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FLEE NORTH: A Forgotten Hero and the Fight for Freedom in Slavery's Borderland

The astonishing story of Thomas Smallwood.

Thursday, September 11 from 1–2pm

Virtual Program

Join Scott Shane, the author of FLEE NORTH: A Forgotten Hero and the Fight for Freedom in Slavery’s Borderland, to hear the astonishing story of Thomas Smallwood, born into slavery near Washington, who bought his freedom, became a shoemaker and began organizing mass escapes from slavery from Washington, Baltimore and the surrounding counties. With the help of a younger white abolitionist, Charles Torrey, Smallwood took wagonloads of men, women and children into Pennsylvania, urging them not to stop until they reached Canada. And Smallwood wrote about the escapes in satirical newspaper dispatches, an extraordinary work of journalism and literature in which he gave the underground railroad its name. Many of those Smallwood helped to flee north approached him after learning that they were about to be sold south by domestic slave traders like Hope Slatter, who operated his private “slave jail” near Baltimore’s harbor.

FLEE NORTH was named one of the best 10 books of 2023 by Publishers Weekly (“This astonishing and propulsive narrative rights a historical wrong by returning [Thomas] Smallwood to prominence. It’s an absolute must-read”) and one of top 20 by Amazon (“Scott Shane’s narrative account is visceral, a stunning feat of historical storytelling as you’re transported into the terrifying life of an enslaved person in 1800s Baltimore”). Henry Louis Gates Jr. called it “riveting” and Taylor Branch called it “a treasure.”

To Join the Webinar: 

Please go to the Pratt Library’s event page

and search for “September 11”. 

Click on “Lunch and Learn” and you can register in advance with Eventbrite.  

 

To join virtual streaming: 

Visit the Enoch Pratt Library Facebook or Youtube channel. 

Questions and comments can be entered in the chat column. 

The Pratt no longer has zoom links to programs. 

This program is part of the Lunch and Learn series on 

Maryland’s history in today’s context.

* ASL interpretation will be available for attendees.

Sponsored by the Enoch Pratt Free Library,  the Maryland State Archives and Maryland’s Four Centuries Project.

About the Presenter

Scott Shane was a reporter for 15 years at The New York Times, where he was twice a member of teams that won Pulitzer Prizes, and before that for 21 years at The Baltimore Sun. His two previous books are Dismantling Utopia, a firsthand account of the collapse of the Soviet Union, and Objective Troy, the story of an American terrorist killed in a drone strike on orders of President Obama. In 2019-2020 he was a fellow at the SNF Agora Institute at Johns Hopkins University, where he has taught courses on media and on the Russian attack on the 2016 American presidential election.

Event Archive

Click below to view a list of previous events

Headings in gold link to additional information or digital recordings, when available.

The Missionary: William Levington, Founder of St. James First African Protestant Episcopal Church

Lawrence Jackson, December 2024

The Battle of St. George’s Island – 1776: The only Revolutionary War Battle in Maryland

Dr. John L. Seidel and Charles Fithian, November 2024

Real Learning, Real Impact: The Digital Scholarship in Museum Partnerships Project

Raven Bishop, Sara Clarke-De Reza, Ph.D., Julie Markin, Ph. D., November 2024

Elizabeth Patterson Bonaparte and the Material World of an Imperial Legacy

Alexandra Deutsch, September 2024

The USS Maryland’s Silver Service: History Captured in Repoussé

Robin Gower, August 2024

Unearthing, Preserving, and Promoting LGBTQ+ History in Maryland

Ben Egerman, July 2024

“The Best Evidence Yet for an Anomalous Animal”: Documenting the Cultural History of Chessie the Sea Monster

Eric A. Cheezum, June 2024

Writing a biography of Frederick Douglass and the Bailey/Douglass Family: Scenes from the Maryland Archives​

Ezra Greenspan, May 2024

Mayaisuwàk (They Speak in One Voice): The Oral History and History of Place of Maryland’s Eastern Shore Tribal Communities and Remnant Descendants
Drew Shuptar-Rayvis (Pekatawas MakataWai’U/ Sëk Xàskwim – Black Corn), April 2024

A Maryland Mosaic for the U.S. 250th Anniversary: Finding the Historical Pieces to Create a Dynamic Picture of Maryland
Burt Kummerow, March 2024

Reclaiming Black History: A Community Research Effort That Led to the Truth, a Book, and Hopefully Change
Marlena Jareaux, Wayne Davis, Christine Bulbul, February 2024

The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of Senator Daniel B. Brewster
John Frece, January, 2024

Mt Olivet Cemetery, Frederick MD.
Chris Haugh, November 2021

Mysterious Maryland — Bizarre and Unexplained stories.
Rachel Frazier, October 2021

Forgotten Black Laurel Cemetery in Baltimore.
Dr. Elgin Klugh, Dr. Issac Shearn, September 2021

Catherine Anne Green publishes The Maryland Gazette by herself, 1767-1775. 
Diane Rey, August 2021

The Influence of Baltimore’s Black Politicians; A biography of Victorine Q. Adams.
Dr. Ida Jones, July 2021

Maryland State Art Collection — painting, sculpture, decorative arts, works on paper.
Catherine Arthur, June 2021

Maryland Women Divided by the Civil War.
Rob Schoeberlein, May 2021

Uncovering the Original Fort at Historic St. Mary’s City.
Travis Parno, April 2021

Laws of Racial Oppression in Maryland from 1634- 1865.
Chris Haley, March 2021

Civil War Caretakers 
Burt Kummerow, February 2021

The Origins of College Park.
Dr. Herbert Brewer, February 2020.

Washington and Maryland.
Burt Kummerow.  February 2020

Washington’s Immortals Maryland’s Revolutionary War heroes and the original Maryland 400.
November 2019

George Washington and Cumberland.  The Education of a Future Founding Father  1753-58.
Burt Kummerow November 2019

French Revolutionary terror in Maryland and the U.S.
Dr. Matthew Hale, October 2019

Previews to Hamilton.
Burt and Mary provide historical background to this play. July 2019  

“The Margaret”  In 1718 A Slave Ship Arrives in Annapolis. 
Dr. Herbert Brewer   October 2019

Slavery in Maryland: How did it Begin? How did it End?
Dr. Travis Parno and Dr. Terry Brock.  Baltimore, November, 2018

Meet Maryland’s First Ship: A New Maryland Dove.
Captain Will Gates.  St. Michaels, November 2018

The English, Forced to Create a New Society in Maryland, Attempt a Bold Vision.
Dr. Ed Papenfuse, Annapolis, November 2018

First Americans and England’s Potomac Frontier, 1607-1676.
Dr. Stephen Potter. Frederick, October 2018

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Land Recognition

We acknowledge the enduring presence of many American Indian tribes who once lived in Maryland and who now, having lost their lands, live in a diaspora. Read more.

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