The long-hidden stories of America's black pioneers, the frontier they settled, and their fight for the heart of the nation When black settlers Keziah and Charles Grier started clearing their frontier land in 1818, they couldn't know that they were part of the nation's earliest struggle for equality; they were just looking to build a better life. But within a few years, the Griers would become early Underground Railroad conductors, joining with fellow pioneers and other allies to confront the growing tyranny of bondage and injustice. The Bone and Sinew of the Land tells the Griers' story and the stories of many others like them: the lost history of the nation's first Great Migration. In building hundreds of settlements on the frontier, these black pioneers were making a stand for equality and freedom. Their new home, the Northwest Territory--the wild region that would become present-day Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin--was the first territory to ban slavery and have equal voting rights for all men. Though forgotten today, in their own time the successes of these pioneers made them the targets of racist backlash. Political and even armed battles soon ensued, tearing apart families and communities long before the Civil War. This groundbreaking work of research reveals America's forgotten frontier, where these settlers were inspired by the belief that all men are created equal and a brighter future was possible. Named one of Smithsonian's Best History Books of 2018
They stayed Sunday night in Salem, but Monday they returned secretly to the woods, where they found the escaped group. John Walker desperately tried to fight them off but was beaten badly and tied to a horse. Slaughter left McClure with ...
2, p. 6. 352. “Its navy had 5”: Ibid., pp. 7—8. 352. “Aboard the Guerricre was”: Allen, p. 292. 353. “Lookouts sighted several”: Maclay, v01. 2, pp. 9—10. 354. “As a boy”: Tucker, pp. 454—5. 354. “Badly wounded when”: Maclay, vol.
Like many of the uninitiated, church member Ebenezer Robinson was curious about the secret rituals administered upstairs in the store. But participants could not describe them, under penalty of death. A nonplussed Robinson once spotted ...
As a free person of color, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, for example, felt unable to return to her native Maryland after the state no longer allowed free Blacks to reside there after passage of an 1853 law.63 California passed laws ...
John Wilson Press, 1866. Harrison, Lowell H., and James C. Klotter. A New History of Kentucky. Lexington, Ky.: Univ. Press of Kentucky, 1997. Henderson, A. Gwynn. “Dispelling the Myth: Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Indian Life in ...
Ash Tyler hopes to make his psychologically scarred father proud by training for his town's Stag Chase, but when he meets the mysterious Bone Jack, dark energies take root and the world as he knows it is upended.
Records the courage and self-reliance of an Indian girl who lived alone for eighteen years on an isolated island off the California coast when her tribe emigrated and she was left behind.
Three years before the Declaration of Independence, George Pointer was born enslaved on a tobacco plantation owned by William Wallace. The Wallace farm was near the banks of the Potomac River in a rural area that the British called the ...
Old white supremacist efforts returned, more ferocious than before. In Civil War by Other Means, Jeremi Suri shows how resistance to a more equal Union began immediately.
An action-packed thriller from global bestseller Wilbur Smith The Syrian plane disintegrated, evaporating in a gush of silvery smoke, rent through with bright white lightning, and the ejecting pilot's body was blown clear of the fuselage.