Monumental

Oscar Dunn and His Radical Fight in Reconstruction Louisiana

Brian K. Mitchell, Barrington S. Edwards, and Nick Weldon

The Historic New Orleans Collection 2021 • paperback
7" x 10" • 256 pp.
180 fully illustrated pages; 12 additional images
ISBN 978-0-917860-83-6
$19.95

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“An exemplary graphic work built on a foundation of impressive scholarship.”

Kirkus Reviews (starred review) Read the full review.

“In its diligent documentation, clear explanations, and dramatic story, Monumental will enhance and expand popular knowledge about Oscar Dunn and Reconstruction.”

Journal of the Civil War Era Read the full review.

2023 Louisiana Library Association Louisiana Literary Award (link)

2022 AASLH Leadership in History Publication Award (link)

2022 Organization of American Historians Civil War and Reconstruction Book Award, Honorable Mention (link)

2022 NCTE Orbis Pictus Recommended Book (link)

2021 “Great Reads from Great Places” Selection for Louisiana, National Book Festival of the Library of Congress (link)

2021 SDUSMP Phillis Wheatley Book Award (link)

2021 SEMC Publications Competition Silver Medal, Books and Catalogues (link)

2021 Publishers Weekly Graphic Novel Critics Poll, Honorable Mention (link)


Monumental tells, for the first time, the incredible story of Oscar James Dunn, a New Orleanian born into slavery who became America’s first Black lieutenant governor and acting governor. A champion of universal suffrage, civil rights, and integrated public schools, Dunn fought for radical change during the early years of Reconstruction in Louisiana, a post–Civil War era rife with corruption, subterfuge, and violence. In life, allies and rivals praised him for his integrity and political talent. After his mysterious death, at the height of his feud with Governor Henry Clay Warmoth, New Orleans honored Dunn with one of the largest funeral processions in its history, and he was hailed as an African American icon. The state approved a monument to be erected in his memory, but it was never built. Dunn’s accomplishments, and those of many other Black politicians who emerged during Reconstruction, faded from memory.

A graphic history informed by newly discovered primary sources, Monumental resurrects, in vivid detail, Louisiana and New Orleans after the Civil War—and presents an iconic American life that never should have been forgotten. Contextual essays, a map, timeline, and endnotes add layers of depth to the narrative. Monumental is a story of determination, scandal, betrayal—and how one man’s principled fight for equality and justice may have cost him everything.

Brian K. Mitchell is director of research and interpretation at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield, Illinois. A New Orleans native, Mitchell received a PhD in urban studies with a concentration in public history at the University of New Orleans. Mitchell’s writing and research primarily deals with race, violence, and the Elaine Massacre, and has been featured by CNN, NPR, and the Associated Press.

Barrington S. Edwards, an artist and community activist from Boston, earned a BFA in communication design and an MS in art education at the Massachusetts College of Art. He taught visual arts at the Boston Arts Academy for nineteen years. He is an award-winning teacher and artist, a publisher of comics and graphic media, and works as a freelance artist and consultant. He teaches art education at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design.

Nick Weldon is editor at The Historic New Orleans Collection, where he edited Enigmatic Stream: Industrial Landscapes of the Lower Mississippi River by Richard Sexton (2019), and materials for several major exhibitions. He was previously senior editor at Runner’s World, and has written about a wide range of topics for outlets including Backpacker, SB Nation, Vice, New Orleans magazine, Garden and Gun, Paper Monuments, Sports Illustrated, and ESPN.com.


Help THNOC provide copies of Monumental to schools and libraries around the country

In 1976, second-grader Brian K. Mitchell told his classmates about his ancestor, Louisiana Lieutenant Governor Oscar J. Dunn. “Brian, I think you’re mistaken,” responded his teacher. “There have been no Black governors or lieutenant governors.” In the video below, Mitchell explains how this childhood memory drove him to understand Dunn's life and why he chose to tell his story in a comic book.

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