![]() ![]() Minter uses hand-painted linoleum block prints for a bright, sunny and upbeat accompaniment. Stories for young children set during Reconstruction are not common, and Lyons has called upon her own family stories and marriage to shine a spotlight on the period. The broom will stay with the family now as a symbol of the past and as a part of family tradition. It is Ellen’s idea to weave flowers through that broom for the new ceremony. The announcement from the pulpit that slave marriages can now be recognized brings more joy to Ellen’s parents, who share stories with their children of the forced separation of families and the importance of the broom that was used in their own wedding, a broom with a place of honor over the fireplace. ![]() There’s happiness in the air for Ellen, her family and all their neighbors as they attend church services celebrating the end of slavery and the beginning of freedom. Ellen cheerfully watches as her parents, former slaves, legally register their wedding at a Freedman’s Bureau during Reconstruction. ![]()
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