Timeline
Introduction – On Liberty’s Borderlands
Chapter One – Property or Persons: Black Freedom in Colonial
America, 1513-1770
Chapter Two – In Liberty’s Cause: Black Freedom in
Revolutionary America, 1770-1790
Chapter Three – Race, Liberty and Citizenship in the
New Nation, 1790-1820
Chapter Four – “We Will Have Our Rights”: Redefining
Black Freedom, 1820-1850
Chapter Five – “No Rights Which the White Man Was Bound to
Respect”:
Black Freedom and Black Citizenship, 1850-1861
Epilogue – Black Freedom, White Freedom
Suggested Readings
Documents
Julie Winch is professor of history at the University of Massachusetts Boston, where she specializes in the lives and genealogies of African Americans in the Revolutionary era and the Early American Republic.
Winch describes how the end of institutionalized slavery and the
freeing of African American slaves brought the United States closer
to achieving true democracy. However, along with liberty for all
came a widespread social inclination to redefine freedom and
equality so the concepts could be applied differently depending on
racial characteristics. These changing definitions were codified in
social rules set in place to provide a constant reminder about race
and about the places in society that the color of one’s skin
mandated for black and white people alike. The five chapters that
comprise this brief book cover from the early years of Colonial
America through emancipation and citizenship in the mid-19th
century. The sections are followed by documents and portraits.
Winch pokes and prods at the intangible space that lies between
blacks and whites, freedom and liberty, and concludes that
democracy cannot coexist with partiality. Verdict: History buffs,
sociologists, and those interested in African American studies will
be intrigued by Winch’s research.
*Library Journal*
Throughout the history of European settlement in America, free
people of color continually had to negotiate a challenging
'borderland' region between slavery and freedom. In this excellent
summary, Winch provides a nuanced history of slavery that
challenges traditional dichotomies of race and definitions of
freedom. She examines slavery from the perspective of those on the
fringes–from enslaved Africans in Montreal to a small number of
African-born colonial slave owners, black Loyalists, mixed-race
runaways in Florida, and men like Francis Johnson, an African
American musician who toured extensively in Europe. After
independence, although free people of color had achieved liberty,
they never achieved full access to citizenship and equality as
promised in the US Constitution. Well written and readily
accessible, this book offers undergraduates and scholars alike an
exceptional analysis of the complex definitions of race and freedom
throughout early US history. Winch also provides primary source
documents and images pertaining to slavery and freedom, as well as
an informative short essay of suggested readings. Summing Up:
Highly recommended. All levels/libraries.
*CHOICE*
In a very concise manner, Winch seeks to bridge the often divergent
literatures about free people of color in the North and the South
and construct a coherent narrative about people whom historians
have generally examined through regional and community
studies....Those familiar with Winch's scholarship on free people
of color in Pennsylvania and the Midwest will likely find her most
recent work stimulating.
*Journal of Southern History*
With the careful scholarship and insight we have come to expect
from her, Julie Winch offers an illuminating synthesis of recent
scholarship on African Americans’ complex experiences with the
meaning of freedom from their first arrival in North America to the
era of emancipation. Surveying free African Americans’ experiences
in the North, South and West, Winch calls attention not only to
blacks’ hopes and the possibilities freedom might offer, but also
the cultural contradictions and the social and legal limitations
that made true freedom an elusive aspiration. Winch’s
well-conceived organization, crisp prose, and thoughtful selection
of documents make this volume an extremely useful introduction for
scholars and students alike.
*Mitch Kachun, Western Michigan University, author of Festivals of
Freedom: Memory and Meaning in African American Emancipation
Celebrations*
Since 1600, free people of color in North America paradoxically
experienced the condition so central to their denomination in very
crimped spaces. Yet, over time, they would prove critical not only
in testing but in forging anew core values and aspirations
apparently originating with more prominent white settlers and
inhabitants of the vast continent—liberty, faith, equality, nation,
improvement, fellowship and community. To investigate this
protracted process is both daunting and disturbing. Julie Winch—a
long lauded scholar of free blacks in the United States, especially
its North—is uniquely fitted for the task. In this new volume, she
makes the complicated and multifarious history of free blacks in
North America accessible without so over-generalizing that the
essential complexity of this history is washed-out. She does so
both because of her evident gifts with prose and because of her
encyclopedic familiarity with relevant sources from diverse times
and places. No one else can speak of the breadth of this history
with her authority. This book summarizes exactly why that is
so.
*Peter Hinks, author of To Awaken My Afflicted Brethren: David
Walker and the Problem of Antebellum Slave Resistance*
In the words of the old African American adage: 'Freedom ain’t
always free.' Even Blacks born free and those formerly enslaved who
had somehow obtained their freedom lived in constant fear of being
forcibly re- enslaved. For enslaved Africans, and for their free
black sisters and brothers, Frederick Douglass said it best in
1852, some 75 years after patriots Thomas Paine and George
Washington waxed eloquent: 'your denunciation of tyrants, brass
fronted impudence; your shouts of liberty and equality, hollow
mockery.' In Between Slavery and Freedom: Free People of Color in
America From Settlement to the Civil War, Julie Winch has captured
the essence of both Douglass' words and the Black liberation
struggle. In so doing she has explored the true essence of freedom
and its meanings: then and now.
*Maurice Jackson, author of Let This Voice Be Heard: Anthony
Benezet, Father of Atlantic Abolitionism*
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