American to the backbone : the life of James W.C. Pennington, the fugitive slave who became one of the first black abolitionists / Christopher Webber.
Material type:
- 9781605981758
- 1605981753
- Life of James W.C. Pennington, the fugitive slave who became one of the first black abolitionists
- Pennington, James W. C. (James William Charles ), 1807-1870
- Abolicionistas afroamericanos -- Biografías
- Afroamericanos -- Biografías
- Trabajadores de los derechos civiles -- Estados Unidos -- Biografía
- Afroamericanos -- Derechos civiles
- African American abolitionists -- Biography
- African American civil rights workers -- Biography
- Abolicionistas afroamericanos -- Biografías
- 920/.009296073
- B E 185.97 P414W 2011
Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Recursos Regionales | Recursos Regionales (2do. Piso) | B E 185.97 P414W 2011 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 00000072108 |
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B E 185.97 H168r 2021 Roots : the saga of an American family / | B E 185.97 H842B 2005 My face is black is true : Callie House and the struggle for ex-slave reparations / | B E 185.97 K52v 1970 Mi vida con Martin Luther King / | B E 185.97 P414W 2011 American to the backbone : the life of James W.C. Pennington, the fugitive slave who became one of the first black abolitionists / | B E 185.97 P945a 2017 This African-American life / | B E 185.97 P954b 1989 A black woman's odyssey through Russia and Jamaica: the narrative of Nancy Prince/ | B E 185.97 T734T 1981 The other Toussaint : a modern biography of Pierre Toussaint, a post-revolutionary Black / |
Incluye referencias bibliográficas e indice.
Finding freedom -- Slavery as it was -- Pennsylvania -- Brooklyn, part I -- Brooklyn, Part II -- School teacher in Newton -- Yale -- Return to Newton -- Hartford, part I -- Hartford, part II -- The Mendi mission -- England -- New beginning in Hartford -- Hartford, part III -- New York, 1848-1849 -- Great Britain, 1849-1851 -- New York, 1851-1852 -- New York, 1853-1854 -- New York, 1854-1855 -- New York, 1855 -- Hartford and New York, 1856-1864 -- Mississippi, Maine, and Florida, 1864-1870.
The incredible story of a forgotten hero of nineteenth century New York City who was a former slave, Yale scholar, minister, and international leader of the Antebellum abolitionist movement. At the age of 19, scared and illiterate, James Pennington escaped from slavery in 1827 and soon became one of the leading voices against slavery prior to the Civil War. Just ten years after his escape, Pennington was ordained to the ministry of the Congregational Church after studying at Yale. Moving to Hartford, he became involved with the Amistad captives and founded the first African American mission society. He traveled to England as a delegate to a world Anti-Slavery Convention and served also as a delegate to an international peace convention. Later he traveled widely in Britain and on the continent to gain support for the American abolition movement. He was so respected by European audiences that the University of Heidelberg awarded him an honorary doctorate, making him the first person of African descent to receive such a degree. As he fought for equal rights in America, Pennington's voice was not limited to the preacher's pulpit. He wrote the first-ever "History of the Colored People" as well as a careful study of the moral basis for civil disobedience, which would be echoed decades later by Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr.
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