A Pioneer in the Cause of Freedom
The Life of Elisha Tyson
Title Details
Pages: 200
Illustrations: 11 b&w images
Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in
Formats
Paperback
Pub Date: 04/15/2025
ISBN: 9-780-8203-6999-0
List Price: $24.95
Web PDF
Pub Date: 04/15/2025
ISBN: 9-780-8203-7001-9
List Price: $24.95
EPUB
Pub Date: 04/15/2025
ISBN: 9-780-8203-7000-2
List Price: $24.95
Hardcover
Pub Date: 04/15/2025
ISBN: 9-780-8203-6998-3
List Price: $119.95
Subsidies and Partnerships
Published with the generous support of The Victor H. Friedman Fund in Southern History, Department of History, University of Alabama.
Related Subjects
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Historical
HISTORY / United States / 19th Century
HISTORY / United States / Revolutionary Period (1775-1800)
A Pioneer in the Cause of Freedom
The Life of Elisha Tyson
An inquiry into the life and biography of a little-known eighteenth-century abolitionist
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- Description
Descended from German Quakers who immigrated to Pennsylvania in the late seventeenth century, Elisha Tyson was born in 1749. As a young man he became wealthy in the milling business in northeastern Maryland before moving in the early 1780s to Baltimore, where he grew even wealthier and established a reputation as a prominent member of the city’s business community. Over the course of more than three decades in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, Tyson helped found abolition societies, supported schools for free Black children, and contributed to the creation of numerous Black institutions and benevolent societies. He filed freedom petitions on behalf of enslaved people and pushed for the passage of liberalized manumission laws in Maryland. He used some of his fortune to assist Black people who claimed they were illegally held in bondage to sue for their liberty, and he confronted slave traders who kidnapped free Black Americans with the aim of selling them into slavery. By the time he died in February 1824, Elisha Tyson had personally aided in the liberation of perhaps two thousand Black people.
Yet the only biography published about this remarkable man was penned shortly after his death by John Shoemaker Tyson, Elisha Tyson’s nephew. In A Pioneer in the Cause of Freedom, Joshua D. Rothman—a preeminent historian of slavery and abolition—seeks to remedy that silence. Along with an annotated version of that nineteenth-century biography, Rothman provides a thorough introduction to Elisha Tyson’s religious, political, and ideological worlds as well as a set of selected documents that illuminate some of Tyson’s work.