The Anti-Slavery Record, Volume 1, No. 7

audiobook

The Anti-Slavery Record, Volume 1, No. 7

by American Anti-Slavery Society

EN·~35 minutes·1 chapter

Chapters

1 total
1

THE

35:44

Description

This 1835 volume of an abolitionist newspaper offers a stark glimpse into the human cost of slavery in the North. It opens with the harrowing case of Stephen Downing, a fugitive seized by a Virginia planter and held in New York’s Bridewell for eighteen months. The report details the legal maneuvering that kept him imprisoned and the desperate appeal to higher courts, exposing the corrupt practices that denied him liberty.

The second narrative follows Francis Smith, a free‑colored man who, after a brief taste of freedom, is captured by a slave‑catcher and dragged back into bondage. His desperate escape attempt, the violent confrontation on a steamboat, and the brutal punishment he endures illustrate the everyday terror faced by those fleeing servitude. Interwoven with a passionate declaration that slavery is a sin, the pages convey the moral urgency driving early anti‑slavery activists.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~35 minutes (34K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

United States: R. G. Williams, 1835.

Credits

Carol Brown and The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2022-05-10

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

AA

American Anti-Slavery Society

Born from a demand for immediate emancipation, this influential abolitionist organization helped turn opposition to slavery into a national movement. Its meetings, petitions, newspapers, and lecture tours pushed antislavery activism into public life in the decades before the Civil War.

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