A plausible man The true story of the escaped slave who inspired Uncle Tom's cabin

Susanna Ashton, 1967-

Book - 2024

"The story of the man behind the book that helped spark the Civil War"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : The New Press 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Susanna Ashton, 1967- (author)
Physical Description
xxi, 344 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781620978191
  • Introduction
  • Prelude: The Man Who Came Back-W.P.A Interview with Jake McLeod (1936)
  • Chapter 1. "Feloniously Inveigling"-A Judgment on the Kidnapping of Doctor (1821)
  • Chapter 2. The Reverend Lowery's Story Based on Facts (1911)
  • Chapter 3. "Speaks Plausibly"-The Reverend and His Runaway Advertisement (1847)
  • Chapter 4. Henry Foreman's Boarding House Census Report of 1850
  • Chapter 5. "A Genuine Article"-Harriet Beecher Stowe's Letter to Her Sister (1850)
  • Chapter 6. Race: United States-The New Brunswick Census of 1851
  • Chapter 7. The Experience of a Slave in South Carolina by John Andrew Jackson (1862)
  • Chapter 8. The White Preacher and the Black Slave Lecturer (1865)
  • Chapter 9. "One Thousand Acres"-A Letter to General Howard (1868)
  • Chapter 10. "Hard Labor"-Court Minutes from Surry County, North Carolina (1881)
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Image Sources
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A scholarly detective story about a man who would inspire a world-changing book. In December 1850, writes Clemson English professor Ashton, John Andrew Jackson, a formerly enslaved person in South Carolina, spent a night in Maine with Harriet Beecher Stowe. He showed her the scars left by the whippings he had endured, likely told her of the family members who had been sold away from him, and recounted his flight from Charleston to Boston as a shipboard stowaway. He left the next day, having unknowingly provided Stowe the germ from which Uncle Tom's Cabin would grow. He might have become a powerful symbol for the abolitionist cause, but, writes Ashton, Jackson had a talent for alienating fellow travelers: "His is a tale of individual hustle; separate from most established Black and white organizations, he would almost always go it alone." His path would take him to Canada, then to England, where, having decided to "forcefully intervene in the global politics of slavery with nothing more than his witness and testimony," he tried to become known on the lecture circuit while subsisting on work as a whitewasher and rough painter. Perhaps daringly--or perhaps out of desperation, once he'd burned enough bridges--he returned to South Carolina after the war with the intention of creating a Black farming community on the land held by his former enslaver. Ashton sorts diligently through what she memorably calls "obfuscatory nineteenth-century ledger lines," piecing together the life of a man who might have been better known had his former allies not repudiated him. The narrative she unfolds has moments of both tragedy and victory as she capably returns a "canceled" man to history. It's a story worth knowing and makes a solid complement to Ilyon Woo's Master Slave Husband Wife. A capable contribution to the literature of slavery and abolition. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.