
At daybreak on October 17, 1859, John Brown, with a party of eighteen men, black and white, took control of the Federal Arsenal at Harper’s Ferry, Virginia. Brown believed that Northern abolitionists would join them, taking up arms or adopting mass political tactics to bring about the end of slavery. Instead, he and most of his surviving followers were captured the next day, and Brown was hanged for treason by the state of Virginia on December 2. The details of the raid and its aftermath have never been presented with such cinematic immediacy as in this volume. In addition, Nelson explodes the conventional dismissal of John Brown as a fanatic, and presents him as America’s greatest revolutionary, the organizer of a brilliant coup which succeeded, given a year or so, in beginning what it set out to do—to overthrow and dismember proslavery control of the United States government. Nelson captures the human pathos and high drama of the event, with its fascinating range of characters, both famous and forgotten, while helping the reader to understand its moral and political significance.
This work investigates the raid on Harper's Ferry as a calculated revolutionary act rather than the impulsive maneuver of a fanatic. Truman Nelson utilizes historical records and contemporary accounts to reframe John Brown's actions, arguing that the raid served as a strategic catalyst for the dismantling of proslavery political control in the United States. The author presents a detailed analysis of the logistical planning and the broader political climate of 1859 to support his interpretation of Brown as a significant revolutionary figure.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Critics and historians often note the author's dramatic, narrative-driven prose style, which departs from traditional academic dryness. Readers frequently highlight this text as a provocative re-evaluation of Brown's legacy that challenges long-standing historical dismissals of his tactical intent.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
1973-01-01
Publisher:
Holt, Rinehart & Winston
ISBN-10:
0030010519
ISBN-13:
9780030010514
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!