Black Puritan, Black Republican: The Life and Thought of Lemuel Haynes, 1753-1833Oxford University Press, 2002 M12 12 - 248 pages Born in Connecticut, Lemuel Haynes was first an indentured servant, then a soldier in the Continental Army, and, in 1785, an ordained congregational minister. Haynes's writings constitute the fullest record of a black man's religion, social thought, and opposition to slavery in the late-18th and early-19th century. Drawing on both published and rare unpublished sources, John Saillant here offers the first comprehensive study of Haynes and his thought. |
From inside the book
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... black or white, Haynes found in Calvinism a tradition of exegesis that could be leveled against the slave trade and slavery. Calvinism helped to convince Haynes and his generation of black authors that liberty must be accompanied by ...
... black or white, Haynes found in Calvinism a tradition of exegesis that could be leveled against the slave trade and slavery. Calvinism helped to convince Haynes and his generation of black authors that liberty must be accompanied by ...
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... white leaders of the time, most notably perhaps Thomas Jefferson and Samuel Hopkins, were deeply divided in their opinions and feelings about black people. Both republicanism and the New Divinity offered an ideal of interracial accord ...
... white leaders of the time, most notably perhaps Thomas Jefferson and Samuel Hopkins, were deeply divided in their opinions and feelings about black people. Both republicanism and the New Divinity offered an ideal of interracial accord ...
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... whites argued that blacks must be expatriated so that the new nation would be free of black-and-white conflict. Colonizationists could not remove the black population, of course, but they helped to remodel American race relations and ...
... whites argued that blacks must be expatriated so that the new nation would be free of black-and-white conflict. Colonizationists could not remove the black population, of course, but they helped to remodel American race relations and ...
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... blacks had to countenance. Haynes felt the ground shifting under him. His ... whites that was neither antislavery nor problack. Ezra Stiles and Timothy ... blacks among them. The restoration of the covenant was, he believed, possible in ...
... blacks had to countenance. Haynes felt the ground shifting under him. His ... whites that was neither antislavery nor problack. Ezra Stiles and Timothy ... blacks among them. The restoration of the covenant was, he believed, possible in ...
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... blacks could claim their freedom and citizenship. He found in the captive experience, especially in Mary Rowlandson's widely remembered captivity, a twin symbol of slavery to sin and black slavery to white masters. Liberation from ...
... blacks could claim their freedom and citizenship. He found in the captive experience, especially in Mary Rowlandson's widely remembered captivity, a twin symbol of slavery to sin and black slavery to white masters. Liberation from ...
Contents
Republicanism Black and White | |
The Divine Providence of Slavery and Freedom | |
Making and Breaking the Revolutionary Covenant | |
American Genesis American Captivity | |
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abolition abolitionism abolitionists according Account affection African African Americans American antislavery appeared argued argument Atlantic authority Ballou believed benevolence black abolitionists blacks and whites blood British captivity cause century charity Christ Christian church claimed colonial concern covenant death described Discourses Divinity Dwight early Edwards effort eighteenth-century England enslavement equality evil faith Federalists followed forces freedom God’s Haynes’s History Hopkins human Importance Independence individual insisted Islam Israelites Jefferson John Lemuel Haynes liberal liberty lives means mind ministers moral Muslims narrative natural Negro never noted notion offered Old Testament oppression patriots political preached providence race religion religious republic republican Revolutionary Samuel seemed sense sentiment sermon sins slave trade slaveholders social society sufferings suggested theology Thomas thought trade and slavery tradition True understanding understood University Press Vermont virtue West writings wrote York