James Oglethorpe, Father of Georgia
A Founder’s Journey from Slave Trader to Abolitionist
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Pages: 256
Illustrations: 31 b&w images
Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in
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Pub Date: 03/25/2025
ISBN: 9-780-8203-6600-5
List Price: $22.95
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Pub Date: 02/15/2024
ISBN: 9-780-8203-6601-2
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Pub Date: 02/15/2024
ISBN: 9-780-8203-6604-3
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ISBN: 9-780-8203-6602-9
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Subsidies and Partnerships
Published with the generous support of Carl and Sally Gable Fund for Southern Colonial American History
Related Subjects
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Historical
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Political
HISTORY / United States / State & Local / South (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MS, NC, SC, TN, VA, WV)
James Oglethorpe, Father of Georgia
A Founder’s Journey from Slave Trader to Abolitionist
General James Oglethorpe’s life, legacy, and fight against slavery
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Founded by James Oglethorpe on February 12, 1733, the Georgia colony was envisioned as a unique social welfare experiment. Administered by twenty-one original trustees, the Georgia Plan offered England's “worthy poor" and persecuted Christians an opportunity to achieve financial security in the New World by exporting goods produced on small farms. Most significantly, Oglethorpe and his fellow Trustees were convinced that economic vitality could not be achieved through the exploitation of enslaved Black laborers.
Due primarily to Oglethorpe's strident advocacy, Georgia was the only British American colony to prohibit chattel slavery prior to the American Revolutionary War. His outspoken opposition to the transatlantic slave trade distinguished Oglethorpe from British colonial America's more celebrated founding fathers.
James Oglethorpe, Father of Georgia uncovers how Oglethorpe's philosophical and moral evolution from slave trader to abolitionist was propelled by his intellectual relationships with two formerly enslaved Black men. Oglethorpe's unique “friendships" with Ayuba Suleiman Diallo and Olaudah Equiano, two of eighteenth-century England's most influential Black men, are little-known examples of interracial antislavery activism that breathed life into the formal abolitionist movement.
Utilizing more than two decades of meticulous research, fresh historical analysis, and compelling storytelling, Michael L. Thurmond rewrites the prehistory of abolitionism and adds an important new chapter to Georgia's origin story.
—Ambassador Andrew Young, civil rights icon
—Phil Kloer, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
—Eli Arnold, library director, Oglethorpe University
—Hermina Glass-Hill, CEO, Susie King Taylor Women’s Institute and Ecology Center
—John C. Inscoe, editor of The Civil War in Georgia: A New Georgia Encyclopedia Companion