Riding Jane Crow: African American Women on the American Railroad (Women, Gender, and Sexuality in American History) by Miriam Thaggert


Riding Jane Crow: African American Women on the American Railroad (Women, Gender, and Sexuality in American History)
Title : Riding Jane Crow: African American Women on the American Railroad (Women, Gender, and Sexuality in American History)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0252086597
ISBN-10 : 9780252086595
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 208
Publication : Published June 28, 2022

Miriam Thaggert illuminates the stories of African American women as passengers and as workers on the nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century railroad. As Jim Crow laws became more prevalent and forced Black Americans to "ride Jim Crow" on the rails, the train compartment became a contested space of leisure and work. Riding Jane Crow examines four instances of Black female railroad the travel narratives of Black female intellectuals such as Anna Julia Cooper and Mary Church Terrell; Black middle-class women who sued to ride in first class "ladies’ cars"; Black women railroad food vendors; and Black maids on Pullman trains. Thaggert argues that the railroad represented a technological advancement that was entwined with African American attempts to secure social progress. Black women's experiences on or near the railroad illustrate how American technological progress has often meant their ejection or displacement; thus, it is the Black woman who most fully measures the success of American freedom and privilege, or "progress," through her travel experiences.


Riding Jane Crow: African American Women on the American Railroad (Women, Gender, and Sexuality in American History) Reviews


  • Robin Loves Reading

    American Women, especially American Black Women had a very strong role in the history both as passengers and workers on the American railroad during the nineteenth and earlier twentieth centuries. One of the things that really caught my attention is how some women had to dress as men in order to ride in at least some sort of style on various train cars. I felt like I was on the train with these women during those early. years.

  • Vicuña

    This book was a revelation in so many ways. I know little about the American railroad and it gave me a real feel for the way trains and rail travel worked in the latter part of the 19th and early 29th century. I’d never thought of journeys in the context of how space is occupied and the effect that has on those around. It’s an interesting and provocative angle and I learned from it. More to the point are the experience of black won en and the author draws extensively on new research material to provide the detail.

    It’s a challenging read; I was emotionally engaged with many aspects of the stories and the injustices meted. It’s also a scholarly read and I’ve tackled in sections over a few weeks with time to reflect on each part. It’s uncomfortable. Even within the opening pages I was appalled to learn of a group of respectable book club members, black women, forcibly evicted from a train as recently as 2015…for making too much noise and being abusive. The rail company later admitted this was incorrect.

    I love social history and these are the stories of real women who worked or travelled on the American railroad. Their voices deserve to be heard and it’s one of the best non fiction titles I’ve read this year. It’s left me wanting to know more and I’m grateful to Netgalley for a review copy of the book via the publisher.

  • Kathy Piselli

    Probably my favorite part is the chapter on the waiter carriers of Gordonsville, Va. It reminded me of a train trip I took - in third class - from Cairo to Luxor, Egypt. This was not the more expensive express train; it was the one used by locals who needed stops in each and every village. At each station were crowds of vendors on the siding, and on the tracks, hawking beverages and cooked food, and serving people through the windows (Coke and Pepsi were "Kwakwila" and "Peeps"). People ate from a real plate, scooping up food as fast as they could and returning the plate to the nimble vendor as the train gained speed out of the station. Many of the vendors were women. This was in 1974. Perhaps today, as in Gordonsville, their place has been taken by a clean cafeteria in air conditioned splendor inside a station building. I wouldn't be surprised. But back to the book, while the more academic sections left me in the dust, Thaggert unearthed incredible personal stories from the archives she visited. The danger faced by Black women who used the trains either for work or for travel was frightening. The story where a wife passes as a white man with her husband posing as her slave, the woman who passes for a boy and rides the rails with hobos, and the invasiveness of the Pullman Company as an employer were great stories.

  • Mariama Thorlu-Bangura

    "Riding Jane Crow" by Miriam Thaggert is a unique book, in that it covers a topic that doesn't get much attention. Thaggert's goal is to present to the reader a window into the world of African American women, and their experiences on the rails during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Jim Crow was the unspoken law of the land, especially in the South. As a result, African American women were treated differently on the train, on the platform, and in general. The book is very detailed, yet at times, extremely repetitive. It reads more like a master's degree dissertation than a general book on a unique topic. While I enjoyed learning about the topic, it took a great deal of patience to get through the book. You have to be a true African American history buff to read this book. For those in that category, I would recommend this book.

    Thank you to NetGalley and University of Illinois Press for this advanced copy, which I voluntarily read and reviewed. All thoughts and opinions are my own.

  • Annastasia

    Miriam Thaggert is a unique insight into the world of Jim Crow and the different standards applied to black women during travel. In “Riding Jane Crow”, the author ties in both personal experiences and fictive accounts by individuals who experienced the restrictions themselves. Thaggert also brings to attention the fact that the double standards held for black women continue to this day and the fight for equal treatment continues. While this is an interesting topic overall, this book read so much like a thesis that it took an effort to continue through the book and seemed rather repetitive in places, hence the three star rating.

    The copy I read was provided by NetGally and University of Illinois Press, and the review is my honest opinion.

  • William Fuller

    I'm not at all comfortable criticizing many published books. After all, researching and composing a book is far more difficult than is simply reviewing one. Still, when an author takes the step of commercializing his or her literary creation, that is, selling copies to the reading public, that author opens the door to public opinion. I suppose the old adage of “stay out of the kitchen if you can't stand the heat” applies, which is probably one of the several reasons I've never attempted to write anything beyond a few specialty magazine articles. With this admission, my observations on Riding Jane Crow are not particularly complimentary.

    In my view, the text of the book reads very much like an academic paper—and not an adroitly written one either. Observations made by the author are repeated multiple times, often more or less verbatim. The writer also falls in love with a few specific terms that she reuses far too frequently; nearly every situation that she addresses is described as “fraught.” Now, I normally have no problem with that word, but its continual repetition throughout the text becomes tiresome and, along with the rest of the uninspired text, suggests that the writer's creativity is indeed limited.

    Speaking of limitations, what does the reader glean from the 133 pages of Riding Jane Crow? (The book does have 188 numbered pages, but 55 of these are peritext such as notes, index, and bibliography. On this point, I'll mention that another 22 pages are an “Introduction” in which the author tells us everything she is going to tell us again later in the book.) If Thaggert is correct, and she provides no statistics to validate this point, the book points out one thing that I have not come across in other sources, i.e., that 19th century American railroads provided a vehicle (literally, as it were) on which escaped slaves as well as Blacks freed by the Civil War left the South in hope of finding more accepting surroundings in other states. Beyond that observation, however, the writer merely belabors the obvious: Blacks were ill-treated on 19th and early 20th century railroads. Black riders, regardless of the service class of their tickets, were frequently relegated to inferior “Jim Crow” rail cars. Black female riders were subject to sexual harassment by white male passengers. Railroad stations as well as 1st class coaches were rigidly segregated. Female Blacks were doubly discriminated against, first because of their race and secondly because of their sex. The positive progress exemplified by railroad expansion and ballyhooed by white travelers was seldom seen in that light by Black passengers. None of these observations is particularly novel. In short, Riding Jane Crow adds remarkably little to the history of, as the subtitle reads, “African American women on the American railroad.” Thaggert expends quite a few words belaboring obvious, well known, and thoroughly documented conditions.

    Speaking of the author's vocabulary, the transformation of nouns into verbs is not at all unusual in the English language. Nonetheless, coming across constructions such as “metaphorize” (i.e., to make a metaphor) distracted me so much from the text that I cannot even remember what the metaphor was supposed to be! Such constructions are jarring enough, but, given the preponderance of the first person pronoun in the text, the author's ego is thoroughly unbelievable. On one page alone, we find the text sprinkled with the phrases “I analyze,” “I examined,” “I complicate,” and “my earlier discussions.” Yes, this review includes use of the 1st person pronoun, but that is something I would never do in an objective article that did not include my personal opinion.

    “Metaphorize,” by the way, can now be found as a defined word in contemporary on-line sources although it does not appear in any of several print dictionaries I consulted, including an unabridged lexicon and, accepted or not, I find it an awkward and ungainly word. However, another “verbed noun” elsewhere in the text does seem to be an unarguable malapropism: “Robinson's lawsuit . . . prefigured African Americans' reduced ability to rely on the court for redress from discrimination, later sedemented with Plessy v. Ferguson.” “Sedemented” is an intransitive verb meaning to have settled to the bottom of a liquid. A court case is purely incapable of “sedementing” anything. Thaggert also occasionally employs the term “paralepsis,” a perfectly good word but hardly one that a general reader is likely to understand, but then a good book does help expand its readers' vocabulary!

    As the character of Inigo Montoya says in the film dramatization of The Princess Bride, “let me sum up”: Riding Jane Crow strikes me as an academic paper written for fellow academics and perhaps to help support the author's retention or promotion by providing her an additional published work to cite in her curriculum vitae. There is nothing whatsoever amiss with that audience or that objective. However, the book does not appear to be intended for a general readership and does very little if anything to further the public's knowledge of the subject matter. What I found to be a colorless, uninspired rhetorical style of writing further weakens the book so far as its interest to a general audience is concerned. It rather pains me to say that the book is hardly worth the time expended in reading it.

  • Sandra

    Miriam Thaggert has written a really interesting account of black women and railroads in the post civil war era through the early 20th century. I really enjoyed the section about Pullman maids because I hadn’t known about them previously, and the chapter about Pauli Murray… I feel like a whole book could be written about them.

    The only thing I question about the book is the author’s description of the photo on page 90. The author says the white male is looking at his watch, but to me it appears that he is handing something (perhaps from the tray?) to the white female. This doesn’t really affect the authors argument, however. The book is meticulously researched and noted.

    Thaggert mentions work by Psyche A. Williams-Forson, which sounds really interesting and I’ll be looking into that as soon as I can.

  • lildebbie57

    I learned a lot from this book. It was very worthwhile for the wealth of content. Reading on my train commute to and from work really put things into perspective. I did find some parts repetitive and disjointed, so it wasn't always the easiest read.