
audiobook
THE NEGRO IN THE AMERICAN REBELLION - His Heroism and His Fidelity - By William Wells Brown - Author of “Sketches of Places and People Abroad,” “The Black Man,” Etc - Lee & Shepard, 149 Washington Street - 1867
PREFACE.
CHAPTER I—BLACKS IN THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR AND IN 1812.
CHAPTER II—THE SOUTH-CAROLINA FRIGHT.
CHAPTER III.—THE NAT TURNER INSURRECTION.
CHAPTER IV.—SLAVE REVOLT AT SEA.
CHAPTER V—GROWTH OF THE SLAVE-POWER.
CHAPTER VI.—THE JOHN BROWN RAID.
CHAPTER VII—THE FIRST GUN OF THE REBELLION.
CHAPTER VIII—THE UNION AND SLAVERY BOTH TO BE PRESERVED.
This volume offers a concise, fact‑based look at the role African Americans played in the birth of the United States. Beginning with the grim reality of early slavery, it sketches how the Black population grew from the first arrivals in 1620 to a sizable community whose labor and lives were bound up in the new nation’s struggles. The author sets the stage by describing the social and legal constraints that shaped their everyday existence before the war erupted.
Drawing on contemporary newspapers, military reports, and first‑hand recollections from Black soldiers, the narrative highlights the courage of men and women who fought in the Revolutionary War and later in the War of 1812. Figures such as Crispus Attucks and the colored regiments are presented not merely as footnotes but as active participants whose loyalty and bravery helped steer the fledgling republic through its most perilous moments. The work invites listeners to reconsider a neglected chapter of American history, emphasizing both the sacrifices made and the contradictions of a nation proclaiming liberty while tolerating bondage.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (579K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger from page images generously provided by the Internet Archive
Release date
2015-10-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

d. 1884
Born into slavery and later becoming a leading abolitionist, this groundbreaking writer helped open new paths in American literature. He is especially remembered for Clotel, widely recognized as the first novel published by an African American.
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