Street Diplomacy Street Diplomacy

Street Diplomacy

The Politics of Slavery and Freedom in Philadelphia, 1820–1850

    • $49.99
    • $49.99

Publisher Description

An illuminating look at how Philadelphia's antebellum free Black community defended themselves against kidnappings and how this "street diplomacy" forced Pennsylvanians to confront the politics of slavery.

As the most southern of northern cities in a state that bordered three slave states, antebellum Philadelphia maintained a long tradition of both abolitionism and fugitive slave activity. Although Philadelphia's Black community lived in a free city in a free state, they faced constant threats to their personal safety and freedom. Enslavers, kidnappers, and slave catchers prowled the streets of Philadelphia in search of potential victims, violent anti-Black riots erupted in the city, and white politicians legislated to undermine Black freedom. In Street Diplomacy, Elliott Drago illustrates how the political and physical conflicts that arose over fugitive slave removals and the kidnappings of free Black people forced Philadelphians to confront the politics of slavery.

Pennsylvania was legally a free state, at the street level and in the lived experience of its Black citizens, but Pennsylvania was closer to a slave state due to porous borders and the complicity of white officials. Legal contests between slavery and freedom at the local level triggered legislative processes at the state and national level, which underscored the inability of white politicians to resolve the paradoxes of what it meant for a Black American to inhabit a free state within a slave society.

Piecing together fragmentary source material from archives, correspondence, genealogies, and newspapers, Drago examines these conflicts in Philadelphia from 1820 to 1850. Studying these timely struggles over race, politics, enslavement, and freedom in Philadelphia will encourage scholars to reexamine how Black freedom was not secure in Pennsylvania or in the wider United States.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2022
November 15
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
304
Pages
PUBLISHER
Johns Hopkins University Press
SELLER
Johns Hopkins University
SIZE
7.2
MB

More Books Like This

Bloody Dawn Bloody Dawn
1994
Force and Freedom Force and Freedom
2019
The Imperfect Revolution The Imperfect Revolution
2013
The Life and Death of Gus Reed The Life and Death of Gus Reed
2014
The Rise of Aggressive Abolitionism The Rise of Aggressive Abolitionism
2021
The Cause of Freedom The Cause of Freedom
2021