Diesel eBooks
Log In Home

      
playboy ebook banner1
Fiction eBooks

Non-Fiction
  Last Viewed



Download Free
eBook Readers
Mobipocket Reader
Microsoft MS Reader
Adobe Reader
Palm eReader
To browse or view on:
Pocket PC PDA
Palm PDA
Handspring PDA
Wireless Phone
Personal PC
      Talk To Us
If you notice any site errors or have an idea, we'd love to hear it no matter how small.



Diesel eBooks makes browsing ebooks a far more enjoyable experience as you avoid wading online through book titles you have no interest in.

Jørgen Dybdahl
eBook and Beyond




Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution-eBook
Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution ebook emailfriend
Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution
Just marked down from $16.59!
 
 
Our price:
reward pts next order:
your effective price:
Total savings:
 
Mobi
Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution mobi iconpicture
$8.96
$ -0.31
$ 8.65
$ 1.34
Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution ebook buy mobipocket
Wishlist
Adobe
Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution Adobe iconpicture
$10.82
$ -0.38
$ 10.44
$ 1.55
Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution ebook buy adobe
Wishlist
Palm
Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution palm iconpicture
$11.33
$ -0.40
$ 10.93
$ 1.06
Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution ebook buy ereader
Wishlist
M-soft
Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution ms reader iconpicture
$11.66
$ -0.41
$ 11.25
$ 0.74
Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution ebook buy ms reader
Wishlist
 

Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution

In 1774, as the new world simmered with tensions that would lead to the violent birth of a new nation, two Rhode Island brothers were heading toward their own war over the issue that haunts America to this day: slavery.

Set against a colonial backdrop teeming with radicals and reactionaries, visionaries, spies, and salty sea captains, Sons of Providence is the biography of John and Moses Brown, two classic American archetypes bound by blood yet divided by the specter of more than half a million Africans enslaved throughout the colonies. John is a profit-driven robber baron running slave galleys from his wharf on the Providence waterfront; his younger brother Moses is an idealist, a conscientious Quaker hungry for social reform who -- with blood on his own hands -- strikes out against the hypocrisy of slavery in a land of liberty.

Their story spans a century, from John's birth in 1736, through the Revolution, to Moses' death in 1836. The brothers were partners in business and politics and in founding the university that bears their name. They joined in the struggle against England, attending secret sessions of the Sons of Liberty and, in John's case, leading a midnight pirate raid against a British revenue cutter. But for the Browns as for the nation, the institution of slavery was the one question that admitted no middle ground. Moses became an early abolitionist while John defended the slave trade and broke the laws written to stop it. The brothers' dispute takes the reader from the sweltering decks of the slave ships to the taverns and town halls of the colonies and shows just how close America came to ending slavery eighty years before the conflagration of civil war.

This dual biography is drawn from voluminous family papers and other primary sources and is a dramatic story of an epic struggle for primacy between two very different brothers. It also provides a fresh and panoramic view of the founding era. Samuel Adams and Nathanael Greene take turns here, as do Stephen Hopkins, Rhode Island's great revolutionary leader and theorist, and his brother Esek, first commodore of the United States Navy. We meet the Philadelphia abolitionists Anthony Benezet and James Pemberton, and Providence printer John Carter, one of the pioneers of the American press. For all the chronicles of America's primary patriarch, none documents, as this book does, George Washington's sole public performance in opposition to the slave trade.

Charles Rappleye brings the skills of an investigative journalist to mine this time and place for vivid detail and introduce the reader to fascinating new characters from the members of our founding generation. Raised in a culture of freedom and self-expression, Moses and John devoted their lives to the pursuit of their own visions of individual liberty. In so doing, each emerges as an American archetype -- Moses as the social reformer, driven by conscience and dedicated to an enlightened sense of justice; John as the unfettered capitalist, defiant of any effort to constrain his will. The story of their collaboration and their conflict has a startlingly contemporary feel. And like any good yarn, the story of the Browns tells us something about ourselves.

Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution ebook adobe icon Adobe Settings
Read Aloud:No
Copying:Not allowed
Printing:Not allowed


Title of ebook: Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution
ISBN: 9780743289146
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Internet download file size: 524 kb
Released online for download: 10-31-2006
Author of eBook: Rappleye, Charles,

 

/b>



Chapter 3: The Sally




In September 1764, as the heavy heat of the New England summer finally began to lift, John and Moses Brown sailed with their brother Joseph from Providence to Newport to supervise the final preparations for the voyage of the ship Sally. Usually the Browns put their vessels out from their own wharf at Providence, but in this case the primary cargo would be rum, and the quantity they were shipping made Newport the only logical point of departure. Besides, the Sally was putting out for Africa, and with so much at stake, the brothers wanted to be sure everything was in order.




Nicholas stayed behind, tending affairs at the countinghouse, as was his wont. John and Moses were the natural candidates for the assignment. A square rigged ... read full excerpt from Sons of Providence: The Brown Brothers, the Slave Trade, and the American Revolution ebook




Related categories
  • United States
  • United States - Colonial Period
  • United States - Revolutionary War
  • Similar Titles
    Common Sense
    Common Sense ebook cover
    Common Sense ...
     
    Notes on the State of Virginia
    Notes on the State of Virginia ebook cover
    Notes on the State of Virginia ...
     
    Saint Thomas Paine
    Saint Thomas Paine ebook cover
    The purpose of this offering is to show that Thomas Paine is the founder, the creator in sole of the United States. The so called 'founding fathers', praiseworthy me ...
     

    Help
    Support Center
    Report a problem
    Knowledgebase/FAQ's
    Troubleshooter
    Account Info
    My history
    My wishlist
    Update info
    New Arrivals
    ALL
    Romance
    Erotic
    Science fiction
    Fantasy
    Business
    Computers
    Coming Soon
    Top Sellers
    ALL
    Fiction
    Romance
    Erotic
    Science fiction
    Fantasy
    Business
    Computers
    Programming
    Top Categories
    Just Reduced
    ALL
    Romance
    Erotic
    Science fiction
    Fantasy
    Business
    Computers
    About
    Contact us
    Privacy & Security
    How to order
    Frequent buyers prog.
    Affiliate program
    Topical Resources
    Free eBook download
    CCBot/1.0 (+http://www.commoncrawl.org/bot.html)