Acknowledgments | vii
List of Illustrations | ix
Introduction | xi
A Note on the Text | xlviii
Introduction to the 2021 Edition | li
Classroom Use for The Book of Negroes | lix
Suggested Readings | lxiii
Black Loyalist Directory | 1
Book One | 3
Book Two | 143
Book Three | 193
Appendix 1: Tabular Analysis of the Black Loyalist Directory
| 215
Appendix 2: The London Black Poor | 225
Selected Bibliography | 263
Index | 271
Illustrations follow page 192
Graham Russell Gao Hodges (Edited By)
Graham Gao Hodges is George Dorland Langdon Jr. Professor of
History and Africana and Latin American Studies at Colgate
University.
Alan Edward Brown (Edited By)
Alan Edward Brown is an attorney in Minneapolis and
Lieutenant in the U.S. Navy
The Book of Negroes is an indispensable text in the history of the
American Revolution, one that deserves to be set alongside the
Declaration of Independence to consider what patriot ideals of
"liberty" meant and for whom. With marvelous clarity and range,
Graham Hodges recounts the history of the Black Loyalists and
connects it to a host of related subjects, from abolitionism and
Black nationalism to Atlantic, imperial and global history.
Informative, accessible, and up-to-date, this edition should be of
tremendous value to students, teachers, and researchers
alike.---Maya Jasanoff, author of Liberty's Exiles: American
Loyalists in the Revolutionary World
This new edition of The Book of Negroes provides historians,
genealogists, and history enthusiasts with an invaluable primary
resource that demonstrates the extent to which self-emancipated and
free African Americans valued freedom and endeavored to keep their
families intact at the conclusion of the American Revolutionary
War. Significantly, the passenger lists of The Book of Negroes
underscores the centrality of Black women who comprised 30 percent
of the 3,000 Black Loyalists who departed the United States with
the British; an indication that Black women put their lives on the
line for freedom and were an essential part of the early
abolitionist movement.---Karen Cook Bell, Associate Professor of
History, Bowie State University, and author of Running from
Bondage: Enslaved Women and Their Remarkable Fight for Freedom in
Revolutionary America
Graham Hodges and Alan Brown have rendered a fabulous service to
historians, genealogists, artists and others who seek to learn more
about a vital but nearly forgotten slice of American and Canadian
history. The Book of Negroes: African Americans in Exile after the
American Revolution provides a rich, detailed historical record of
some 3,000 African-Americans who, as a reward for serving the
British on the losing side of the American Revolutionary War, were
transported by ship from New York City to Nova Scotia, Canada and
other British harbours at the war's end in 1783. Hodges and Brown
bring this history to life, make it appealing and approachable for
teachers and students, and help us see the drama inside the musty
British naval ledger that provided the very first massive public
record of Black people and their migrations in the
Americas.---Lawrence Hill, author of the novel The Book of Negroes,
8/6/21
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