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The Days of Rondo

The Days of Rondo

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Author Evelyn Fairbanks

Minnesota Historical Society Press (August 15, 1990)

Evelyn Fairbanks lived along Rondo Avenue-the heart of St. Paul's largest black community-from the 1930s through the 1950s. Her memoir tells warm and human stories recalling those years in a vibrant community that vanished with the coming of the freeways in the 1960s.

Description

In the 1930s and the 1940s Rondo Avenue was at the heart of St. Paul's largest black neighborhood. African Americans whose families had lived in Minnesota for decades and others who were just arriving from the South made up a vibrant, vital community that was in many ways independent of the white society around it.

The Days of Rondo is Evelyn Fairbanks's affectionate memoir of this lively neighborhood. Its pages are filled with fascinating people: Mama and Daddy--Willie Mae and George Edwards--who taught her about love and pride an dignity; Aunt Good, a tall and stately woman with a "queenly secretive attitude"; brother Morris, who "took the time to teach me about the street and the people I would find there"; Mrs. Neal, the genteel activist who showed her the difference between a salad fork and a dessert fork; Mr. and Mrs. Taylor, who started a girls' string band; and a whole assortment of street vendors and playmates who made up the world of her childhood

As she grew up, Fairbanks saw many different sides of her community. Her words bring to life the all-day Sunday services at the Sanctified church, the "perfect days" of her girlhood, and the ghost stories told on the porch of a soft midwestern summer evening. But she also remembers a visit to relatives in Georgia, the deaths of her Mama and Daddy, and the difficult lessons her free-wheeling brother taught her about friends and money. By the time Evelyn was a teenager, World War II was changing St. Paul and the whole world in ways that touched upon her own life. And through the years she was also discovering what it meant to grow up as a black person in Minnesota.

A gifted storyteller, Fairbanks has recreated the patterns of her neighborhood life in a northern city. Her story ends in the mid-1950s, a few years before the Rondo neighborhood was destroyed by freeway construction. In preserving her memories of this distinctive community, Evelyn Fairbanks has added an important dimension to our understanding of Minnesota during those years.

Author information

A graduate of the University of Minnesota, Evelyn Fairbanks spent her career as an educator, administrator, and lecturer in human services. She also worked as an operations supervisor at Augsburg Fortress Publishers.

Reviews and news

Praise for Days of Rondo:

"Fairbanks spins yarns about St. Paul's black society with the flair of a campfire storyteller.
St. Paul Pioneer Press

"Must reading for anyone wanting a clearer understanding of the history of race relations."-
Library Journal

"Narrative history at its best."
Choice

"Her prose is simple and concise and is leavened by a rich sense of humor."
Minnesota Monthly

"The Days of Rondo is an interpretive account of events in the life of a black family from the South struggling for survival and meaning in a northern city. Rich in humor and detail, it provides a well-illustrated mosaic of socioeconomic, ethnic, and class realities as seen through the eyes of a young black woman."
David V. Taylor, author of African-Americans in Minnesota

Related resources

MNopedia article on the Rondo Neighborhood

Rondo Oral History Project

Rondo & I-94 Gale Family Library Guide

Rondo Neighborhood Map

Credjafwan Co-op, St. Paul


  • This title is also available at your favorite e-book vendor.
  • 192 pages
  • 5.5 x 8.5 inches
  • ISBN: 9780873512565

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