University of Washington Libraries
Skip to content  Home : Favorites : Ordering and Use : Help : Blog   
Share
Digital Collections Special Collections : A-Z List : Subject List : Advanced Search  

« Historical Children's Literature Collection

add to favorites : reference url back to results : previous : next
 
Zoom in Zoom out Pan up Pan down Pan right Pan left Maximum resolution Fit in window Fit to width Rotate left Rotate right Hide/show thumbnail
The gospel of slavery: a primer of freedom (W)
The gospel of slavery: a primer of freedom (W)
TitleThe gospel of slavery: a primer of freedom (W)
AuthorThomas, Abel Charles, 1807-1880
PublisherStrong, Thomas W.
Publisher LocationUnited States--New York--New York
Publication Date1864
PrinterUnknown
IllustratorUnknown
Image Production ProcessRelief prints--woodcuts
NotesIllustrated with uncolored woodcuts.
An antislavery alphabet book for children with illustrated verses that use slavery, abolitionist, and Christian terms to describe different aspects of slavery and the abolitionist movement. At the bottom of each page is a discussion of the principles of each lesson.
"W stands for woman." According to the verse, while there are many slaves who are mothers, there are no slaves who are wives because their masters sell their husbands and their children. The discussion at the bottom of the page explains how southern ladies' claims "that they care as tenderly for slave mothers as northern ladies care for poor white mothers" are false because in truth they are only looking to improve their property and increase their money-interest.
The illustration depicts a black woman who is tied to a post and being whipped. In the background, her husband and child are led away by slave traders.
Contextual NotesAbel Charles Thomas was a Universalist evangelist, minister, journalist, and historian. Although he served the Universalist church in Philadelphia in two separate pastorates totaling nearly twenty-five years and there wrote two of the most celebrated pieces of nineteenth-century Universalist controversial literature, he is most remembered for his short pastorate in Lowell, Massachusetts, where, as one of the founders and editor of the literary magazine, the Lowell Offering, he was a mentor to aspiring writers amongst the young women working in the textile mills (John C. Morgan, Unitarian Universalist Historical Society).
Thomas was also active in Philadelphia antislavery work. Iron Gray was a pseudonym used by Thomas.
Subjects (LCSH)Slavery -- United States -- Juvenile poetry; Slavery -- United States -- Controversial literature
CategoryDiscrimination and bigotry
Alphabet books
History
Political works
LanguageEnglish
Digital CollectionChildren's Historical Literature Collection
Digital ID NumberCHL1355
RepositoryUniversity of Washington Libraries, Special Collections Division
Repository CollectionChildren's Historical Literature Collection T449.T45 1864
Object TypeBook
Physical Description[26] p.: illustrated; 17 x 12 cm.
Digital Reproduction InformationPhotographed from original book in TIFF format using a Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi/EOS 400D, resized and enhanced using Adobe Photoshop, and imported as JPEG2000 using Contentdm's software JPEG2000 Extension. 2009.
Exhibit ChecklistExhibit checklist 20.2
add to favorites : reference url back to results : previous : next
Contact Us | Change display settings | About | Make a Gift | Privacy ^ to top ^