From Slavery to Freetown: Black Loyalists After the American Revolution

From Slavery to Freetown: Black Loyalists After the American Revolution
ISBN-10
0786406151
ISBN-13
9780786406159
Category
Biography & Autobiography / Cultural, Ethnic & Regional / General
Pages
251
Language
English
Published
1999
Publisher
McFarland
Author
Mary Louise Clifford

Description

During the American Revolution over 3,000 persons of African descent were promised freedom by the British if they would desert their American rebel masters and serve the loyalist cause. Those who responded to this promise found refuge in New York. In 1783, after Britain lost the war, they were evacuated to Nova Scotia, where for a decade they were treated as cheap labor by the white loyalists. In 1792 they were finally offered a new home in West Africa; over 1,200 responded and became the founders of Freetown in Sierra Leone.
This history follows ten of these freed slaves from their escape from masters in Virginia and the Carolinas to their sojourn in wartime New York, their evacuation to Nova Scotia and finally their exodus to Freetown, where they struggled for another decade for not only freedom and dignity but the right to worship as they choose, make an honest living, and govern themselves.

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