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Knowing Him by Heart

African Americans on Abraham Lincoln

Knowing Him by Heart( )
Editor: Hord, Fred Lee
Norman, Matthew D.
Introduction by: Hord, Fred Lee
Norman, Matthew D.
Contribution by: Davis, Rodney O.
Wilson, Douglas L.
Burlingame, Michael
Carwardine, Richard
Medford, Edna Greene
Oakes, James
Pinsker, Matthew
Prokopowicz, Gerald J.
Sellers, John R.
Weber, Jennifer L.
Douglass, Frederick
Douglas, H. Ford
Hamilton, Thomas
Hamilton, Robert
Campbell, Jabez P.
Turner, Henry McNeal
Payne, Daniel Alexander
Garnet, Henry Highland
Bell, Philip A.
Thomas, Edward M.
Smith, Alfred P.
Harper, Frances Ellen Watkins
Vashon, George B.
Strother, Thomas
Johnson, Ezra R.
CPS,
Smith, James
Augusta, Alexander T.
Sanderson, Jeremiah B.
Anderson, Osborne P.
Chester, Thomas Morris
Hudson, James H
Proctor, John
Purvis, Robert
Johnson, Hannah
Grimes, Leonard A.
Asher, Jeremiah
Menard, John Willis
African Civilization Society, African Civilization
Florville, William
Johnson, Henry
Street, Thomas R.
Morgan, John H.
Burr, Mattild
Beman, Amos G.
Cain, Richard H.
Roudanez, Jean Baptiste
Bertonneau, Arnold
North Carolina Freedmen, North Carolina
Rutter, Don Carlos
Stephens, George E.
Pennington, James W. C.
"Africano",
Davis, Annie
Chase, S. W.
Truth, Sojourner
Delany, Martin
Washington, George
Hill, Isaac J.
Newton, Alexander H.
Thomas, Jacob
Demby, Angeline R.
Wagoner, Henry O.
Le Vere, George W.
Keckley, Elizabeth
Trevigne, Paul
Liverpool, Thomas N. C
Cordelia, H.
Williams, George Washington
Love, Emmanuel K.
Scarborough, William S.
Langston, John Mercer
Clark, Peter H.
Hammond, E.W.S.
Anderson, Charles W.
Washington, Booker T.
Tubman, Harriet
Taylor, Julius F.
Wells-Barnett, Ida B.
Dunbar, Paul Laurence
Thomas, Elizabeth
Grimke, Archibald H.
Keckly, Elizabeth
Sinclair, William A.
Barber, Jesse Max
Terrell, Mary Church
Fortune, T. Thomas
Ransom, Reverdy C.
Du Bois, W. E. B.
Trotter, William Monroe
Griffin, Maude K.
Kealing, Hightower T.
Floyd, Silas X.
Knox, George L.
Inborden, Thomas S.
Henderson, George W.
Pickens, William
Miller, Kelly
Cottin, Etta M. T.
Gandy, John M.
Moore, Fred R.
Williams, Sylvanie F.
Smith, Harry C.
Magee, James H.
Curtis, James L.
Bowen Sr, John W. E.
Ball, Cora J.
Baker, Thomas Nelson
Yates, Josephine Silone
Johnson, James Weldon
Lewis, William H.
Murphy Sr, John H.
Wright Sr, Robert R.
Allain, Theophile T.
Bush-Banks, Oliva Ward
Gadsden, Richard W.
Johnson, Edward A.
Dunbar-Nelson, Alice
Harrison, Hubert H.
Woodson, Carter G.
Moton, Robert R.
Johnson, Georgia Douglas
HUGHES, Langston
Chesnutt, Charles
White, Walter
Perkins, Lamar
Haynes, Samuel A.
Lilly, William E.
Vann, Robert L.
Imes, William Lloyd
Gordon, Eugene
Mitchell, Arthur W.
Evans, Grace
Payne, Aaron H.
McKay, Claude
Simmons, Roscoe Conkling
Rogers, Joel A.
Bethune, Mary Mcleod
Franklin, John Hope
Baker, Ella
Jackson, Luther Porter
Townsend, Willard
Bunche, Ralph J.
Wilkins, Roy
Johnson, Mordecai W.
Murphy, Carl J.
Robinson, Jackie
King Jr, Martin Luther
Marshall, Thurgood
Sampson, Edith
Quarles, Benjamin
Drake, St. Clair
Wesley, Charles H.
Bates, Daisy
Malcolm X, Malcolm
Brooks, Gwendolyn
Lester, Julius
Bennett Jr, Lerone
Moon, Henry Lee
Sengstacke, John H.
Hodges, Norman E. W.
Strickland, Arvarh E.
Berry, Mary Frances
Harding, Vincent
Thomas, Clarence
Fields, Barbara Jeanne
Gates Jr, Henry Louis
Obama, Barack.
ISBN:978-0-252-04468-7
Publication Date:Dec 2022
Publisher:University of Illinois Press
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:USD $39.95
Book Description:

Though not blind to Abraham Lincoln's imperfections, Black Americans long ago laid a heartfelt claim to his legacy. At the same time, they have consciously reshaped the sixteenth president's image for their own social and political ends. Frederick Hord and Matthew D. Norman's anthology explores the complex nature of views on Lincoln through the ......

Book Details
Pages:576
Detailed Subjects: History / United States / General
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):6.15 x 9.25 x 1.6 Inches
Book Weight:2.06 Pounds
Author Biography
(Editor)
Born a slave in Maryland in about 1817, Frederick Douglass never became accommodated to being held in bondage. He secretly learned to read, although slaves were prohibited from doing so. He fought back against a cruel slave-breaker and finally escaped to New Bedford, Massachusetts, in 1838 at about the age of 21. Despite the danger of being sent back to his owner if discovered, Douglass became an agent and eloquent orator for the Massachusetts Antislavery Society. He lectured extensively in both England and the United States. As an ex-slave, his words had tremendous impact on his listeners.

In 1845 Douglass wrote his autobiography, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, which increased his fame. Concerned that he might be sent back to slavery, he went to Europe. He spent two years in England and Ireland speaking to antislavery groups.

Douglass returned to the United States a free man and settled in Rochester, New York, where he founded a weekly newspaper, The North Star, in 1847. In the newspaper he wrote articles supporting the antislavery cause and the cause of human rights. He once wrote, "The lesson which [the American people] must learn, or neglect to do so at their own peril, is that Equal Manhood means Equal Rights, and further, that the American people must stand for each and all for each without respect to color or race."

During the Civil War, Douglass worked for the Underground Railroad, the secret route of escape for slaves. He also helped recruit African-Americans soldiers for the Union army. After the war, he continued to write and to speak out against injustice. In addition to advocating education for freed slaves, he served in several government posts, including United States representative to Haiti.

In 1855, a longer version of his autobiography appeared, and in 1895, the year of Douglass's death, a completed version was published. A best-seller in its own time, it has since become available in numerous edi



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