The Music They Made

Edward and Carrie Smith live through the Great Depression and the Great Migration. Like many people of African descent in the early 1900s, they fled the South in hopes the North would provide opportunities.

Inspired by the true lives of Edward and Carrie Crawford Smith, The Music They Made is a richly woven historical novel of love, loss, and perseverance during one of the most turbulent periods in American history.
Edward leaves Nashville in 1898 to serve during the Spanish-American War and disappears into a dangerous world of shifting loyalties, forgotten memories, and far-off conflicts. As Carrie waits, the life they planned slips further from reach — until fate offers them a second chance.
Drawn into the Great Migration, Edward and Carrie journey north to Chicago, where African American families seek safety from Southern violence and Jim Crow oppression. In a growing Black community alive with culture, music, and hope, they build a family, face personal tragedy, and confront the harsh realities of racial injustice, labor struggles, and economic hardship.
Through war, migration, and social change, Carrie becomes a tireless advocate for fair employment and education, while Edward’s violin and Carrie’s piano remain the quiet heartbeat of their home.
The Music They Made is a moving portrait of two imperfect people who, despite separation and sorrow, never fully let go of the bond that first brought them together — and whose legacy is written not only in history, but in the lives they shaped.

The book is available at various ebook outlets and at Amazon as a print book.