More than 1,400 neighborhoods in the United States, most of them
African-American, were leveled in the name of urban renewal during the
mid-twentieth century. South of Main recreates the culture and history
of just one of those, the Southside of Spartanburg, South Carolina,
founded in the 1860s by a group of ex-slaves who lived together at the
end of a dusty road called Liberty Street. This poignant and painful
history examines the experiences of the people who called the Southside
home and whose lives were affected by the bulldozers of urban renewal.
Their story is an American story, a complex chronicle of a people
powerless against the whims of progress. This book received an IPPY
award in 2006 from Independent Publisher magazine as the best
multicultural nonfiction title by an independent press in North America.