Family Patterns 195
See also: Frazier, E. Franklin; Herskovits, Melville; Slave
Culture
Fernando A. Ortiz
Bibliography
Bennett, Lerone. Before the Mayfl ower: A History of Black Amer-
ica. New York: Penguin, 1997.
Billingsley, Andrew. Climbing Jacob’s Ladder: Th e Enduring Leg-
acy of African-American Families. New York: Simon &
Schuster, 1992.
Clark, Kenneth B. Dark Ghetto: Dilemmas of Social Power. 1965.
Reprint, New York: Harper & Row and Wesleyan University
Press, 1989.
Frazier, E. Franklin. Th e Negro Family in the United States. Chi-
cago: University of Chicago Press, 1939.
Th e U.S. Census Bureau recently published some sta-
tistics that provide an insight into the contemporary struc-
tural reality and patterns of average African American
families. Th ere are currently 8.4 million African American
households in the United States, with 46 percent living
in owner-occupied homes, with a $31,969 annual median
income, an increase up from a $26,468 median income in
- Sixty-four percent of homes contain a family, and
45 percent contain a married-couple family. Additionally,
1.2 million African American grandparents are living with
their own grandchildren younger than 10 years of age, and
51 percent of these grandparents are also responsible for
their care.
Five generations of a slave family in Beaufort, South Carolina, in 1 862. (Library of Congress)