The review/taste of the book was interesting enough to make me want to read it. Thought I'd repost:
"On the eve of the American Revolution, an unlikely band of ministers and
benefactors devised a plan to send John Quamine, a free black man, and
Bristol Yamma, a slave, as missionaries to Africa. The project was
conceived by the two would-be missionaries themselves, and supported by
controversial Congregationalist minister Samuel Hopkins and his more
moderate colleague Ezra Stiles. In 1774, Stiles and Hopkins arranged for
the duo to be sent to the College of New Jersey, where Presbyterian
minister (and president of the College) John Witherspoon would train
them. Their proposed mission gained some notoriety, and a diverse lot of
supporters championed their cause, including Quaker abolitionist
Anthony Benezet, New Jersey lawyer and politician Elias Boudinot,
Scottish theologian John Erskine the noted black poet Phyllis Wheatley,
Eleazar Wheelock and his Mohegan pupil-turned-preacher Samson Occum, and
black Anglican missionary to Africa Phillip Quaque (though his
endorsement came with serious reservations). The outbreak of war in 1775
and the subsequent death of Quamine in 1779 ultimately thwarted the
planned mission. In spite of its failure, though, it remains an
important but oft-ignored episode in what Edward E. Andrews calls “the
tangled history of cultural encounter between Europe, Africa, and the
Americas” (188)."
Read more of the review here
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