|
|
LONG
JOURNEYS
An Arkansas Family in Africa . . . a scrapbook of memories
and history
Sarah McKee Burnside
This book
was written to answer the many people who have asked the author,
“What was it like to grow up in Africa?” Scattered
throughout the text, there are stories—some scary, some
sad, and some happy—about “home” from different
perspectives, long before the Congo became independent in
1960.
Sarah
McKee Burnside was born in 1930 at Bibanga, a mission
station in what was then the Belgian Congo. She was the youngest
of four siblings. George T. McKee and his wife, Elsie Maxfield
McKee, had gone to the Congo in 1911 and stayed until 1941.
Sarah grew up in the Congo first being taught by her mother
using the Calvert System, then attending boarding school when
she was eight-years-old. For Sarah it was the most natural
way to grow up, being surrounded by Congolese natives. When
she was eleven-and-a-half, the McKees headed for Arkansas
and the United States. She never returned to the Congo. World
War II was in progress in 1941. Her parents’ health
was not robust enough to return after the war. She graduated
from Agnes Scott College with degrees in English and French.
She married a medical student who became a pediatrician. They
have a daughter and two sons. Later, when those children were
grown, she earned a master’s degree in drama from the
University of Arkansas. They live in Fayetteville, Arkansas.
January
2007
$24.95 - OUT OF PRINT
8 x 10; cloth, 112 pages, 86 images
978-09768007-4-3
Distributed for
Phoenix International.
|