Freedom's Port: The African American Community of Baltimore, 1790-1860

Front Cover
University of Illinois Press, 1997 - History - 350 pages
Baltimore's African-American population--nearly 27,000 strong and more than 90 percent free in 1860--was the largest in the nation at that time. Christopher Phillips's Freedom's Port, the first book-length study of an urban black population in the antebellum Upper South, chronicles the growth and development of that community.
He shows how it grew from a transient aggregate of individuals, many fresh from slavery, to a strong, overwhelmingly free community less wracked by class and intraracial divisions than were other cities. Almost from the start, Phillips states, Baltimore's African Americans forged their
own freedom and actively defended it--in a state that maintained slavery
and whose white leadership came to resent the liberties the city's black
people had achieved.

From inside the book

Contents

Slavery and the Growth of Baltimore
7
The Roots of QuasiFreedom
30
The Urban Melange
57
The Contours of QuasiFreedom
83
A Community of Commitment ca 182060
115
Climbing Jacobs Ladder
117
The Maturation of a Black Community
145
Cursed with Freedom
177
Freedom Shall Not Perish
211
Conclusion
235
Notes
243
Bibliography
299
Index
337
Copyright

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About the author (1997)

Christopher Phillips, an assistant professor of history at Emporia State University, Kansas, and visiting assistant professor (1996-97) at John Carroll University, Cleveland, Ohio, is the author of Damned Yankee: The Life of General Nathaniel Lyon.