The Experience of a Slave in South CarolinaUniv of North Carolina Press, 2011 M09 1 - 60 páginas In The Experience of a Slave in South Carolina, escaped slave John Andrew Jackson seeks to educate his readers on the horrors of slavery. He spares no details in relating the murder of his sister, the separation of his family, and his own frequent whippings at the hands of a "Christian" master and mistress. He offers a scathing review of white religious hypocrisy, criticizing those who could not see the contradiction between worshiping a merciful God on Sundays and holding slaves under inhumane conditions. Jackson details his escape from slavery into Massachusetts as a ship stowaway after he is separated by sale from his first wife and child. He also describes his interactions with Harriet Beecher Stowe; his failed attempts to purchase the freedom of his family members; and his eventual escape into Canada following the passage of the Fugitive Slave Law. His work also includes a variety of carefully recorded hymns and antislavery songs. Jackson would eventually flee to England with his second wife before returning to South Carolina after the War. A DOCSOUTH BOOK. This collaboration between UNC Press and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Library brings classic works from the digital library of Documenting the American South back into print. DocSouth Books uses the latest digital technologies to make these works available in paperback and e-book formats. Each book contains a short summary and is otherwise unaltered from the original publication. DocSouth Books provide affordable and easily accessible editions to a new generation of scholars, students, and general readers. |
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... sisters, our wives, our children, and thank God with them, that "I was not born a little slave To labour in the sun; To wish I was but in my grave, And all my labour done." Many an English reader, knowing that every year we pay a ...
... sisters, our wives, our children, and thank God with them, that "I was not born a little slave To labour in the sun; To wish I was but in my grave, And all my labour done." Many an English reader, knowing that every year we pay a ...
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... sisters. Of these, two brothers and two sisters were dead when I left the plantation. My earliest recollection was of my mistress, whom I feared above all persons, as she used every means in her power to spite me. The reason for this ...
... sisters. Of these, two brothers and two sisters were dead when I left the plantation. My earliest recollection was of my mistress, whom I feared above all persons, as she used every means in her power to spite me. The reason for this ...
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... sister whipped to death. The circumstances were as follows:— My sister was religious, and perhaps it stung her conscience, or it might have been for some other reason; but, at all events, she ordered my sister to leave off praying, and ...
... sister whipped to death. The circumstances were as follows:— My sister was religious, and perhaps it stung her conscience, or it might have been for some other reason; but, at all events, she ordered my sister to leave off praying, and ...
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... sister Rose was married to March, before she came on our plantation. Mack English, having turned a wishful eye on Rose, wrapped himself up in his big cloak, and went to the nigger-house in the night, and called a [Page 13] slave named ...
... sister Rose was married to March, before she came on our plantation. Mack English, having turned a wishful eye on Rose, wrapped himself up in his big cloak, and went to the nigger-house in the night, and called a [Page 13] slave named ...
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Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Experience of a Slave in South Carolina. [Edited by W. M. S.] John Andrew Jackson Vista completa - 1862 |
The Experience of a Slave in South Carolina. [Edited by W. M. S.] John Andrew Jackson Vista completa - 1862 |
Términos y frases comunes
Anderson asked bit of pay bondage Boston brother brought Burl Quiney C. H. Spurgeon called catch Church coming day corn cotton fields cowhide death DocSouth Books escape father fifty blows fifty lashes gave gimlet give Glory hallelu hallelujah heard HERALDS OF FREEDOM hind-wheel roll hogs horse hundred lashes James English John Andrew Jackson John Ashmore judgment day kicked kill Louisa M'Farden married massa master minister mistress morning mother Mount Zion Chapel murdered nigger-house niggers night numbers Old Peter overseer Peggy pick cotton plantation plough pony rascal replied ring like judgment roll by faith rolls like judgment sail thro Salem sister slave girl slaveholder slavery snakebites songs soon sorrow and woe South Carolina steal stow Suboy sung swamp tell thirteen dollars Thomas English told trade vessel White Sulphur Springs whole world round wife wild turkeys WILSON STREET