John Brown's Raid

audiobook

John Brown's Raid

by United States. National Park Service

EN·~2 hours

Chapters

Description

In the opening chapters, listeners are drawn into the chilly October night of 1859, when a small, determined band of men—lawyers, farmers, escaped convicts, and former slaves—crept toward Harpers Ferry under the cover of mist. Guided by the fierce‑eyed John Brown, this eclectic “Provisional Army” carries concealed rifles and a single, radical purpose: to strike at the heart of slavery. The narrative paints the tense journey with vivid detail, letting you feel the cold air, the creaking wagon, and the uneasy resolve of those prepared to sacrifice everything.

The book then steps back to trace Brown’s roots, from a modest New England farmhouse to the frontier farms of Ohio, where a strict religious upbringing forged his moral conviction that slavery was a sin. It explores how personal loss, frontier hardships, and the violent clashes of “Bleeding Kansas” shaped his militant abolitionism. By weaving contemporary reports, letters, and eyewitness accounts, the work offers a balanced, immersive portrait of a man whose uncompromising vision would soon ignite a nation‑wide debate.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (117K characters)

Series

National Park Service History Series

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2017-12-03

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

United States. National Park Service

United States. National Park Service

Charged with caring for America's most treasured landscapes and historic places, this federal agency helps protect natural wonders, cultural sites, and stories that stretch across the United States. Since its creation in 1916, it has become the steward of a vast system of parks, monuments, memorials, and heritage areas.

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