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Between Two Worlds: The Life of Free Black Diarist William T. Johnson
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Between Two Worlds: The Life of Free Black Diarist William T. Johnson

Between Two Worlds: The Life of Free Black Diarist William T. Johnson

For more than 75 years, 14 journals, dating from 1835 to 1851, sat inside a trunk located within an attic of a Greek Revival town house at 210 State Street, Natchez, Mississippi. These personal documents were unknown to anyone, except the author’s descendants—notebooks and leather-bound volumes penned by a Natchez barbershop owner, farmer, and “free man of color” William Tiler Johnson.

The extraordinary set of documents sampled inside this publication is a milestone of African American studies. It is considered the best autobiographical account of a free Black man living in the Deep South prior to the Civil War.

Product Details:

  • Historical nonfiction
  • 20 pages, approx. 8.5” x 5.5”, soft cover booklet
  • Written by the staff at Natchez National Historical Park
  • Printed in USA, published by Eastern National
$8.99
Between Two Worlds: The Life of Free Black Diarist William T. Johnson—
$8.99

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Between Two Worlds: The Life of Free Black Diarist William T. Johnson

For more than 75 years, 14 journals, dating from 1835 to 1851, sat inside a trunk located within an attic of a Greek Revival town house at 210 State Street, Natchez, Mississippi. These personal documents were unknown to anyone, except the author’s descendants—notebooks and leather-bound volumes penned by a Natchez barbershop owner, farmer, and “free man of color” William Tiler Johnson.

The extraordinary set of documents sampled inside this publication is a milestone of African American studies. It is considered the best autobiographical account of a free Black man living in the Deep South prior to the Civil War.

Product Details:

  • Historical nonfiction
  • 20 pages, approx. 8.5” x 5.5”, soft cover booklet
  • Written by the staff at Natchez National Historical Park
  • Printed in USA, published by Eastern National

Product Information

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Description

For more than 75 years, 14 journals, dating from 1835 to 1851, sat inside a trunk located within an attic of a Greek Revival town house at 210 State Street, Natchez, Mississippi. These personal documents were unknown to anyone, except the author’s descendants—notebooks and leather-bound volumes penned by a Natchez barbershop owner, farmer, and “free man of color” William Tiler Johnson.

The extraordinary set of documents sampled inside this publication is a milestone of African American studies. It is considered the best autobiographical account of a free Black man living in the Deep South prior to the Civil War.

Product Details:

  • Historical nonfiction
  • 20 pages, approx. 8.5” x 5.5”, soft cover booklet
  • Written by the staff at Natchez National Historical Park
  • Printed in USA, published by Eastern National
Between Two Worlds: The Life of Free Black Diarist William T. Johnson | National Parks