The American Scholar

LETTERS

The Myth of the Black Loyalist

Farah Peterson’s “The Patriot Slave” (Summer) is one of the best articles I have read on the subject of slavery. It took me back to the late 1940s, when, as a young African-American boy growing up in Florida, I would listen to my paternal grandmother, who was born in 1876, share with me some aspects of her life. Some of the things the author cites as examples of intimate violence obviously extended through the Reconstruction and Redemption periods because they were mentioned by my grandmother. Thus, to me, she—who had little or no formal education—has been vindicated after all these years. I congratulate Dr. Peterson for such a well-written, meaningful, and informative article. It touched me in so many ways.

GENERAL E. NEASMAN China Grove, North Carolina

Professor Peterson takes a sharp and necessary look at antebellum America, a period encompassing

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The American Scholar

The American Scholar4 min read
The Choice Is Ours
In December 1866, mathematician Mary Boole wrote to Charles Darwin: Do you consider the holding of your Theory of Natural Selection, in its fullest & most unreserved sense, to be inconsistent,—I do not say with any particular scheme of Theological do
The American Scholar4 min read
We've Gone Mainstream
Marie Arana’s sprawling portrait of Latinos in the United States is rich and nuanced in its depiction of the diversity of “the least understood minority.” Yet LatinoLand is regrettably old-fashioned and out-of-date. For starters, Hispanics aren’t rea
The American Scholar4 min read
Downstream of Fukushima
Iam two levels down in Tokyo’s massive central railway station, eating seafood with my wife, Penny, and a crowd of hungry Japanese commuters and travelers. In August 2023, the Japanese government, with the blessing of the International Atomic Energy

Related Books & Audiobooks