summary of roll of thunder hear my cry chapter 8

Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

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Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

By mildred taylor.

  • Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Summary

Nine-year-old Cassie Logan heads to the first day of school with her brothers, twelve-year-old Stacey, seven-year-old Christopher-John, and six-year-old Little Man. It is October, 1933, and they are the children of an African-American couple living in rural Mississippi. The family owns four hundred acres of land, half of which is mortgaged, and Papa must work half the year on the railroad far away to pay for it. Mr. Granger, whose family owned the land during slavery times, wants to buy it back and constantly threatens to coerce them into selling it to him.

On the way to school, TJ Avery and his younger brother, Claude, tell the Logans that the Berry family were burned by the white Wallace brothers. A white boy, Jeremy Simms , joins them for part of the walk. He goes to Jefferson Davis County School while the Logans attend Great Faith Elementary. At school, Cassie and Little Man get in trouble with the teacher, Miss Crocker, by protesting that their used textbooks list the condition "very poor" next to their race. Mama, who is a seventh-grade teacher, pastes paper over the inside covers of her students' books to hide this information.

Papa returns unexpectedly from the railroad with a very big, strong man named Mr. Morrison , who got in a fight with some white men and lost his job on the railroad. He will be staying with the Logans.

In October, the children must walk to school in the rain and mud and are splashed by the vindictive driver of the white school's bus. (The black school cannot afford a bus because the county does not give it enough money.) One day, after being forced off the road into a muddy ditch, Stacey leads his siblings in digging a trench across the road at lunchtime to make it look like the road has washed out. After school, they watch from the forest as the bus drives into the ditch, breaking its axle, flooding its engine, and leaving the white students without a bus for two weeks.

Later, the children hear that the "night men" are out. Cassie sees cars approach the house in the middle of the night and then turn around. Later, TJ tells the Logan kids that these men tarred and feathered a black man, Sam Tatum , for accusing Jim Lee Barnett , who owns the Mercantile in the neighboring town of Strawberry, of cheating him.

Stacey takes the blame when he is caught with TJ's cheat-notes during a test. He follows TJ to the Wallace's store, where he has been forbidden to go, and punches him. Mr. Morrison catches him and brings him home. Stacey confesses to Mama, who punishes the four children for going to the store by taking them to see Mr. Berry, who is burned so badly that he is not recognizable and can no longer speak. Mama begins to arrange a boycott of the Wallace and Barnett stores.

Big Ma takes Stacey, Cassie, and TJ to the market in Strawberry. While Big Ma talks to Mr. Jamison, a friendly white attorney, TJ admires a pistol in the main store. When Mr. Barnett waits on white customers while ignoring TJ, Cassie tries to remind him of their presence. He calls her a "little nigger," then throws her out of the store for arguing with him. In the street, Cassie bumps into Jeremy's sister, Lillian Jean, and is forced by Mr. Simms to say, "I'm sorry, Miz Lillian Jean," as Big Ma looks on.

Uncle Hammer comes to visit for Christmas, hears this story, and is only prevented from going after Mr. Simms by Mr. Morrison. Mama explains to Cassie that Big Ma had no choice but accede to Mr. Simms' wishes. Uncle Hammer drives the family around in his new Packard and also gives Stacey a new coat. TJ makes fun of him because it is so big on him until Stacey gives it to TJ to borrow until he grows into it. Uncle Hammer makes him give it to TJ permanently for being irresponsible enough to let TJ take it from him in the first place. On Christmas, Mr. Morrison tells the story of how, when he was six years old, his entire family was killed when an angry white mob attacked his house, where two young men accused of molesting a white women were hidden.

Big Ma puts the land in Hammer and Papa's names to protect it. Mr. Jamison agrees to provide credit for the families who have agreed to have Papa shop for them in Vicksburg rather than patronize the Wallaces' store. Mr. Granger, who owns the land upon which Wallace store sits, threatens Uncle Hammer and Papa with the loss of their land.

Cassie pretends to be friends with Lillian Jean, acting subservient, calling her Miss, and carrying her books for her. One day she takes her into the woods and fights with her, pulling her hair until she apologizes for the incident in Strawberry. Cassie threatens to tell the secrets that Lillian Jean has shared with her if she says anything to her father. Mama fails TJ on a test for cheating. In retribution, he mentions to the Wallaces that she has covered the inside of the books. Kaleb Wallace, Harlan Granger , and another man from the school board come to Mama's class when she is teaching a lesson about the injustices of slavery and fire her.

Stacey stops being friends with TJ, and TJ starts hanging around with RW and Melvin Simms , who are older and are white. Mr. Avery , Mr. Lanier, and several other people stop buying goods in Vicksburg when Mr. Granger and Mr. Montier raise the percentages of cotton they want from their sharecroppers and threaten to kick anyone who continues the boycott off their land. On the way back from a trip to Vicksburg to buy goods for the few families still participating in the boycott, Papa, Mr. Morrison, and Stacey must stop when the back wheels fall off their wagon. As they fix them, the Wallace truck stops behind them and someone shoots at Papa, grazing his temple. The horse tries to run away, and the wheel of the wagon rolls over Papa's leg, breaking it. Mr. Morrison fights off the Wallaces, badly injuring them.

With his new injury, Papa can't go back to work on the railroad, but it looks like the family might scrape by until the bank calls in the note on their mortgage. Uncle Hammer sells his Packard to pay for it. He brings the money to his brother's family on the week of the revival, a religious and social event, but must leave quickly so as not to incite further tensions. TJ shows up at the revival with RW and Melvin, who he says will buy him the pistol at the Barnett store. When Stacey and everyone else ignore him and enter the church, TJ is upset but finally leaves with the Simms brothers.

That night, thunder rolls and Mr. Morrison keeps watch outside the house. TJ taps on the door in the middle of the night and tells Cassie and Stacey that he broke into the Barnett Mercantile with RW and Melvin to steal the gun. When Mr. Barnett came down to investigate the noises, RW and Melvin, who were disguised with stockings over their faces, hit him with the flat side of an axe. When his wife came down, they threw her against a stove, knocking her out. TJ threatened to tell the police, so the Simms boys beat him up badly. He asks Stacey to help him get home, and all four Logan children end up walking TJ back to his house in the middle of the night.

The Logan children watch from the woods as the Wallaces, Simms brothers, and other whites break their way into the Avery house and drag out its inhabitants, beating them. Many of them call for hanging TJ, Mr. Morrison, and even Papa. Mr. Jamison arrives and tries to stop them. Stacey sends the other children home to tell the adults what is happening.

After hearing the story from Cassie, Papa sets off with his shotgun and Mr. Morrison. Soon, Mama notices smoke coming up off the cotton, which is burning. She and Big Ma go out to fight the fire, which is heading towards the woods. Before dawn, Jeremy Simms comes to the house and says that all the white men (whom Cassie and her brothers saw at the Averys' house) have gone to fight the fire. He has also seen Papa and Stacey, who are all right. Just then, it begins to rain heavily, which puts the fire out.

Cassie and Little Man rush to the cotton fields where they see white and black men and women putting out the rest of the blaze. Mama and Big Ma take them and Stacey home. There, Stacey tells Cassie that Mr. Jamison tried to stop the hanging, but Mr. Granger would not cooperate until he smelled smoke and sent the men to fight the fire. That is when Mr. Morrison (strangely, not Papa) went to get Stacey in the woods. Cassie realizes that the lightening didn't start the fire, but rather, Papa started it. Papa and Mr. Morrison arrive home and Papa tells Stacey and Cassie that TJ is with the sheriff and will probably be put on the chain gang where he might die. Stacey bursts into tears and runs off. Papa follows his son after putting Cassie to bed. In bed, Cassie cries for TJ and the land.

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Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Questions and Answers

The Question and Answer section for Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry is a great resource to ask questions, find answers, and discuss the novel.

what might the silver Packard represent or symbolize? Why might Tylor use this detail to introduce uncle hammer

In "Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry" by Mildred D. Taylor, the silver Packard represents wealth, status, and power. It symbolizes the economic prosperity and social standing that Uncle Hammer has achieved, particularly in contrast to the poverty and...

How did the Logan Family get their land

Paul-Edward, Big Ma's late husband, bought the land from a Yankee. They have owned 200 acres for 50 years now and grow cotton. The other 200 acres are not fully paid for with mortgage.

Question is in details

Stacey calls the men who change their mind about shopping in Vicksburg "jackrabbits". Papa is firm yet informative to Stacey. He calls Stacey a boy, which he is, that does not understand the lives of these men. Papa is quick to set his children...

Study Guide for Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry study guide contains a biography of Mildred Taylor, quiz questions, major themes, characters, and a full summary and analysis.

  • About Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry
  • Character List

Essays for Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry literature essays are academic essays for citation. These papers were written primarily by students and provide critical analysis of Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry.

  • Racism and Perspective in Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

Lesson Plan for Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

  • About the Author
  • Study Objectives
  • Common Core Standards
  • Introduction to Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry
  • Relationship to Other Books
  • Bringing in Technology
  • Notes to the Teacher
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  • Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Bibliography

Wikipedia Entries for Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

  • Introduction

summary of roll of thunder hear my cry chapter 8

Roll of Thunder, Hear my Cry

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64 pages • 2 hours read

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Summary and Study Guide

Mildred D. Taylor’s semi-autobiographical Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry is a middle grade novel first published in 1976. The novel received the 1977 John Newbery Medal and was recognized by the Coretta Scott King Book Awards. With more than 6.5 million copies in print, the novel anchors Taylor’s “Logan saga,” a series of novels about the same family. A 1978 TV movie of the novel was nominated for two Emmy Awards. This guide references the 2016 paperback edition.

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In 1933, 9-year-old narrator Cassie Logan lives with her family in rural Mississippi. She and her three brothers—Stacey, Christopher John, and Little Man—walk to the Great Faith Elementary and Secondary School for Black students along a dusty road with their friends. The group must dodge a school bus carrying White students to the better-funded Jefferson Davis School. One of the friends, T.J., tells the Logans that White men set fire to three members of the Berry family. Cassie’s father, David, returns home from his job working on the railroad with Mr. Morrison, who is to help protect the Logans’ home. David decides that his family will no longer shop at the local Wallace store, as they are likely responsible for the attack on the Berrys.

The bus driver from the White school intentionally splashes mud on the Logans, and Stacey devises a plan: the Logan children dig a trench in the road, which fills with rainwater. The bus becomes stuck in the trench, damaging it. Later, they hear that a party of White men is going after more Black families. The Logans worry the men will target her family because of their bus prank. Cassie sees White men outside of the Logan home that night, but they leave without incident. Stacey and the Logans follow T.J. to the Wallace store. Stacey punches T.J. for stealing his mother’s test scores and letting him take the blame. Mary learns they were at the store and takes them to see Mr. Berry’s terrible burns. Stacey, Cassie, and T.J. travel to Strawberry with Big Ma to sell goods. There, Cassie bumps into Lillian Jean Simms . Both Lillian Jean and her father push Cassie, but Big Ma makes Cassie apologize.

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Uncle Hammer, David’s brother who lives in Chicago, arrives for a visit. He gifts Stacey a new coat. T.J. teases Stacey about his coat and convinces him to give it to him. Uncle Hammer berates Stacey for letting T.J. fool him and urges him to learn from the mistake. David returns in the early morning hours of Christmas Eve. The family tells stories by the fire, and Mr. Morrison closes the night with a sad tale about the massacre of his family by White men during the Reconstruction period, a decade after the Civil War.

Cassie’s mother, Mary, is fired for her role in the boycott. T.J. divulged this role to the White men, so the Logan’s cut ties with T.J. T.J. begins spending time with the White Simms boys. Several families drop out of the Vicksburg arrangement. Still, David goes shopping there with Stacey and Mr. Morrison again. The Wallaces attack their wagon, shooting David. David recovers well. Mr. Morrison takes the children along in the wagon to run an errand. The Wallaces attack again, but Mr. Morrison lifts their truck from the road, stunning them with his strength.

The bank suddenly requires full payment of the Logans’ mortgage, but Uncle Hammer sells his Packard to pay it. One night, T.J. shows up at the Logan house battered and bruised; he broke into the Mercantile with the Simmses, and the brothers likely killed Mr. Barnett and harmed his wife. The Simmses beat T.J. and blame him for the robbery and assault. The Logan children accompany T.J. home, and the Wallaces and Simmses arrive, intending to lynch TJ. They turn him over to a sheriff after David catches his field on fire to distract them.

The White men fight the fire alongside the adult Logans. It begins to rain, dousing the fire. Stacey says that Mr. Jamison used his car to block the Wallaces from taking T.J. Mr. Granger would not intervene until he saw the fire. Then, he ordered the White men to leave T.J. with the sheriff and go fight the fire. David and Mr. Morrison return home and learn that Mr. Barnett died of his injury. Mr. Jamison warns David to lay low. Cassie realizes that her father lit his own field on fire to stop the White men from lynching T.J. Stacey worries that T.J. will receive a death sentence. David cannot say that he will not. Stacey runs into the forest, crying. David follows T.J. Cassie cries in her bed “for T.J. and the land” (276).  

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  1. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry: Chapter 4 (Part 1)

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  5. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Book Summary Racial Injustice Mildred D. Taylor Timeless Classic

  6. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry: Chapter 7 Part 1

COMMENTS

  1. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry: Chapter 8 Summary & Analysis

    Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry: Chapter 8 Summary & Analysis. Cassie finds Lillian Jean on the walk to school and offers to carry her books for her. T.J. and the other Logan children don't understand what Cassie's doing, but when Little Man threatens to tell Mama, Stacey stops him. He says that whatever's going on is between Cassie and ...

  2. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Chapters 7-8 Summary & Analysis

    A summary of Part X (Section5) in Mildred D. Taylor's Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry. Learn exactly what happened in this chapter, scene, or section of Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry and what it means. Perfect for acing essays, tests, and quizzes, as well as for writing lesson plans.

  3. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Chapter 8 Summary

    Summary. As they walk to school, Cassie hails Lillian Jean. She says she's thought over what happened in Strawberry and has realized how she should act and she "should've seen it all along." She offers to carry Lillian Jean's books, and the white girl accepts eagerly. They part ways and head to different schools; Cassie's brothers criticize her ...

  4. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Chapter 8 Summary

    Chapter 8 Summary. Cassie is still burning from the insult she received at the hands of Lillian Jean Simms in Strawberry. One day on the road, Cassie chases after Lillian Jean, apologizes, and ...

  5. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Chapter 8 Summary

    Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Chapter 8 Summary. Cassie is being suspiciously nice to Lillian Jean. She offers to carry her books to school for her. Okay, that's weird. Meanwhile, T.J. is again nagging Stacey to get questions in advance of Mrs. Logan's final exams. Sometime after New Year's Day, Cassie and Papa have a long talk in the woods.

  6. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Chapters 7-8 Summary and Analysis

    Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Summary and Analysis of Chapters 7-8. Chapter Seven Summary: When Mama asks for Stacey's coat to shorten the sleeves, he has to admit that he has lent it to TJ until he grows into it. TJ was making fun of him, calling him preacher because of the way the coat fit. Mama wants him to get it back, but Uncle Hammer tells ...

  7. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Chapter 8

    Chapter 8. Cassie is being suspiciously nice to Lillian Jean. She offers to carry her books to school for her. Okay, that's weird. Meanwhile, T.J. is again nagging Stacey to get questions in advance of Mrs. Logan's final exams. Sometime after New Year's Day, Cassie and Papa have a long talk in the woods. Papa tells her that her temper could get ...

  8. What are the main events in chapter 8 of "Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

    In chapter 8 of "Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry," Cassie Logan has a plan and she works it to perfection. She finally gets even with Lillian Simms for the insult in Strawberry. She sucks her in ...

  9. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Chapter Summaries

    Chapter 1 Summary. It is the first day of school, and Cassie Logan is feeling grumpy. She dislikes the uncomfortable Sunday clothes her mother is making her wear, and she hates the thought of ...

  10. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Chapters 7 & 8 Summaries

    Chapter 7. In Chapter 7, Mama asks Stacey to bring her his new coat from Uncle Hammer so she can hem it for him, but he has given it away to his friend, TJ. Mama is furious and wants him to get ...

  11. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry: Study Guide

    From a general summary to chapter summaries to explanations of famous quotes, the SparkNotes Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Study Guide has everything you need to ace quizzes, tests, and essays. ... Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry is a novel by Mildred D. Taylor that was first published in 1976.

  12. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Chapter Summaries

    Chapter Summaries Chart. Chapter. Summary. Chapter 1. The Logan children are walking to the Great Faith Elementary and Secondary School, where they attend and their mother te... Read More. Chapter 2. The Logan family is working their cotton fields. Big Ma is supervising as the younger, lighter children climb up poles t...

  13. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry: Full Book Summary

    Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Full Book Summary. The Logan family works hard to keep the small piece of farmland they own. They endure many racial injustices. The children are harassed by a school bus full of white children, so they dig out a ditch in the road, trapping the bus and breaking the axle. Cassie, one of the Logan daughters, takes a ...

  14. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Summary

    Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Summary. Nine-year-old Cassie Logan heads to the first day of school with her brothers, twelve-year-old Stacey, seven-year-old Christopher-John, and six-year-old Little Man. It is October, 1933, and they are the children of an African-American couple living in rural Mississippi.

  15. Roll of Thunder, Hear my Cry Summary and Study Guide

    Mildred D. Taylor's semi-autobiographical Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry is a middle grade novel first published in 1976. The novel received the 1977 John Newbery Medal and was recognized by the Coretta Scott King Book Awards. With more than 6.5 million copies in print, the novel anchors Taylor's "Logan saga," a series of novels about the ...

  16. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Summary

    Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry is a novel by Mildred Taylor in which nine-year-old Cassie Logan narrates her experience of growing up as a Black child in rural Mississippi. Cassie Logan's family ...