MEMOIR OF WILLIAM WELLS BROWN.
A narrative of the life of the author of the present
work has been most extensively circulated in England
and America. The present memoir will, therefore,
simply c...
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Born a slave, William Wells Brown (1815-1884) escaped to freedom and became the first African American to publish a novel or a play. He was also an abolitionist and an internationally acclaimed lectur...
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William Wells Brown (1813-6 November 1884), historian, abolitionist, reformer, and first black American novelist, was born on a plantation near Lexington, Kentucky, to a slave mother and a white slave...
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In a letter dated 2 July 1847, Edmund Quincy, a prominent Boston abolitionist, described the thirty-three-year-old William Wells Brown as "an extraordinary fellow. I do not know that his intellectua...
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William Wells Brown's chillingly realistic depictions of the horrors of slavery make him an important figure in American literature. Despite his wretched beginnings in bondage he rose to become the fi...
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Born a slave and lacking any formal education, William Wells Brown occupies a central and remarkably versatile role in the formation of the African American literary tradition. The author of the first...
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