MasonDixon, Edward G. Gray
MasonDixon, Edward G. Gray
List: $24.99 | Sale: $17.50
Club: $12.49

Mason-Dixon
Crucible of the Nation

Author: Edward G. Gray

Narrator: Walter Dixon

Unabridged: 15 hr 5 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 11/21/2023


Synopsis

The story of the Mason-Dixon Line is the story of America's colonial beginnings, nation building, and conflict over slavery.

Acclaimed historian Edward Gray offers the first comprehensive narrative of the America's defining border. Formalized in 1767, the Mason-Dixon Line resolved a generations-old dispute that began with the establishment of Pennsylvania in 1681. In 1780, Pennsylvania's Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery inaugurated the next phase in the Line's history. Proslavery and antislavery sentiments had long coexisted in the Maryland–Pennsylvania borderlands, but now African Americans faced a boundary between distinct legal regimes. With the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act in 1850, the Mason-Dixon Line became a federal instrument to arrest the northward flow of freedom-seeking Blacks. Only with the end of the Civil War did the Line's significance fade, though it continued to haunt African Americans as Jim Crow took hold.

Mason-Dixon tells the gripping story of colonial grandees, Native American diplomats, Quaker abolitionists, fugitives from slavery, capitalist railroad and canal builders, presidents, Supreme Court justices, and Underground Railroad conductors—all contending with the relentless violence and political discord of a borderland that was a transformative force in American history.

About Edward G. Gray

Edward G. Gray is the author of acclaimed books on the revolutionary era and the early American republic, including The Making of John Ledyard: Empire and Ambition in the Life of an Early American Traveler and Tom Paine's Iron Bridge: Building a United States. He is professor of early American history at Florida State University.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Rama

The American Frontier King Charles I of England granted the Calvert Family a charter for the Colony of Maryland in 1632, and in 1681, Charles II awarded the Penn Family a similar charter for Pennsylvania. However, a dispute over a sixty-nine-mile parcel of land between the 39th and 40th degrees of N......more

Goodreads review by Scott

(Audiobook) (3.5 stars) This work attempts to describe the Mason-Dixon Line, which was not quite the hard border it was portrayed to be, but how it came to symbolize the divide in the nation. Initially, it was a dividing line between Maryland and Pennsylvania and Virginia, which had their disputes w......more