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The Abolitionist's Journal : Memories of an American Antislavery Family / James D. Richardson.

Ebook Central College Complete Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Richardson, James, 1953- author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Abolitionists--United States--Biography.
Abolitionists.
Antislavery movements--United States.
Antislavery movements.
Richardson, George Warren, 1824-1911.
Richardson, George Warren.
Richardson, James, 1953-.
Richardson, James.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (327 pages)
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
Albuquerque, New Mexico : University of New Mexico Press, [2022]
Summary:
"The Abolitionist's Journal is a skillfully researched and deeply engrossing story centering on the life and times of the author's great-great grandfather, George Richardson (1824-1911)--a fervently abolitionist preacher who offered shelter to runaway slaves on the Underground Railroad, served as a chaplain in the Union Army during the Civil War, and founded a school in Texas for freed black slaves after the war, which still stands today as a testament to his extraordinary life. The book weaves his story with the selfdiscovery of how the author's ancestor's life has intersected with his own. "The book opens with the George Richardson's handwritten journal that sat unread on my father's bookshelf for decades until the weekend before I entered seminary in midlife to become an Episcopal priest. After reading the journal, my life was never the same again. "George Richardson filled his pages with stories of war, white vigilantes, Black schools, church politics and frontier congregations. He wrote of adventures at Yellowstone in the early years of the national park. He wrote of getting lost on horseback in Minnesota in the winter, and the crushing devastation in the Mississippi countryside in the days after the Civil War. He wrote of life in Black shantytowns, Texas Panhandle cowboys and Idaho Mormons. His is the story of our country. "After reading the journal, my wife Lori and I began retracing the steps through eight states of George and his wife Caroline Richardson (1825-1887), visiting graveyards, battlefields, schools, churches and the house they used on the Underground Railroad. "Our journey has brought me to the brink of the racial divide in America. The book raises uncomfortable questions about why a family that was committed to racial equality in the mid-nineteenth century lost that commitment in the twentieth century. The book covers my years as a journalist covering the resurgent Ku Klux Klan in Southern California, and later serving as a church pastor in Charlottesville, invaded by neoNazis thrusting this college town into the national spotlight.""-- Provided by publisher
Contents:
The Journal
Awakenings
Daisy
Dreams
James Crow
Chauncey Hobart
Across That Bridge
Freedom Ride
Dagger Strokes
The Slaughter Pen
The Fort Pillow Boys
Fort Pickering
Snakes
Rebs and Refugees
Licked
War Criminal Park
Owen
Texas Burning
Jeremiah Webster
Glory Bound
The Gillette Mansion
Alleyton
Caroline
Austin City Limits
Lily
Wild Geese
Emma
Seas and Stars
Charlottesville
Remembering
Notes:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
9780826364043
0826364047
OCLC:
1347259604

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