
Lost Black Voices of the 19th Century
True Stories of Freedom, Literature, and Erasure
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Lost Black Voices of the 19th Century
True Stories of Freedom, Literature, and Erasure
They wrote. They fought. They dreamed. Then history erased them.
In this groundbreaking companion to The Lost Lives of the 19th Century, acclaimed author Richard Fleischman brings to light the forgotten voices of Black writers, thinkers, and storytellers who shaped American history—only to be silenced by it.
From William Wells Brown’s defiant lectures to Harriet E. Wilson’s trailblazing novel, from newspaper editors and poets to spiritual autobiographers and schoolteachers, this book uncovers the lives and legacies of Black individuals who left their mark on the written word. Some battled slavery and systemic racism with pen in hand. Others chronicled lives of survival, resistance, and beauty against staggering odds.
Each chapter reveals not just a hidden story, but the larger forces of exclusion, erasure, and rediscovery. Meticulously researched and lyrically told, this collection invites readers to witness the power of voices once lost—and the urgency of recovering them.
These are not just biographies. They are restorations.
Perfect for readers of narrative nonfiction, cultural history, and those committed to expanding the historical canon, this book is a powerful act of remembrance.
Also by Richard Fleischman: The Silent Riders: True Stories of Black Cowboys, Soldiers, and Settlers Who Shaped the West