EBOOK

Freedom Seekers

Escaping From Slavery In Restoration London

Simon P. Newman
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Year
2022
Language
English

About

Winner of the 2024 ACLS Open Access Book Prize & Arcadia Open Access Publishing Award, and joint winner of the prestigious 2023 Frederick Douglass Book Prize from Yale University's Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition, Freedom Seekers: Escaping from Slavery in Restoration London reveals the hidden stories of enslaved and bound people who attempted to escape from captivity in England's capital.
In 1655 White Londoners began advertising in the English-speaking world's first newspapers for enslaved people who had escaped. Based on the advertisements placed in these newspapers by masters and enslavers offering rewards for so-called runaways, this book brings to light for the first time the history of slavery in England as revealed in the stories of resistance by enslaved workers. Featuring a series of case-studies of individual "freedom-seekers", this book explores the nature and significance of escape attempts as well as detailing the likely routes and networks they would take to gain their freedom.
The book demonstrates that not only were enslaved people present in Restoration London but that White Londoners of this era were intimately involved in the construction of the system of racial slavery, a process that traditionally has been regarded as happening in the colonies rather than the British Isles. An unmissable and important book that seeks to delve into Britain's colonial past.

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Reviews

"The colonial criminality of the 'runaway slave' and of any who harboured them has much clearer connections to the cobbled streets of Westminster and the square mile than many will wish to acknowledge, but the records, as illuminated across Simon Newman's brilliant study, are clear. Freedom Seekers is an accomplished, meticulous, and gripping study of Black men, women, and children who sought to c
Dave Hitchcock
"Brimming with revelations at every turn, Freedom Seekers reorders our understanding of the making of racial slavery, finding the early traces of British exploitation of Black people in the streets, squares, lanes, and alleyways of the expanding metropolis. Restoration London may have been far from the plantation horrors of the empire in the Caribbean but it contained the same forces of human abus
Matthew J. Smith (Director, Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slavery, UCL)

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