About the Author:
Stephen Kendrick is the author of a novel, Night Watch, as well as Holy Clues: The Gospel According to Sherlock Holmes. He is senior minister at First and Second Church (Unitarian) in Boston. Paul Kendrick has worked as a director of the Democratic National Committee's grassroots campaign. He is a Presidential Arts Scholar at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., where he also serves as NAACP chapter president.
Review:
A truly outstanding account of the struggles of some extraordinary people-the 'ordinary' black citizens of pre-Civil War Boston. Supremely gifted historians in every respect, Stephen Kendrick and Paul Kendrick have given us an exceptionally full and compelling history of the antebellum struggle for racial equality in the nation's Birthplace of Liberty." -James Brewer Stewart, author of Holy Warriors: The Abolitionists and American Slavery "Stephen Kendrick and Paul Kendrick have succeeded where professional historians have failed. They not only have rescued important African American figures from historical obscurity but have brought them back to life, walking the streets and breathing the air of nineteenth-century Boston. They will make Robert Morris, William C. Nell, and Benjamin and Sarah Roberts as familiar to us as Charles Sumner. More importantly, they focus our attention on the victory African Americans achieved against segregation in the cradle of liberty and have demonstrated its relevance to us today. They have connected the past with the present-they have made the past present." -Donald Yacovone, author of Freedom's Journey: African American Voices of the Civil War "An absorbing book about the heroic and successful struggle of Boston's black community during the antebellum period to desegregate the public schools of their city. This well-written and carefully documented account of Roberts v. City of Boston is greatly enhanced by biographical studies of figures like Benjamin Roberts, Sarah's father; William Cooper Nell, the indefatigable black abolitionist; and Robert Morris, the black lawyer who pleaded the Roberts case and who finally receives the historical recognition he richly deserves." -Thomas H. O'Connor, University Historian, Boston College
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