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The freedom business : including A narrative of the life and adventures of Venture, a native of Africa / poems by Marilyn Nelson ; art by Deborah Dancy

Catalog Data

Author:
Nelson, Marilyn 1946-  Search this
Dancy, Deborah  Search this
Smith, Venture 1729?-1805 Narrative of the life and adventures of Venture, a native of Africa  Search this
Subject:
Smith, Venture 1729?-1805  Search this
Smith, Venture 1729?-1805  Search this
Physical description:
72 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
Type:
Poetry
Juvenile literature
Juvenile works
Place:
Connecticut
Middle Haddam
Date:
2008
©2008
Contents:
Witness -- Earliest memory -- Hellhounds -- Forty-two perfect days -- Honor among slavers -- A treasure buried -- Pestilence -- Anamaboo -- How I came by my name -- A voyage by sea -- Keeper of the keys -- Two masters -- Whispered plans -- Fat on the fire -- Meg -- December moonrise -- Sailing to Saybrook -- Aubade -- Work song -- Cows in the shade -- Sap rising -- Farm garden -- Mingo -- The incident of the clams -- The freedom business
Summary:
Born the prince of Dukandarra, Guinea, Broteer Furro was captured by slave traders at age six. As Broteer stepped off the African continent and onto a cargo ship bound for Rhode Island, the vessel's steward purchased the boy and gave him a new name: Venture. The young man crossed the Atlantic Ocean, landed in Narragansett, and worked through three decades of slavery to buy not only his own freedom but also the freedom of his wife and children. Remarkable in his own time for his Ambition and physical stature, Venture Smith would become known to history as the first man to document both his capture from Africa and life as an American slave. Poems by Marilyn Nelson sit opposite the text of Venture Smith's own narrative.
Topic:
Slaves  Search this
African Americans  Search this
Slavery  Search this
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_1076792