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A Slave On Slavery - Printable Version

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A Slave On Slavery - AussieMick - 06-01-2024 08:11 PM

The Weekend Australian newspaper has a literary section. An article by Caroline Overington has the title of this Thread. It refers to a New York Times article (for subscribers)
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/23/arts/john-jacobs-slavery-discovery.html

by jennifer-schuessler

It starts "One day in 1855, a man walked into a newspaper office in Sydney, Australia, with an odd request. The man, later described as a “man of color” with “bright, intelligent eyes” and an American accent, was looking for a copy of the United States Constitution. The text was procured, along with a recent book on the history of the United States. Two weeks later, the man returned with a nearly 20,000-word text of his own, bearing a blunt title: “The United States Governed by Six Hundred Thousand Despots.”

The first half offered an account of the author’s birth into slavery in North Carolina around 1815, his escape from his master, his years on a whaling ship and then his departure from “the land of the free” for the shores of Australia, where he went to work in the gold fields. The second half was a long, blistering condemnation of the country he had left behind, in particular its revered founding document
."

Here's the link to (rather laborious print) the old newspaper ...
https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/60178733?searchTerm=a%20true%20story%20of%20slavery


RE: A Slave On Slavery - David Lockmiller - 06-02-2024 12:45 PM

''Slavery is terrible for men; but it is far more terrible for women,'' Harriet Jacobs wrote.


RE: A Slave On Slavery - David Lockmiller - 06-03-2024 08:04 AM

''Slavery is terrible for men; but it is far more terrible for women,'' Harriet Jacobs wrote.

Harriet Jacobs was the much more well-known sister of "the man [who] returned with a nearly 20,000-word text of his own," bearing a blunt title: “The United States Governed by Six Hundred Thousand Despots.”