Thursday, 20 August 2020

Henry 'Box' Brown Abolitionist

A new book about one of the best-known Abolitionist campaigners  in Victorian Britain is being published by Kathleen Chater.    

Here are details

From Slavery to Show Business Kathleen Chater 267 pages, $39.95 softcover, 22 photos, appendix, notes, bibliography, index ISBN 978-1-4766-7922-8 Ebook ISBN 978-1-4766-3943-7 2020

McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers • Box 611, Jefferson, North Carolina 28640 336-246-4460 • Orders 800-253-2187 • FAX 336-246-4403 • McFarlandPub.com


HENRY BOX BROWN:

From Slavery to Show Business

Henry Box Brown: From Slavery to Show Business is to be published very soon.  McFarland is a well-known publishing company in the USA, and Henry is famous there.   I attach an order form but I’d like to tell you a bit more about how important he is in the history of both abolitionism and entertainment in Victorian Britain.

His story is familiar in the United States because of his extraordinary method of escape from enslavement in the South to the North: he was nailed into a crate and posted. This was how he acquired the sobriquet ‘Box’ which he adopted as his name.  After speaking on the abolitionist circuit for some eighteen months in New England, he fled to old England when the passing of the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act made remaining in America dangerous.  Initially he spoke on the abolitionist circuit here but thereafter only occasional big events in his life are known: he won a libel case against a newspaper which vilified him; he married again to an Englishwoman; he moved into mesmerism and magic before, after 25 years, he returned to the USA.

He published two autobiographies: the first in 1849 and the second in 1851 in Manchester.  Unlike Frederick Douglass and William Wells Brown, the most famous campaigners against American slavery, he wrote nothing more about his experiences.  He lived a full life but has unfortunately left no record of how he felt about it. With the digitization of British, American and Canadian newspapers it has now been possible to reconstruct his extraordinary journey. 

In researching his life I have been struck by his bravery, not just in his method of escape, but in his break with the abolition movement and his willingness to reinvent himself (he also made forays into acting).  The partnership between him and his second wife, a Cornish schoolteacher, was a revelation.  Almost nothing has been known about her but it is now possible to understand the role she played in his professional career as well as in their personal life, which overturns some stereotypes of the Victorian woman (and man).

He became well-known, appealing not to the bien-pensant middle classes but to the working classes, and is often mentioned in the press as an example of a popular entertainer.  Surprisingly the two ‘firsts’ in English history that he achieved have never been recognised – and you need to read the biography to find out what they were.

I hope you will be as intrigued by this extraordinary life as I was in discovering it.  If you need any more information, please contact me.

Kathleen Chater  

untoldhistories@live.co.uk

The box in the illustration was made by Rory Rennick, an American performer who does a magic act based on Henry’s


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