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Alan B. Govenar

African Americans Frontiers: Slave Narratives and Oral Histories

African Americans Frontiers: Slave Narratives and Oral Histories

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African American Frontiers concentrates on the period from 1703, the date of the first published narrative of an African slave's attainment of freedom in the American colonies, to 1948, the year in which President Harry S. Truman integrated the United States armed forces through Executive Order 9981.

This book is an invaluable historical resource that brings together diverse first-person accounts of individual African Americans through primary source documents, including: Henry "Box" Brown, who escaped the South by express mailing himself to Philadelphia in a wooden crate; Herb Jeffries, who introduced the black cowboy in Westerns; and Eunice Jackson, whose funeral home was destroyed in the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921. Such little known stories, most of them previously unpublished, resonate with the determination, forbearance, moral strength, and imagination of the tellers, and give readers an opportunity to see the world as it once was, as told by the men and women who lived in it.



Binding Type: Hardcover
Author: Govenar, Alan B.
Published: 07/12/2000
Publisher: ABC-CLIO
ISBN: 9780874368673
Pages: 551
Weight: 2.60lbs
Size: 10.35h x 7.33w x 1.47d
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