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Snow-Storm in August: The Struggle for American Freedom and Washington's Race Riot of 1835 Paperback – April 9, 2013

4.3 out of 5 stars 54 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Anchor; Reprint edition (April 9, 2013)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0307477487
  • ISBN-13: 978-0307477484
  • Product Dimensions: 5.2 x 0.7 x 8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (54 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #761,756 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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By J. Green VINE VOICE on July 9, 2012
Format: Hardcover
In between the War for Independence and the Civil War calls for the abolition of slavery began to grow in number and volume, but few people could imagine whites and former black slaves living peacefully side-by-side. Some favored re-settling freed slaves in Africa or the Caribbean, but understandably most blacks viewed America as their home and didn't relish the idea of being shipped off to a land they'd never known. But it didn't stop a few abolitionists from agitating in southern states, and scattered reports of slave uprisings caused fear and anxiousness among those who owned such "human property."

Jefferson Morley tells the story of combustible race relations in 1835 in the young American capitol. Arthur Bowen, a young slave owned by Anna Thornton (widow of William Thornton, designer of the U. S. Capitol) who enjoyed a fair amount of liberty, came home very drunk late one night. What is known about the confusing events is that he picked up an axe and entered his mistresses' bedroom where his own mother also slept, and mumbled some drunken threats. His actual intent isn't known but the women panicked and Arthur was eventually arrested and charged with attempted murder. In the already charged atmosphere, mobs of white men quickly formed and threatened to take Arthur to "Judge Lynch."

At the same time a former slave named Beverly Snow (a man, not a woman) ran a popular and successful restaurant in Washington. Unlike Arthur, Beverly did not mix much with those pressing for emancipation, but was very forward and cheeky in promoting himself and his restaurant (which bothered some people). Rumors quickly spread that Snow had made offensive comments about white women, and the two situations combined to feed mob riots which came to be known as the "Snow-Storm.
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Format: Hardcover
The idea that one human could own another human is an ancient one, and was settled into European and American culture. In America in the 1830s, there were plenty of people who thought that slavery should be abolished (some thought the best way would be to send all former slaves back to where they came from). In Washington City (before it was Washington D.C.), slavery might have disgusted some, but overall it was the accepted way of doing things, and in the city's bustle you would find many slaves going about their masters' business, but also freedmen making their own way. It made for tension within the city, and sometimes that tension boiled over. Eventually it would explode into civil war, but decades before that, Washington erupted into a race riot, the details of which are recounted in the compelling _Snow-Storm in August: Washington City, Francis Scott Key, and the Forgotten Race Riot of 1835_ (Nan A. Talese) by Jefferson Morley. Morley has tied diverse threads into a fascinating story; the social, political, and even culinary themes are here, along with a relatively unflattering portrait of the author of our national anthem. Morley may have exaggerated the importance of the riot within American history, but is completely convincing that it should not be forgotten, and his vivid book will help keep the memory.

The "Snow" of the "Snow-storm" was a former slave named Beverly Snow, who earned his freedom and came to Washington to be a restaurateur. He worked hard, eventually setting up the Epicurean Eating House on Pennsylvania Avenue. Snow was not only a clever chef, he was a storyteller and a wit, and he mingled with his customers in a show of sincere hospitality. Influential people came to dine, and Snow's business was good.
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Format: Hardcover
Mr. Morley's work does not find complete favor with me. In part I must admit to a prejudice, i.e., I am a descendent of Francis Scott Key, and resent the claim that Key was as racist as Morley makes out. I told Morley this in 2005, when his article on the Bowen Trial was published in the Washington Post. I thought it only fair I tell you this before I voice my comments on "Snow Storm."

What I do not like about "Snow Storm" is that most of the motivations Mr. Morley imputes to various persons in the narrative are based on little actual evidence. There are entirely too many "possibles" and "could haves," all of which are construed to the author's late 20th Century take on what constituted racism in the early 19th Century. Moreover, many important things are left out, such as what the American Colonization Society was really all about when it formed and how it got established in Africa in the first place. Also left out is Key's defense in 1820 of the would-be slaves of the captured slaver "Antelope," which, if fairly presented, would have done much to call into question just how "racist" Key really was in the early 19th Century context. Morley never seems to make the connection between the man who bought Arthur Bowen, William Stockton, and his more famous brother Robert F. Stockton, who was instrumental in founding what became Liberia, as well as playing a major role in much U.S. history (Stockton, California was named for him and for good reason). If Mr. Morley had made the connection, he might have "deduced" (Morley's way of interpreting data) that Bowen never went into slavery after the Presidential pardon, but was taken to the Colony of Maryland in Africa and released as a free man.
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