Sunday, March 18, 2012

In Hope of Understanding

As it turns out, I didn't stick with The Women even one day longer. I started reading In Hope of Liberty, by James Oliver and Lois E. Horton, and I'm about 1/3 of the way through.  It's a scholarly history book, filled with many facts and details about African American life in the English colonies of the northern U.S., from the first settlements up to the Civil War. 

The story is told in chronological order, so I'm to the early 1800s now in the account. What I've learned so far is both surprising and not surprising.  What's surprising is how much information there is about how these folks fared in the northern colonies, and how well some of them were able to do, even as slaves.  What is not surprising is that they struggled to maintain the freedoms they gained and that many whites actively worked against their efforts.  Moreover, though slavery was outlawed in most of the northern states before the Civil War, the emancipation process was gradual in many of them, taking years, with some slaves not freed until the Emancipation Proclamation.

Nevertheless, the difference in the experiences of enslaved people living in the north versus the south is remarkable.  The smaller number of slaves in northern colonies helped to make whites less paranoid, it seems, and therefore more tolerant of blacks' freedoms.  So some slaves were allowed to become literate, to have time off, to travel to some extent, to make money of their own by hiring themselves out or selling their goods, to learn technical skills, to own property, and to buy their freedom. 

Some slaves were thought of as similar to indentured servants, and were freed after a certain number of years of service.  Some were freed in their masters' will, or freed by those who came to believe slavery was wrong.  The shipbuilding and fishing industries, an important part of the northern coastal economy, employed many blacks, both free and enslaved. They were valued workers and often treated as such by the ships' captains and other sailors, especially out at sea where different social customs could prevail.

Despite all that, though, those who were enslaved still suffered hardships, not the least of which was knowing they were not free.  But free blacks helped their enslaved brethren. There were fairly large populations of free blacks living in cities and towns during the 18th century, where some formed abolitionist societies.  Many blacks, both free and enslaved, along with sympathetic white citizens, wrote articles and petitioned their governors, constantly pressuring for changes to the law, for the abolition of slavery.  And when it was clear that a break with England was coming, blacks (along with non-blacks) made it known that a truly free and democratic society could not also be a slave-holding society.

In Hope of Liberty also talks about the many blacks, slave and free, who served in the wars fought, including the French and Indian War and the Revolutionary War. Many volunteered, hoping to be freed.  Others were sent in place of their masters who paid for the privilege of staying out of harm's way.  Some slaves who fought well in the war were freed as a reward.  Others were not, having to return to their former status once the war was over.  Some chose to fight for Great Britain when the crown offered them freedom in exchange for their service.

There was a very interesting section on Crispus Attucks, one of the first people killed in the Revolutionary War.  It's actually a much more complex story than I've been led to believe in the little history I've heard about him.  He was a runaway slave, and apparently very active politically even before he took part in what became known as the Boston Massacre. Here is a brief account of his role in that incident: Attucks. The Hortons tell a detailed story about him and many other important African-Americans of the colonial period.

Also interesting was the authors' account of African-Americans' complex relationships with Native Americans. The Hortons portray them as mostly friendly and mutually supportive.

In Hope of Liberty is very well written, and as a result of reading it, I'm getting a much fuller picture of what life what like for northern blacks in the early years of our nation's history.  I'm looking forward to learning more in the next couple of weeks.

Stay tuned!

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Time Travel Times Three

Well, I didn't post last week but I did finally finish 11/22/63, though it had a disappointing ending, in my view.  It seemed a bit contrived, even rushed, as if the publisher was breathing down the author's neck to get the book finished. I won't tell you how it ends, but suffice it to say it didn't end the way I had hoped it would.

At any rate, following that book I read a book for work, Seamless Teamwork, that describes how people can use Sharepoint (a Microsoft networked website program) to collaborate on projects. Since I'm going to be helping with Sharepoint sites at work, I thought I'd read that.  It's a pretty well written book, though some of it doesn't pertain to me, but it let me see how much people can do with Sharepoint.

Once I was done with that book, I started on The Women, by T. Coraghessen Boyle, one of my favorite authors. Published in 2009, it's a fictionalized account of Frank Lloyd Wright and his wives.  Boyle has done this sort of thing before--taken a historical figure and given him an imagined story.  (See The Road to Wellness.)  In this book he's got a Japanese man as his narrator who's telling us what happened during the time he was a architecture fellowship student at Wright's farm in Wisconsin.  I've just started it, but apparently he meets all the wives while there, and focuses his narrative mostly on them.

It's an interesting premise, but I'm afraid that so far this book seems a lot like another book by Boyle I read recently (and wrote about in this blog), East Is East, published 18 years earlier.  That novel was also set in an artist's colony (Wright's farm seems that sort of place), and it too had a Japanese protagonist.  Because it seems to repeat that book, I don't know if I'll stay with it. But I'll give it a few more days, I think.

I'm looking forward to moving on to a history book about African Americans in colonial New England, In Hope of Liberty, so maybe I'll jump ship on Boyle and head for that book.  We'll see what happens . . .