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Showing posts with the label Wells-Brown

William Wells Brown: First African American Novelist

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William Wells Brown was born into slavery in Lexington, Kentucky in 1814. His mother, known only as "Elizabeth," was the slave of a prominent physician there named Dr. Young. Elizabeth had a total of seven children: Elizabeth, Leander, Benjamin, Joseph, Solomon, Milford, and William. Bought and sold several times before the age of twenty, William Wells Brown spent much of his young adulthood in St. Louis, where he was forced into work in the slave trade along the Missouri River. Finally in 1834, Brown escaped slavery and headed North. After gaining his freedom, Brown married Elizabeth Schooner and the couple had three children. Between 1834 and 1845, Brown relocated to Buffalo, New York where he served as a conductor on the Underground Railroad. He worked as a steam boatman on Lake Erie, where he would ferry escaped slaves to Canada ( 1 ). By 1849, Brown traveled abroad to England, where he became a prominent speaker on the issue of Prohibition, and later, abolition. ...

Slave Narrative: Dramatized

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On a random search through YouTube, I discovered this very interesting piece that complements our present section quite well: a dramatic reenactment of slave memories that were recorded and transcribed. You may recognize the familiar voices and faces of some well-known and well-loved African American actors such as Whoopi Goldberg, Angela Basset, Robert Guillaume, Roscoe Lee Brown, and a popular talk show host, entrepreneur, philanthropist and owner of cocker spaniels...