To Raise Up a Nation: John Brown, Frederick Douglass, and the Making of a Free Country

To Raise Up a Nation: John Brown, Frederick Douglass, and the Making of a Free Country

by William S. King
To Raise Up a Nation: John Brown, Frederick Douglass, and the Making of a Free Country

To Raise Up a Nation: John Brown, Frederick Douglass, and the Making of a Free Country

by William S. King

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Overview

A Choice Academic Book of the Year: The Sweeping Story of the Men and Women Who Fought to End Slavery in America
Drawing on decades of research, and demonstrating remarkable command of a great range of primary sources, William S. King has written an important history of African Americans’ own contributions and points of crossracial cooperation to end slavery in America. Beginning with the civil war along the border of Kansas and Missouri, the author traces the life of John Brown and the personal support for his ideas from elite New England businessmen, intellectuals such as Emerson and Thoreau, and African Americans, including his confidant, Frederick Douglass, and Harriet Tubman. Throughout, King links events that contributed to the growing antipathy in the North toward slavery and the South’s concerns for its future, including Nat Turner’s insurrection, the Amistad affair, the Fugitive Slave law, the Kansas-Nebraska Act, and the Dred Scott decision. The author also effectively describes the debate within the African American community as to whether the U.S. Constitution was colorblind or if emigration was the right course for the future of blacks in America.
Following Brown’s execution after the failed raid on Harper’s Ferry in 1859, King shows how Brown’s vision that only a clash of arms would eradicate slavery was set into motion after the election of Abraham Lincoln. Once the Civil War erupted on the heels of Brown’s raid, the author relates how black leaders, white legislators, and military officers vigorously discussed the use of black manpower for the Union effort as well as plans for the liberation of the “veritable Africa” within the southern United States. Following the Emancipation Proclamation of January 1863, recruitment of black soldiers increased and by war’s end they made up nearly ten percent of the Union army, and contributed to many important victories.
To Raise Up a Nation: John Brown, Frederick Douglass, and the Making of a Free Country is a sweeping history that explains how the destruction of American slavery was not directed primarily from the counsels of local and national government and military men, but rather through the grassroots efforts of extraordinary men and women. As King notes, the Lincoln administration ultimately armed black Americans, as John Brown had attempted to do, and their role was a vital part in the defeat of slavery.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781594165627
Publisher: Westholme Publishing
Publication date: 10/18/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 696
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

WILLIAM S. KING is an independent scholar. He is the author of Till the Dark Angel Comes: Abolitionism and the Road to the Second American Revolution.

Table of Contents

List of Maps ix

Prologue xi

1 Life and Times 1

2 Bleeding Kansas 32

3 Raising an Army of One Hundred Volunteers 64

4 Carrying the War into Africa 97

5 An American Spartacus 129

6 A Setting Possessed of Imposing Grandeur 163

7 The Battle at Harper's Ferry 196

8 Year of Meteors 239

9 1860 274

10 Terrible Swift Sword 315

11 His Truth Is Marching On 354

12 Buffeted by Sleet and by Storm 390

13 Lincoln's Emancipation 426

14 Men of Color, To Arms! 454

15 Battles for Liberty, Battles for Union 500

16 War for the Total Expiation of Slavery 535

17 One More River to Cross 575

Epilogue 614

Notes 622

Bibliography 642

Illustration Credits 654

Acknowledgments 655

Index 657

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