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Oliver W. Hill Book Club: Jailed For Freedom
The Oliver W. Hill Book Club, named in honor of Richmond African American attorney and civil rights activist, invites readers to explore various books dealing with the law, civil rights, and social justice in America.The book club will begin with a discussion of the 100th Anniversary Edition of Jailed For Freedom: A First Person Account Of The Militant Fight For Women’s Rights led by suffrage historian Angela P. Dodson. She is a contributing editor for Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, has served as senior editor for The New York Times and executive editor of Black Issues Book Review. Dodson has written and edited newspaper and magazine articles, feature stories and books. In 2017 she published Remember the Ladies: Celebrating Those Who Fought for Freedom at the Ballot Box, which studies the countless hurdles confronted on the turbulent path to suffrage while juxtaposing the movement along with other social and political developments.
First published in 1920, Jailed For Freedom is the eyewitness account of Doris Stevens, one of the militant suffragists engaged in an intensive campaign (1913-1919) in her words “to win a solitary thing-the passage by Congress of the national suffrage amendment enfranchising women.” Stevens movingly describes the courage of the women who picketed outside the White House (“Silent Sentinels”), exposing themselves to public scorn, physical violence, and arrest. Virginia women were among those jailed at Virginia’s Occoquan Workhouse for refusing to pay fines, and were force-fed after going on hunger strikes. The 2020 anniversary edition of Jailed for Freedom includes Dodson’s Introduction which articulately outlines the suffrage movement. The centennial edition includes poignant archival illustrations.
Jailed For Freedom is available in print at the library and as an e-book on Libby.
- Date:
- Monday, March 8, 2021
- Time:
- 6:30pm - 7:30pm
- Categories:
- Book Discussion Law Virtual
Event Organizer
Meldon Jenkins-Jones is the Richmond Public Library / Community Services Manager at Hull Street Branch Library.
Meldon also chairs the Get Lit Advisory Committee which supports the Richmond Public Library Get Lit Reading Initiatives including the Black Male Emergent Readers (BMER) program and the Lit Chicks Read book clubs.
Meldon is a graduate of the Leadership Metro Richmond Class of 2022. She was the first recipient of the Virginia Library Association (VLA) Librarians of Color Forum Award in 2021 and is an active member of VLA. She presented “Libraries Bringing Community Together” at the 2023 VLA Annual Conference.
In 2011, Meldon received her Master of Library and Information Studies from Florida State University. She received her Juris Doctor degree from Rutgers University School of Law—Newark and practiced law in New Jersey until her retirement in 2003. Meldon received her Bachelor of Arts degree from Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, where she studied African American Studies and Russian Civilization.
A Metro Richmond resident, Meldon is the mother of two adult children and enjoys spending time with her grandchildren.