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Textbook Details

  • ISBN:
    1400032261
  • ISBN-13:
    9781400032266
  • PUB. DATE:
    August 2006
  • PUBLISHER:
    Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
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New York Burning: Liberty, Slavery, and Conspiracy in Eighteenth-Century Manhattan by Jill Lepore

$16.95 List Price
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Customer Reviews

About much more than just the fires...by Anonymous

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This book centers on a series of arson fires in 1741 New York City and the arrest and execution of slaves who were believed to have set them with the purported intent of massacring whites and establishing a black kingdom. For me, though, the best feature of this book is the author's extremely thorough research and her penchant for digression along numerous fascinating trails of colonial...

New York Burningby Anonymous

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New York Burning was an exceptionaly good book that uncovered the horrors of slavery in the eighteenth-century. I found it hard to get through the first two chapters, but once i got into the story it started to make sense and i was able to understand it alot more. It really educated me on slaves and what they had to go through in the past.I learned alot that i didnt know before. It was intresting to...

Overview -

New York Burning

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: August 2006
  • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
  • Sales Rank: 296,590

Synopsis

A vivid narrative of the fires of 1741, the "Bonfires of the Negroes," and the alleged slave conspiracy to destroy the city, kill all the white men, and take all the white women as mistresses.

Over a few weeks in 1741, thirteen fires blazed across New York City. With each new fire, panicked whites cried from street corners, "The Negroes are rising!" Thirteen black men were burned at the stake, and seventeen more were hanged. Of more than a hundred black men and women thrown into a dungeon underneath City Hall, more than seventy-seven confessed and named names, sending still more men to the gallows and the stake, and still others to bone-crushing slavery in the Caribbean.

Although the New York conspiracy trials have much in common with the Salem witchcraft trials of 1692, they were much worse-and have almost been forgotten. Historian Jill Lepore reconstructs the harsh and unfamiliar past of a city that slavery built and nearly destroyed. She provides vivid descriptions of the way slaves and their masters lived and interacted, explores the social and political climate of the times, and reveals how slavery both destabilized and created American politics.

The Washington Post - Jonathan Yardley

… Jill Lepore has written a vivid and convincing account of the "plot" and its aftermath. For the general reader, the principal interest of New York Burning lies in the story of the slaves and their prosecutors, and the account Lepore presents of life in Manhattan in that day.

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Biography

Jill Lepore is Assistant Professor of History at Boston University.