History

Somewhere Toward Freedom: Sherman’s March & the Story of America’s Largest Emancipation

In the American Civil War, General Tecumseh Sherman’s march through the South is nothing short of legendary. Growing up in South Carolina, I heard about and witnessed the effects of how he set the secessionist state ablaze in retribution. The fall of Atlanta also carries a special place in history: It was a major victory on Lincoln’s resume before the midterm elections, and Gone with the Wind forever dramatized (albeit in a biased manner) how…

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History Society

Last Seen: The Enduring Search by Formerly Enslaved People to Find Their Lost Families

Family is a bedrock of human civilization. After all, it’s where we first learn to care for ourselves, work for others, and socialize among each other. However, life is not always easy on families, and many eventually separate as time proceeds. Separation often takes a heavy toll. For those who suffered under slavery, dehumanizing conditions continually forced separations among spouses, parents, and children. On top of that, the Civil War caused a social upheaval that’s…

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Biography-Memoir History

A Slave No More: Two Men Who Escaped to Freedom

Facing a seven-hour drive, I picked up this audiobook so that I wouldn’t have to listen to a business book for that long in one day. The author David Blight had won a Pulitzer Prize and is renowned for his annals of African-American history. I knew his writing to be eloquent and clear, and his observations of human nature, compassionate and acute. I had great hopes for this drive, and thankfully, with Blight’s erudite help,…

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Fiction-Stories History

Wild, Beautiful & Free: A Novel

Jeannette Bébinn is the daughter of a plantation owner in Louisiana in the 1840s and 1850s. Her black mother, whom her white father enslaved, died during childbirth. Jeannette can “pass” as white. Her father dotes on her and invests in her during her youth, much to the ire of her father’s jealous, white wife. When Jeannette’s father dies suddenly, this wife finds out that her late husband skipped a generation in his will by deeding…

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Biography-Memoir History

Master Slave Husband Wife: An Epic Journey from Slavery to Freedom

I first heard the Crafts’ story as a student in American History class in a South Carolina high school. My teacher shared how the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 was first tested with a couple in Boston who recently escaped slavery. Mass protests made a mockery of the enslavers’ efforts, the Crafts eluded capture by escaping, and the slave-catchers returned to Georgia empty-handed. I remember that the story seemed more complicated than that, but even…

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Biography-Memoir History

And There Was Light: Abraham Lincoln & the American Struggle

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.” These words were written by an enslaver who held to white supremacy, yet they inspired a nation and inspire it still. A few (like Dr. King) have reached Lincoln’s heights, but no one has surpassed his personal struggle for a union without…

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Biography-Memoir History Leadership

A Man Named Robert: Lessons from the Life of America’s First Great Emancipator

This book attempts to accomplish two feats at once. First, it attempts to provide leadership lessons, and second, it tries to highlight the life history of Robert Carter III. (Ironically, the author and the biographical subject share the same last name. In this review, the author will be referred to as Dr. Carter while the subject, as just Carter.) Carter was a 18th-century Virginian planter who amassed great wealth around the time of the Revolutionary…

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Biography-Memoir History

The First Emancipator: Slavery, Religion, & the Quiet Revolution of Robert Carter

For most of us, American history consists of well-attested narratives. Northerners were against slavery while Southerners were for it. General emancipation of slaves after the Revolution was impractical. The founding fathers were deist in their religious orientation. To these three national myths, the case of Virginian aristocrat Robert Carter stands in stark opposition. In the late eighteenth century, he freed around 500 of his own slaves, to the ire of his neighbors and without compensation,…

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