Lewis Hayden and the War Against Slavery
- Binding: Hardcover
- Publisher: Linnet Books
- Publish date: 02/01/1999
Unlike William Lloyd Garrison and other proponents of "moral suasion", Hayden, with his activist friends Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Theodore Parker, and others, believed in direct intervention in the processes of slavery. He did not write down his exploits. They were, after all, clandestine and illegal. But Strangis's careful research shows him always on the scene: Fugitive slaves William and Ellen Craft were married in his parlor; Harriet Beecher Stowe visited escapees in his Boston home and recorded Hayden's memories of slave life in The Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin; Hayden was instrumental in attempts to rescue the three fugitives Shadrach, Thomas Sims, and Anthony Burns; and he passed a destitute John Brown $600 only five days before Harper's Ferry.
After the war, Hayden was one of the first African Americans elected to the Massachusetts legislature. Upon his death in 1889, Frederick Douglass eulogized Hayden as a "brave and wise counselor in the cause of our people, a moral hero...". Young readers will find his story one of omnipresent commitment and danger, emblematic of theblack abolitionist activism that flourished in those dangerous years.
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