"Samuel Ringgold Ward's fascinating life is emblematic of the netherworld between slavery and freedom that many Black Americans navigated during the nineteenth century. Smart and well told, Blackett's biography gives us a truly diasporic account of the struggles of one such important figure."–Claude A. Clegg III, author of
The Price of Liberty: African Americans and the Making of Liberia "This peripatetic former slave, abolitionist, journalist, and preacher who crossed nineteenth-century American, Canadian, British, and Jamaican borders has long eluded biographers. No longer. Through studious research, window-pane prose, and sober judgments, eminent historian R. J. M. Blackett finally grasps the fascinating Samuel Ward."–Jeffrey R. Kerr-Ritchie, author of
Rebellious Passage: The Creole
Revolt and America's Coastal Slave Trade "Ward emerges from Richard Blackett's superb biography as a towering presence in the international antislavery movement who never shrank from 'troubling the waters' in his pursuit of racial justice."–Julie Winch, author of
A Gentleman of Color: The Life of James Forten