‘Hidden Figures’ Author to Introduce Readers to Unsung Black Families In Baltimore

By Sameer Rao Apr 10, 2017

Following the literary and film success of "Hidden Figures," author Margot Lee Shetterly will turn her attention to two little-known but prominent Black families in Baltimore. Viking Books announced today (April 10) that it has acquired the rights to Shetterly’s next two books. The first will focus on the mid 20th-century achievements of the Murphys, a publishing family, and the entrepreneurial Adams family.

As described by PBS, formerly enslaved patriarch John Henry Murphy founded the The Afro-American newspaper and turned it, with his children, into one of the country’s most widely-read Black titles. The paper tackled Jim Crow, the lack of Black representation in Baltimore government and other racial justice issues throughout its existence. The Murphys used this influence to successfully advocate local change, including desegregating the University of Maryland’s law school. 

A 2011 Baltimore Sun obituary for Adams family leader William "Little Willie" Adams notes that he and his schoolteacher-turned-politician wife Victorine spun wealth generated in the Great Depression-era underground economy into systematic venture capital and philanthropy. Their investments and donations sustained Black business development, employment and political clout for decades in Baltimore.

According to a Viking press statement about the not-yet titled book, "Shetterly will bring the history of Baltimore to life through the success stories of the Adamses and the Murphys, also showing the contrasting challenges faced by those left behind by redlining, lack of economic opportunity, and urban decay."

The second book lacks a fixed topic but will also uncover the history of hidden Black figures.