Cathy D. Knepper, Ph.D. has a doctorate in American Studies from the University of Maryland at College Park, specializing in twentieth-century history and culture. She has lectured at the National Archives, the Woman's National Democratic Club, the Roosevelt Presidential Library, and the FDR American Heritage Center. She is married, the mother of two sons, and lives in Kensington, Maryland.
Please follow the links below to learn more about and purchase the books.
Jersey Justice: The Story of the Trenton Six
Now available in hardcover and e-book! Sister Helen Prejean, author of Dead Man Walking, said of this book, “In 1949 six African-American men in Trenton, New Jersey were sentenced to death by electrocution on the basis of coerced confessions and manipulated eyewitness testimony. Historian Cathy Knepper lays out the intriguing story of their struggle for exoneration. Starting virtually alone, Bessie Mitchell, sister of one of the six, garnered popular support in what became a world-wide campaign to free the men, involving the likes of Paul Robeson and Thurgood Marshall. The author clearly shows that in the United States innocent people can, and do, get sentenced to death, a problem of great concern to the present day.” |
Dear Mrs. Roosevelt: Letters
to Eleanor Roosevelt Through Depression and War
Now available in paperback! According to renowned Eleanor Roosevelt biographer Blanche Wiesen Cook, "Eleanor Roosevelt never saw a wrong without trying to right it...She read her mail avidly, and used her influence to preserve democracy and fight for the people. Now, with this timely, useful, galvanizing collection of blunt and earnest letters, so can we." |
Greenbelt, Maryland: A
Living Legacy
of the New Deal
Professor Arnold R. Alanen observes "As the first full-scale assessment of one of the nation's foremost planned communities, this book is unique. More importantly, it examines the ideological changes that have occurred in Greenbelt up to the present - a very important issue in light of its atypical origins as a New Deal community. Combining archival materials with contemporary interviews gives the subject a sense of immediacy that many historical interpretations lack." |
