by: Erik Calonius
$4.00
Overview
Describes the history of the Wanderer, a one-time yacht transformed into an illegal ship, including its smuggling expeditions and those involved in smuggling slaves into the South.
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Seller Description
On July 3, 1858 a luxury yacht named the Wanderer left Charleston on a secret journey: To sail across the ocean, load a cargo of over 400 slaves from the African coast, and bring them back to America. The Wanderer’s journey—taken fifty years after the African slave trade was made illegal—was the last documented shipment of African captives to American soil. The story begins in Savannah, where a group of Southern radicals purchased the elegant 114 foot schooner, which was the pride of the New York Yacht Club, and within a year had converted it into a slave vessel—with the New York Yacht Club pennant still flying above. As the story shifts from Charleston to Africa to Jekyll Island, Georgia; and from New York City to the White House and then back to Savannah, the Wanderer’s tale is played out in a final courtroom drama that powered headlines across the country and hurried the nation into civil war. Reviews “Rich in atmosphere, sprung with surprises, The Wanderer is my favorite kind of history: a voyage into the turbid waters of a past we thought we knew, a past we scarcely could have imagined.” ―Hampton Sides, author of Ghost Soldiers and Blood and Thunder “Calonius brings to life this extraordinary story, from the luxurious yacht club salons and Southern courtrooms to the Congo, in an account that reveals the complicated legacy of slave trading, one that has yet to be sorted out in contemporary America.” —BOOKLIST “Seldom is history presented in so exciting and informative a way as in The Wanderer … This is a book that even those weary of Civil War studies will find gripping and profound.” —Betram Wyatt-Brown, Pulitzer finalist and former president of the Southern Historical Society “A spell-binding page turner, opening with a shipwreck and never letting up...Narrative history rarely rises to these heights.” ―Eileen Mackevich, Executive Director, Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission “A fast paced narrative... Calonius has a terrific eye for atmospheric details.” ―Publishers Weekly “A compelling and heartrending record of a journey that helped push the nation to the brink of the Civil War.” ―The Washington Times “Historical reporting at its best.” ―The Tuscon Citizen “Written in a style more reminiscent of thrillers than history books, the highly accessible text digs deep into the motivations of the Civil War and illuminates some of the darkest corners of our nation's past.” ―School Library Journal “A fascinating and revealing story, told with authority and literary grace.” ―John Boles, Professor of History, Rice University, and Editor of the Journal of Southern History “This is a beautifully written book, full of imagery…I have reacted as positively and enthusiastically only one time before--that being to Nathaniel Philbrick's 'In the Heart of the Sea'.” ―Donald Thompson, author, "The Civil War Research Guide." “The Wanderer is a must-read for anyone interested in the causes of the Civil War.” ―Eric Wittenberg, CivilWarCavalry.com “Facts and imagination add up to a revealing, well-written account of a virtually little known yet important story of international slave trading--sometimes evil key men involved, the ship, The Wanderer, the backgrounds, and the dialogue all add up to an informative read. Erik Calonius has a bright future as an author.” ―Brooks Davis About the Author Erik Calonius is a former reporter, editor and London-based correspondent for the Wall Street Journal. He served as Miami Bureau Chief for Newsweek, and was a staff writer for Fortune magazine, where he was nominated for the National Magazine Award.
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