What’s Tom Hanchett Reading?

Tom Hanchett

Dr. Tom Hanchett retired recently after many years with Levine Museum of the New South and earlier with Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic Landmarks. But he hasn’t given up work as a community historian. He writes a column on international restaurants for the Charlotte Observer, “Food From Home,” gives tours including the ongoing “Charlotte in Black & White and More” for Community Building Initiative, and lectures frequently on our city’s history. He joined the Library’s Robinson-Spangler Carolina Room as the Library’s Historian-In-Residence in 2019. Find his writings at www.HistorySouth.com.

Books from Childhood

Charlotte’s Web, by E.B. White
Pogo Sunday Parade, by Walt Kelly

Of the thousands of books from my youth, these are two that I re-read with our daughter Lydia and found I loved even more, thirty years onward. Charlotte’s Web, I discovered, is not just about a Fine Pig but also about being kind, being a teacher, and loving each minute even when you know it will not last. Walt Kelly’s Pogo comic strips offered the joy of making your own entertainment out of words and everyday human interactions, a humor based on a bedrock belief in the value of all of nature’s creatures — or was that “nature’s screechers”?

Books from College

The Death and Life of Great American Cities, by Jane Jacobs
Pattern in the Material Folk Culture of the Eastern United States, by Henry Glassie
Streetcar Suburbs: The Process of Growth in Boston, 1870 – 1900, by Sam Bass Warner
The Strange Career of Jim Crow, by C. Vann Woodward

In college a series of books opened doors to my life’s work as a community historian. Jane Jacobs helped disrupt the 1950s – 60s horror of urban demolition by well-intentioned “experts,” instead pushing us all to look closely at how cities really work, an intricate “street ballet” of different people and uses. Henry Glassie offered a similar lesson for other material culture, from buildings to baskets. And Sam Bass Warner documented how cities grow over time, with a focus on the era of streetcar suburbs — such as Charlotte’s Dilworth, Elizabeth, Myers Park and Washington Heights, where I began my research for Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic Landmarks Commission when I arrived in the early 1980s.

The web of past decisions that shape our present options — that history did not just happen, nor has the world always gotten better and better. Southerner C. Vann Woodward opened my eyes with his exposé of the White Supremacy Campaign circa 1900 that systematically marginalized African Americans and blue-collar whites as well, actions we are still striving to undo.

Books on Charlotte

Charlotte, North Carolina: A Brief History, by Mary Norton Kratt
The Dream Long Deferred: The Landmark Struggle for School Desegregation in Charlotte, North Carolina (3rd edition), by ​Frye Gaillard

When I arrived in this city, I needed a grounding in its history. Mary Kratt brought a poet’s pen and a storyteller’s ear to her chronicle of the Queen City, still the best single source on Charlotte nearly 40 years after she wrote it. Frye Gaillard, a young Observer reporter with a journalist’s driving urgency and love for people stories, showed how ordinary Charlotteans made history in the Civil Rights era. As I helped create Levine Museum’s main Cotton Fields to Skyscrapers exhibit, we gratefully drew on Kratt and Gaillard’s factual research, but even more on their unspoken philosophy that “people make history.”

Books on Food and People

The Tummy Trilogy, by Calvin Trillin
Shark’s Fin & Sichuan Pepper, by Fuscia Dunlop

 

How to get a handle on the fast-growing international population that is making history in Charlotte today? Calvin Trillin’s light-hearted but smartly observed food writing for The New Yorker  showed the way. Fuscia Dunlop’s memoir of Chinese culinary life took it deep. Whether you are at a fancy restaurant or the most humble table, eat a great meal and you are savoring not just a cook’s handiwork, but also all the cultural heritage that stands behind it.

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