall, No. 6 which is the school for black children, different houses, farms, and the Carrier house. The movie also shows the train station in Rosewood where Sarah Carrier and her grandson are selling fruits, vegetables, and eggs to the whites getting on the train and one of the heroes of Rosewood, the train conductor Mr. Bryce. Once the train rolls by we come up on Sumner, FL, the white neighborhood in the movie. The railroad tracks separate the 2 towns. It doesnt look as clean as Rosewood does. A boy and his father hunt a boar and carry it out of the woods while the father chastises his son about playing with a colored bo y. The sheriff rides up and asks him if he sees a black man that escaped off the chain gang and tells him to keep a look out for him and not to shoot him. I chose this movie because it was very interesting to me when I first saw it and I never heard of Rosewood, FL before. I thought it was just a movie to show how lynching and massacres were conducted in America. When I saw it in the movies I missed the beginning of it so I didnt know it was based on a true story. When Mrs. Lamarre gave us the movie project, it gave me the opportunity to research on just how accurate and true the story of Rosewood was. In this report I will be telling how true the story really is and, around the start of the 19th century, that lynching and massacres of black towns were normal. The Reality of Rosewood, Lynching, and Massacres Rosewood is based on a true story. It is about how a prosperous black town was burned down to the ground b...
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