Books in Review
African Americans in the Early Republic, 1789-1831. By Donald R. Wright. (Arlington
Heights, Ill.: Harlan Davidson Inc., 1993. 252 pp., index, biblio. essay, no notes, paper).
Donald Wright's extensive knowledge of the historical literature concerning this
subject, combined with his crisp prose and knack for organization, make African
Americans in the Early Republic not only useful, but a joy to read. Wright looks
especially closely at what he terms "a second forced migration," the varying nature of
slave life, slave revolts and slave resistance, the life of free blacks, and the Early
Republic's mix of racism, colonizationism, and abolitionism.
Although not a product of extensive primary research, Wright's contribution could still
be termed original because he condenses, analyzes, and synthesizes a wide variety of
secondary works into a highly readable, accessible form. Undergraduates and general
readers looking for a brief, yet accurate and able description of both African American
history, and African American historiography, will benefit most from this book. By
using a number of well-placed firsthand accounts, especially those of Charles Ball,
Wright's account is neither pedantic nor filled with meaningless over-generalization.
Researchers may find the complete lack of citations annoying, especially when Wright
discusses African epidemiology and other less known facets of African American life in
the Early Republic. Graduate students and established historians in other areas of
specialization can benefit from Wright's lucid historiographical analyses, which cover
most of the major works of the last twenty-five years. Unfortunately, Norrece Jones'
provocative Born a Child of Freedom, Yet a Slave (1990) is not discussed. Even
established historians in this field may benefit from Wright's careful balancing between
conflicting historiographical interpretations and his own sense of the past.
---------Robert E. Wright
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