Colored Travelers: Mobility and the Fight for Citizenship before the Civil War

Colored Travelers: Mobility and the Fight for Citizenship before the Civil War

by Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor
Colored Travelers: Mobility and the Fight for Citizenship before the Civil War

Colored Travelers: Mobility and the Fight for Citizenship before the Civil War

by Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor

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Overview

Americans have long regarded the freedom of travel a central tenet of citizenship. Yet, in the United States, freedom of movement has historically been a right reserved for whites. In this book, Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor shows that African Americans fought obstructions to their mobility over 100 years before Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a Montgomery bus. These were "colored travelers," activists who relied on steamships, stagecoaches, and railroads to expand their networks and to fight slavery and racism. They refused to ride in "Jim Crow" railroad cars, fought for the right to hold a U.S. passport (and citizenship), and during their transatlantic voyages, demonstrated their radical abolitionism. By focusing on the myriad strategies of black protest, including the assertions of gendered freedom and citizenship, this book tells the story of how the basic act of traveling emerged as a front line in the battle for African American equal rights before the Civil War.

Drawing on exhaustive research from U.S. and British newspapers, journals, narratives, and letters, as well as firsthand accounts of such figures as Frederick Douglass, Harriet Jacobs, and William Wells Brown, Pryor illustrates how, in the quest for citizenship, colored travelers constructed ideas about respectability and challenged racist ideologies that made black mobility a crime.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781469663920
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 02/01/2021
Series: The John Hope Franklin Series in African American History and Culture
Pages: 240
Sales rank: 813,225
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.55(d)

About the Author

Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor is assistant professor of history at Smith College.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

In this provocative book, Pryor effectively argues that black Americans, understanding that mobility was essential to citizenship, developed and implemented a host of strategies to resist what would be called Jim Crow on stagecoaches, streetcars, railroads, and transatlantic ships. The evidence from the press and archives is rich, enabling readers to know celebrated figures in new ways and to also meet a host of new figures whose dramatic lives and travels have been impressively reconstructed first in this work. This book's boldness—combined with its deep immersion in sources—is very rare.—David Roediger, University of Kansas



There is a lot of published scholarship that discusses the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century travel of African Americans, but Colored Travelers is original in that it examines travel itself as a critical site of contestation over antebellum civil rights. If the freedom of mobility is a defining characteristic of social citizenship, Pryor argues, then the formal segregation of space on and in vehicles of transportation—coaches, trains, boats—constituted the earliest institutionalization of policies and practices of racial segregation in the United States and, thus, transformed these spaces into hotbeds for civil rights activism. These are important arguments, and they have never been so thoughtfully and persuasively made.—Joanne Pope Melish, author of Disowning Slavery: Gradual Emancipation and Race in New England, 1780-1860

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