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United States History - African American History, United States History - 19th Century - Civil War, United States History - Western, Plains & Rocky Mountain Region, African American History, Social Sciences - General & Miscellaneous, African American Biog
The New Man by H. C. Bruce — book cover

The New Man

by H. C. Bruce, Henry Clay Bruce (With), Willard B. Gatewood
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Overview

Born to black slaves in 1836, H. C. Bruce took the name of his master, a farmer in Prince Edward County, Virginia. After years of slaving on the plantation in Missouri and working in tobacco factories, Bruce escaped to freedom in Kansas with his future wife. In the 1880s, he moved to the District of Columbia to take a federal job arranged by his brother, Blanche K. Bruce, a senator from Mississippi. 

The New Man is unusual in its double perspective: for Bruce’s life was split by servitude and freedom, and his experience gave heightened meaning to both. Bruce provides insights into the slave’s attitudes toward his masters and toward poor white people. He believes that “good blood” (a sense of honor and duty and domestic virtues) will tell, no matter the race, but he appeals to fairness in assessing the situation of emancipated slaves at the end of the Civil War: "They were set free without a dollar, without a foot of land, and without the wherewithal to get the next meal even, and this too by a great Christian Nation."

Synopsis

Born to black slaves in 1836, H. C. Bruce took the name of his master, a farmer in Prince Edward County, Virginia. After years of slaving on the plantation in Missouri and working in tobacco factories, Bruce escaped to freedom in Kansas with his future wife. In the 1880s, he moved to the District of Columbia to take a federal job arranged by his brother, Blanche K. Bruce, a senator from Mississippi. 

The New Man is unusual in its double perspective: for Bruce’s life was split by servitude and freedom, and his experience gave heightened meaning to both. Bruce provides insights into the slave’s attitudes toward his masters and toward poor white people. He believes that “good blood” (a sense of honor and duty and domestic virtues) will tell, no matter the race, but he appeals to fairness in assessing the situation of emancipated slaves at the end of the Civil War: "They were set free without a dollar, without a foot of land, and without the wherewithal to get the next meal even, and this too by a great Christian Nation."

About the Author, H. C. Bruce

Willard B. Gatewood, a professor of history at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, and the author of Aristocrats of Color: The Black Elite, 1880–1920.

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Book Details

Published
September 1, 1996
Publisher
Bison
Pages
165
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780803261327

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