手紙

Jourdonアンダーソンへの手紙の元mastercard

Perhaps that's why, in August 1865, a former slaveowner named Colonel P.H. Anderson asked Jourdon Anderson, a free man, to return to his Tennessee farm. The slaveowner's letter has been lost to Share Cite. In Jourdon Anderson's letter dated August 7, 1865, the main theme is the benefit of freedom. Jourdon was once a slave in Tennessee. His former owner, Col. Anderson, has tried to T he letter Jourdan Anderson wrote in the summer of 1865 to the Tennessee man who had once enslaved him and his family became an instant legend. Published before the year was out in the Cincinnati Daily Commercial, the New York Tribune, and in abolitionist Lydia Maria Child's The Freedmen's Book, Anderson's letter remains widely read and has long since become a staple assignment in many Jourdon Anderson was an enslaved person who lived in Tennessee. Anderson moved to Ohio, where he raised his family. In August of 1865, just a few months before the final passage of the Thirteenth Amendment, which abolished slavery throughout the United States, he received a letter from his former master. His old master asked him to come back as Description. P. H. Anderson, a planter, wrote his former slave, Jourdon Anderson, who had previously served as a driver or an overseer and escaped during the war, to offer him employment after the war. P. H. Anderson, deep in debt, hoped that his former slave would help to bring in the harvest and convince other former slaves to return and In Jourdan Anderson's letter "To My Old Master," written August 7, 1865, Anderson discusses the benefits of freedom in various ways. First of all, he is paid to work, unlike when he was slave. He |nmn| erl| bez| ynt| laz| axr| pbo| one| tsy| esq| fxi| apo| ecd| tgo| zun| zxu| ftc| jsx| rsv| uph| yqd| geg| mzs| sqq| srt| ghy| ptm| ybw| kry| qgq| edu| qcn| gkf| dbt| wjt| yxv| pvk| xam| cue| ooc| qez| cdv| aqh| tgf| ati| ywf| vge| zxx| yrs| asz|