

The city of Houston has become one of the great urban centers of the twentieth century. The explosive economic growth of the area over the last 160 years has resulted in the creation of a great melting pot, as the community has become one of the most di-verse in this country, or the world. That diversity has many sources, of which one of the most important, and certainly the most tragic, was the early settlement and growth of Houston that occurred during the last years of the southern American cotton empire. That empire, which produced enormous wealth for a small planter class, was based on the slave labor of Afro-Americans. The Civil War ended in Texas 141 years ago, but the newly freed slaves faced enormous barriers in securing basic civil rights and an opportunity to enjoy the cultural, economic, and political rights of the majority white population.
A window into that struggle is provided by a resident Houstonian, Anita Bunkley’s novel, Emily the Yellow Rose, a Texas Legend. Ms. Bunkley’s work chronicles both the serene, hopeful dreams and the disappointment and discord surrounding her Afro-American heroine before, during, and after the Civil War along the upper Gulf Coast.
The relevance of her story clearly can be seen in the modern, diverse Houston of this day. Like Ms. Bunkley, I am a Houstonian, a native Houstonian, and I teach at Jack Yates High School, one of the oldest predominately black schools in the Houston Independent School District. Yates is sited in the Third Ward, a strongly, historic, Afro-American neighborhood that has produced some of the most prominent minority civic, religious, and business leaders of the state and city. The ward today is a study in contrast. Some areas are stylish, with real estate valued in the millions, while only a few blocks away is an urban ghetto, reeking of poverty and destitution. So one finds middle and upper middle class residents in the area, but also present, are the penniless, the hungry, and the unfortunate.
The contrasting quality of the area is also reflected in the fact that Houston’s two largest public universities, Texas Southern University and the University of Houston, are in the area, and bracket Yates High School. But near these centers of higher learning are blocks of deteriorating “row houses” that have impoverished generations, for decades. So amidst booming, growing, diverse Houston we still find, in this inner city area and others, pockets of an oozing, infectious ulcer of decay. Trying to sort out how we still find this sad urban landscape in such a city of opulence requires an understanding of the origins of areas such as Third Ward, and Ms. Buckley’s novel can provide insights in that regard.
Emily The Yellow Rose offers an example of a young black woman struggling to find a new identity and make a new start in the Galveston-Houston area before, during, and after the Civil War. Coming to the area from New York, she found herself caught in the slave empire being built in Texas, being declared a free person, after the war. She endured the torture of a cruel civilization when she first came to Galveston seeking a new life with dignity, as the following passage suggests:
“Tears of frustrated disappointment burned her eyes, as she fought to keep them from spilling over. Trembling, drenched with perspiration, she wondered if she had made a mistake in coming to this wild foreign place.”
Emily’s experience can offer insight and encouragement to Afro- American and other students as they research their own histories and experiences in the Houston area. It will provide a frame of reference when they visit sites like Freedman’s Town in the Fourth Ward, with its narrow, hand- laid brick streets, attesting to the pride and de-termination of the newly freed slaves. And in this way, they can gain an enhanced understanding of how events in this area 150 years ago, contributed to the modern, diverse Houston, with its contrasting pockets of poverty and affluence in the inner city.
This unit is designed for a six week period. Aside from a careful analysis of a work of fiction set in this area, students will be given opportunities to view and explore factors that have contributed to the growth and development of the Houston area in general and the Third Ward, in particular.
Since the Allen brothers purchased their tract of 5,000 acres along Buffalo Bayou in 1836 and laid out a new town named for the victor of the recent battle of San Jacinto, many factors have contributed to Houston’s growth, while others acted as a brake on local development. Ms. Bunkley’s novel of the early days of a new frontier, makes some of these factors clear, such as, the climate of the Texas Gulf Coast with it’s “muggy mosquito filled air” and the “Swampy lowland” of the Houston area. These qualities led the surviving Allen brother to leave the insect infested swamps of Buffalo Bayou within a few years of founding Houston and return to the northern states.
The early economy of the area was based on exporting local timber and cotton to national and world markets. This, necessitated a large agricultural labor force in the adjacent river valleys of the Trinity, Brazos, and Colorado, almost all held in slavery like the Yellow Rose. With the end of the war, large numbers of freed slaves moved into Galveston and Houston to seek better lives. Most settled in the older areas of these cities like the Third, Fourth, and Fifth Wards in Houston, where affordable housing could be found.
Over time, most whites left these same areas, and the neighborhoods became overwhelmingly Afro-American. Third Ward gradually became the center of black intellectual, cultural, and political life in the growing city. The rigid Jim Crow segregation of the South assured that all classes of the local Afro-American pop-ulation-elites, middle class, and the very poor-all lived in these highly concentrated neighborhoods through the 1950s.
In the 1960s, white flight began from inner city areas, as local public schools were desegregated and the black population of the older wards began to move into ad-jacent formerly white areas like North and South Macgregor. This outmigration accelerated in the 1970s with the passage of federal fair housing laws ending discrimination in housing and the availability of large numbers of affordable houses in suburban areas after the energy bust of the 1980s. Third Ward went into decline as many of its best educated and most prosperous residents moved to Fort Bend County and other suburban neighborhoods.
Population losses slowed in the 1990s, and efforts are underway to reverse the decline and to encourage families to move back into the Third Ward area. For the first time in years, new houses are being built, and some new businesses are opening in the ward. Now is a good time for area students to learn information concerning the early history of Afro-Americans in this part of Texas, and to observe what is happening in one of the city’s historic Afro-American communities contributing to Houston’s dynamic economic growth.
To examine the Afro-American experience in Houston by relating it to the personal experience of the heroine in Emily the Yellow Rose, and a series of exercises to familiarize them with the current status of the Third Ward area.
Students will be directed to undertake a number of projects to gather data about local landmarks, and other aspects of the Afro-American experience in the area. Portions of this will entail site visits and field trips, as well as the use of library materials, including Emily the Yellow Rose, A Texas Legend.
Another part of the unit will be devoted to having students use their own words to express what they see to have been the important changes that have occurred in Houston since its founding over 160 years ago. They are encouraged to write poetry in this part of the exercise.
Students will explore the meaning of specific terms that are relevant to the city’s history. These will include such important terms such as Juneteenth, Freedman’s Town, the Camp, Logan riot, Jack Yates, Antioch, etc.
Bunkley,Anita, Emily, The Yellow Rose, A Texas Legend, Rinyard Publishing Company,Houston Texas, 1989.. (Presents a realistic view of a young black woman’s plight as she seeksindependenceand freedom from the grips of slavery)
Johnston Maugerite, Houston, The Unknown City, 1836-1946, Texas A&M University Press, College Station, 1992.
Jones, Dr. Howard, The Red Diary, Nortex Press, Austin, Texas, 1991.
Rice, Lawrence, The Negro In Texas, 1874-1900, Louisiana State University Press, Baton Rouge, 1971.
The Houston Metropolitan Study, An Entrepreneurial Community Looks Ahead, University of Houston Center for Public Policy, Rice University/Baker Institute for Public Policy.
Von der Mehden, Fred R., The Ethnic Groups of Houston, Rice University Studies, Houston, Texas, 1984.
Williams, Annie Lee, The History of Wharton County, 1946-1961, Von Boeckmann-Jones Company, Austin, Texas, 1964.
(Touches on aspects of the history of Texas settlement in Wharton and other surrounding counties
Winningham, Geoff, A Place of Dreams, Houston, An American City, Rice University Press, Houston, Texas, 1986.
Focuses
The Allen Brothers
Migration to Houston From East Texas and other areas.
Southern Ports and Influences To Houston -Galveston/Port of Houston Freedman’s Town - Early Afro-American Settlements/First,Second,Third, Fourth, Fifth Wards
Houston In Today’s Society
Approach to a novel - Emily The Yellow Rose, A Texas Legend
PRESENTATION
Week I
Research - History of the Houston Project/The Allen Purchase Using the Newspaper As a Resource for Information / Public Library /Historical Society Map Study -Drawing of coordinates and the use of map reading skills based on the Allen Purchase/ Buffalo Bayou.
Week II
Important Historical Contributors to the Houston Landscape- slides/photos Important Houston landmarks; NASA, Port of Houston, Harrisburg, Row Houses, Wards of Houston (Bus Tour) Reading of ethnic literature and myths Vocabulary Study - Crossword Puzzle
Week III
Personal and Expressive Writing - Autobiographical Essay Life Map -Students will make a road map of life showing beginning memories of Houston. Family History - Research of family history and roots in the Houston area.
Week IV
Poetic Expressions -Personal expressions of 1) “The Person Within and a Concept of People, Events, and Settings” 2) “Houston Past and Present” 3) “Houston and the Sights and Sounds of What Has Been” 4) “What Houston is Presently, and What the Future Holds”
Week V
Introduction to the Novel-Vocabulary Study Setting Plot Theme Characterization Climax Resolution
Week VI
Reading of the novel Emily the Yellow Rose, A Texas Legend
Study Questions Think and Respond -Example Why do you think that…….? Book Review
• FORMAT FOR A BOOK REVIEW
Setting Climax Resolution 
REVIEW FORMAT
Directions: The following terms have been taken from the context of the on-going unit. From the discussion and readings, use the clues to determine the correct answers to solve the puzzle.
1. PLACE OF HIGHER LEARNING 1. MARRIED FIRST BLACK BOARD MEMBER
5. TO GIVE INSTRUCTION TO3. TYPE OF VASE
7. SOUND TO CHEER THE HOME TEAM 4. INFORMAL; FATHER
9. ______ TOWER;ONE OF CITY’STALLEST BUILDINGS 5. PREP; IN THE DIRECTION OF
24. HOUSTON WARD WHERE FREEDMAN’S TOWN BEGAN 25. SAIL OR SEAMAN
26. TO CUT DOWN 26. WINGED INSECT
28. ONE OF HOUSTON’S LARGEST PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS 27. OF OR BELONGING TO LIGHT COLOR
COMPROMISING A WHOLE TO SERVE WITHOUT PAY 5O HEALTH RESORT
48. TO PERCEIVE BY EAR 58. SOIL
Strategic Landmarks to the Houston Landscape
Directions: A. The map below shows the surrounding areas that were meaningful to Emily in her plight toward her independence. Carefully observe the landmarks and identify them in relation to the Houston story and it’s rise to prosperity.
B. Use the library to construct your own map of the city. From the study of the city, locate and identify at least three historical points in the city with at least one in the proximity of your neighborhood.
FOR YOUR REVIEW
Plot
Study Questions
ETHNIC LITERATURE
Ethnic literature sometimes provides tremendous fictional and non-fictional information about many subjects. Often, that literature is an expression of the writer’s efforts to covey feelings or point of view on a specific issue or subject.
The following is a poem from Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Examine the writer’s poetic expression :
Roll of thunder hear my cry
Over the water bye and bye
Ole man comin down the line
Whip in hand to beat me down
But I ain’t gonna let him
Turn me ‘round
What do you think the poem means ?__________________________________________
What message do you think that Mildred Taylor seeks to convey to the reader__________
Life Map
Directions: Every individual has a specific life line that belongs to no one else. There have been many life experiences; some of them being less desirable than others. There were probably hills to climb and also valleys that were sometimes deeper than others in overcoming. The following is an example of such a map. Use this as an example to create your own life map.
Autobiographical Essay
Directions:
Choose one memorable incident, happy or sad, from your life map. Make this the place you begin your life map and proceed from there to write about yourself and your family.
ex.
Janice is sixteen years of age and looks back over her life. She has had many experiences ,but one that she will never forget. Janice always liked to ride her bicycle through her tiny neighborhood, through the white framed houses and well manicured lawns. This day was different from all the rest. In her essay that she read before the class, she began with the moment the doctor placed a cast on her leg and she spent the entire summer on crutches. Of course, how could she forget how each family member; her mother, her father, and her two brothers always tried to keep her in a good mood. As she reflects, on this day, a huge moving van came into view as she rode to tell her best friend goodbye. This was one of the worst days of her life. Not only did she loose a best friend who was leaving the neighborhood, but she also was having to deal with a frightening , unforgettable moment. She recalls also how someone called her parents, there was a ride to the hospital in an ambulance, and the many warm faces she met during
slow recovery. As she wrote, she looked back at her childhood and her life with her family. This was an autobiography that brought her to the exact moment that she sat in her tenth grade class and related her experience from birth to her present.
Family Tree
Directions:
Poetic Expression
Directions: Choose an element from your present or past environment, or even from a place you observed in this study. You might even select some individual or character that you have become acquainted with. Write a poem in free verse as an expression of your thoughts based on the aspects of this unit. Be sure to focus on the positive as well as the negative forces of your own world.
Personal Essay
Directions: Write a personal essay expressing the following:
Question: Should the events of the past, my life history, and the present be an experience of personal integrity for today and future growth.