The Abolitionist and the Spy: A Father, a Son, and Their Battle for the Union
An abolitionist and a spy, father and son, in the forgotten Western theater of the Civil War



The abolitionist legacies of Orville Brown and his son, Spencer, live on in this historic and daring nineteenth-century account. Journeying apart from each other, but with similar passion, Orville and Spencer's stories span virtually every major abolitionist event: from the battles of Bleeding Kansas and the establishment of the free-soil movement to the river wars of Memphis, Vicksburg, and Shiloh. Listeners will follow Orville west as he strikes out for Kansas Territory to help ensure its entry as a free state. But the life of his precocious eldest son, Spencer, serves as an eventful accompaniment to Orville's own adventures.



As a young Navy recruit in the Civil War's Western theater, Spencer volunteered to go behind enemy lines on numerous occasions. With his bold sleuthing and detailed diaries, Spencer's life unfolds vividly against the exciting backdrop of the Union and Confederate battle for control of the Mississippi River. The lives of these daring men are a fortifying record of American perseverance.
1134424952
The Abolitionist and the Spy: A Father, a Son, and Their Battle for the Union
An abolitionist and a spy, father and son, in the forgotten Western theater of the Civil War



The abolitionist legacies of Orville Brown and his son, Spencer, live on in this historic and daring nineteenth-century account. Journeying apart from each other, but with similar passion, Orville and Spencer's stories span virtually every major abolitionist event: from the battles of Bleeding Kansas and the establishment of the free-soil movement to the river wars of Memphis, Vicksburg, and Shiloh. Listeners will follow Orville west as he strikes out for Kansas Territory to help ensure its entry as a free state. But the life of his precocious eldest son, Spencer, serves as an eventful accompaniment to Orville's own adventures.



As a young Navy recruit in the Civil War's Western theater, Spencer volunteered to go behind enemy lines on numerous occasions. With his bold sleuthing and detailed diaries, Spencer's life unfolds vividly against the exciting backdrop of the Union and Confederate battle for control of the Mississippi River. The lives of these daring men are a fortifying record of American perseverance.
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The Abolitionist and the Spy: A Father, a Son, and Their Battle for the Union

The Abolitionist and the Spy: A Father, a Son, and Their Battle for the Union

by Ken Lizzio

Narrated by Paul Boehmer

Unabridged — 8 hours, 57 minutes

The Abolitionist and the Spy: A Father, a Son, and Their Battle for the Union

The Abolitionist and the Spy: A Father, a Son, and Their Battle for the Union

by Ken Lizzio

Narrated by Paul Boehmer

Unabridged — 8 hours, 57 minutes

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Overview

An abolitionist and a spy, father and son, in the forgotten Western theater of the Civil War



The abolitionist legacies of Orville Brown and his son, Spencer, live on in this historic and daring nineteenth-century account. Journeying apart from each other, but with similar passion, Orville and Spencer's stories span virtually every major abolitionist event: from the battles of Bleeding Kansas and the establishment of the free-soil movement to the river wars of Memphis, Vicksburg, and Shiloh. Listeners will follow Orville west as he strikes out for Kansas Territory to help ensure its entry as a free state. But the life of his precocious eldest son, Spencer, serves as an eventful accompaniment to Orville's own adventures.



As a young Navy recruit in the Civil War's Western theater, Spencer volunteered to go behind enemy lines on numerous occasions. With his bold sleuthing and detailed diaries, Spencer's life unfolds vividly against the exciting backdrop of the Union and Confederate battle for control of the Mississippi River. The lives of these daring men are a fortifying record of American perseverance.

Editorial Reviews

Kirkus Reviews

2020-05-11
The story of two Civil War–era anti-slavery activists, father and son.

Spencer Kellogg Brown was just 19 years old when he volunteered to become a spy for the Union, having already served in the Army and then enlisted in the federal Navy patrolling the Mississippi River. Spencer, writes Lizzio, an anthropologist and popular historian, may have been driven by ambition, a desire for adventure, and “an impassioned abolitionist’s abhorrence of slavery” all at once. Certainly a factor, as well, was the example of his father, Orville, an earnest Christian from the so-called Burned-Over District of western New York, where religious fervor fueled sectarianism and abolitionism. Orville tried his hand at this and that before moving the family to Kansas, where the issue of whether the territory would join the Union as a free or a slave state was being put up to a vote that led supporters of both sides to stream in to cast ballots. In the case of one key vote, nearly 5.5 out of 6 ballots were for slavery, about which Lizzio observes, “since legal pro-slavery voters greatly outnumbered free-soilers, Missouri settlers would have prevailed easily in a free and fair election.” The free-staters cried foul, and in no time the territory became the “Bloody Kansas” of the history books, with militias led by such firebrands as John Brown and his pro-slavery counterparts murdering opponents right and left. “John Brown has been described as a bit player in the Kansas conflict, yet the old broadswords man was anything but,” writes the author. “His massacre of innocent men on the Pottawatomie marked the moment when what had thus far been largely a political conflict turned violent.” The violence mounted to the point of civil war, whereupon Orville takes a back seat to Spencer in Lizzio’s fast-paced and lucid account.

A sturdy contribution to the popular history of the Civil War and especially its western theater.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940172734816
Publisher: HighBridge Company
Publication date: 11/10/2020
Edition description: Unabridged
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