In this innovative study, Crystal Sanders explores how
working-class black women, in collaboration with the federal
government, created the Child Development Group of Mississippi
(CDGM) in 1965, a Head Start program that not only gave poor black
children access to early childhood education but also provided
black women with greater opportunities for political activism
during a crucial time in the unfolding of the civil rights
movement. Women who had previously worked as domestics and
sharecroppers secured jobs through CDGM as teachers and support
staff and earned higher wages. The availability of jobs independent
of the local white power structure afforded these women the freedom
to vote in elections and petition officials without fear of
reprisal. But CDGM's success antagonized segregationists at both
the local and state levels who eventually defunded it.
Tracing the stories of the more than 2,500 women who staffed
Mississippi's CDGM preschool centers, Sanders's book remembers
women who went beyond teaching children their shapes and colors to
challenge the state's closed political system and white supremacist
ideology and offers a profound example for future community
organizing in the South.