Abolition and the African American St..., Patricia Williams Dockery
Abolition and the African American St..., Patricia Williams Dockery
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Abolition and the African American Story

Author: Patricia Williams Dockery

Narrator: Nekia Renee Martin

Unabridged: 4 hr 13 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 12/09/2025


Synopsis

Until now, you've only heard one side of the story: how Abraham Lincoln defeated the Confederacy to end slavery, but the truth involves a vast network of abolitionists who would keep fighting for freedom long after the end of the war. Here's the true story of the Civil War and Reconstruction, from the African American perspective.

A SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR

By 1850, Africans had already been in the United States for nearly 300 years. Their labor created a strong economy and defined American society in profound ways, but their rights nearly tore the country apart, a century after its founding.

The beginning of the Civil War marked a turning point: the beginning of a public fight to recognize African Americans as Americans. Though much of this played out on the battlefield, the real fight was going on in every corner of the country: North and South, free households and enslaved, in the halls of government and secret meetings. That fight didn't end when the South surrendered, and young people were central to the way abolitionists envisioned the future. From soldiers to public speakers to the Underground Railroad, this is the true story of the African American experience of the Civil War and Reconstruction.

About The Author

Dr. Patricia Williams Dockery is a writer, playwright, scholar-activist, and international commentator who is consulted for her expertise on diversity, equity, and inclusion; social justice; and Black women’s intersectional experiences.She has developed educational public programs for grades K—12 and general audiences at the Field Museum, the Museum of Science and Industry, and the College of Charleston Avery Research Center for African American History and Culture. She currently serves as associate vice president for academic affairs at Morgan State University.Dr. Dockery is a Fulbright Scholar and earned a PhD in anthropology from University of Illinois Chicago. A transdisciplinary educator and artist, her play, Septima!, about the life and work of civil rights organizing mastermind and revolutionary educator Septima Poinsette Clark, debuted at Charleston’s PURE Theatre. She and her husband share a beautiful blended family of seven children and a loving boxer-hound mix named Sadie Mae.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Emily on November 01, 2025

Patricia Williams Dockery’s Abolition and the African American Story is a crucial and compelling work of corrective history. The book’s central purpose is to successfully dismantle the oversimplified narrative that credits figures like Abraham Lincoln alone with ending slavery. Instead, Dockery mast......more

Goodreads review by Kelly {SpaceOnTheBookcase] on December 22, 2025

I really enjoy the Race to the Truth Series because it dives into the nuance of history adding both context and truthfulness to tough subjects long simplified. Patricia Williams Dockery’s ability to compact so much information in less than 200 pages is remarkable! First, a huge shoutout to Dockery's......more

Goodreads review by Alicia on October 04, 2025

A shorter nonfiction for a middle grade audience to give a fuller perspective of abolition through African Americans throughout the history of African Americans in the United States including contemporary celebrations of Black military leaders, president, etc. There are thoughtful questions at the e......more


Quotes

"This volume is a valuable resource that helps push back against problematic erasure. Fleshes out an often-oversimplified era with a nuanced web of historical information." —Kirkus Reviews

"Substantial, crucial curriculum support."—Booklist