I Am Samuel C. Harrell
I was born in Gatesville, North Carolina, and raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, during a time when America looked prosperous on the outside. Still, the truth was far more complicated for people who looked like me. The 1950s were sold as the golden age—new neighborhoods, new cars, families growing under the glow of post-war optimism. But that wasn’t the world I knew.
Every summer, my parents sent us children back to Corapeake, North Carolina, the place where they grew up and where our roots ran deep. Corapeake was a world of cotton fields, red clay, heat that settled into your bones, and elders who expected every child to work hard, respect the land, and honor the family. I was around ten years old when I first stepped into those cotton fields.
That work shaped me. Long before I knew anything about economics or entrepreneurship, I learned discipline, responsibility, and the quiet pride of doing a job well—even when no one praises you for it. Looking back, the political climate around me—segregation, the slow rumble of the Civil Rights Movement—was the backdrop of those early lessons. I didn’t understand it then, but I was living inside a nation divided by race yet moving, inch by inch, toward change.