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The Rising Generation

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Chronicles the history of emancipation through the cradle-to-grave experiences of a remarkable generation of black northernersThe Rising Generation chronicles the long history of emancipation in th...
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  • 30 July 2024
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Chronicles the history of emancipation through the cradle-to-grave experiences of a remarkable generation of black northerners

The Rising Generation chronicles the long history of emancipation in the United States through the cradle-to-grave experiences of a generation of black New Yorkers. Born into precarious freedom after the American Revolution and reaching adulthood in the lead-up to the Civil War, this remarkable generation ultimately played an outsized role in political and legal conflicts over slavery’s future, influencing both the nation’s path to the Civil War and changes to the US Constitution.

Through exhaustive research in archives across New York State, where the largest enslaved population in the North resided at the time of the American Revolution, Sarah L. H. Gronningsater begins by exploring how English colonial laws shaped late eighteenth-century gradual abolition acts that freed children born to enslaved mothers. The boys and girls affected by these laws were born into a quasi-free legal status. They were technically not enslaved but were nonetheless required to labor as servants until they reached adulthood. Parents, teachers, and mentors of these “children of gradual abolition” found multiple ways to protect and nurture the boys and girls in their midst. They supported and founded schools, formed ties with white lawyers and abolitionists, petitioned local and state officials for better laws, guarded against kidnapping and cruelty, and shaped New York’s evolving identity as a free state. Black fathers used their votes during annual state elections in the early 1800s to influence legislative antislavery efforts. After many but not all black men in the state were disfranchised by a race-based property requirement in 1822, black citizens across New York organized to regain equal suffrage and to expand and protect other crucial, non-gendered features of state citizenship. Women and children were critical participants in these efforts.

Gronningsater shows how, as the children of gradual abolition reached adulthood, they took the lessons of their youth into midcentury campaigns for legal equality, political inclusion, equitable common school education, and the expansion of freedom across the nation.

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Price: $69.95
Pages: 416
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Series: Early American Studies
Publication Date: 30 July 2024
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781512826319
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

HISTORY / African American & Black, History of the Americas, HISTORY / United States / State & Local / Middle Atlantic (DC, DE, MD, NJ, NY, PA), POLITICAL SCIENCE / Civics & Citizenship, LAW / Legal History, Slavery and abolition of slavery

"Gronningsater has seamlessly melded political, legal, and African American history with a cast of characters ranging from Frederick Douglass to Sojourner Truth, William H. Seward, Quaker philanthropists, and even obscure Black carters and washer women to produce a superb book about the consequences of the gradual abolition of slavery in New York...Based on extensive archival research combined with an awareness of the massive, relevant historiography, this is an indispensable work for US historians."
Sarah L. H. Gronningsater is Associate Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania.

Contents
Introduction. “Emancipate, Enfranchise, Educate”
Chapter 1. Poor Law, Slave Law, and the Golden Rule: Quaker Antislavery and the Early Modern Origins of Gradual Abolition Policy
Chapter 2. “To Be Born Free” . . . and Bound: The 1799 Gradual Abolition Law and Its Consequences
Chapter 3. Educating the “Rising Generation”: Associational Culture and the Politics of Black Schools
Chapter 4. Citizenship National: Slavery, Democracy, and Black Citizenship in the 1820s ##
Chapter 5. Male and Female “Citizens of the State”: Rights, Politics, Petitions, and Parties
Chapter 6. Antislavery Legal Culture: The Lemmon Slave Case and the Coming of the Civil War
Chapter 7. The Great Question of Equality Before the Law: The Civil War and Reconstruction
Epilogue. The Two Charlottes
List of Abbreviations
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments