

An edition of A Fragile Freedom (2008)
African American Women and Emancipation in the Antebellum City (Society and the Sexes in the Modern Worl)
By Erica Armstrong Dunbar
Publish Date
March 28, 2008
Publisher
Yale University Press
Language
eng
Pages
212
Description:
"This book is the first to chronicle the lives of African American women in the urban North during the early years of the republic. A Fragile Freedom investigates how African American women in Philadelphia journeyed from enslavement to the precarious status of "free persons" in the decades leading up to the Civil War and examines comparable developments in the cities of New York and Boston." "Erica Armstrong Dunbar argues that early nineteenth-century Philadelphia, where most African Americans were free, enacted a kind of rehearsal for the national emancipation that followed in the post-Civil War years. She explores the lives of the "regular" women of antebellum Philadelphia, the free black institutions that took root there, and the previously unrecognized importance of African American women to the history of American cities."--Jacket.
subjects: African american women, Free african americans, Slaves, emancipation, united states, Antislavery movements, united states, Slavery, history, Philadelphia (pa.), history, Philadelphia (pa.), social conditions, United states, race relations, Women, united states, history, History, Social conditions, Slaves, Emancipation, Antislavery movements, Slavery, Race relations