Life of James Mars, A Slave Born and Sold in Connecticut (1867 Hartford Case, Lockwood and Company edition) (Q5222): Difference between revisions

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(‎Created claim: note (P64): Small textual changes begin at least as early as page 30, where "ninety" dollars (from the 1864 edition) becomes $90. On page 33, the paragraph break at "Things all went along pleasantly" has been removed. On page 33, "West" becomes "west." On page 34, what is third person narration in the 1864 edition becomes quoted speech: "There is nothing I want to stay here for. . .")
(‎Changed claim: content (P95): appendix (Q328))
 
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Property / content: appendix / qualifier
 
note: Continues the narrative through to the present, including his marriage and move to Hartford, his successful efforts to keep an enslaved girl from being shipped south via writ of habeus corpus, and the reaction of the community. Brief biographies of his children, an injury from a fall, his recovery, and his anger at post-war disenfranchisement in Connecticut.
Property / content: appendix / qualifier
 
note: top of page 37, notes he is in his 78th year of age.
Property / content: appendix / qualifier
 
note: About 2 pages longer than the Appendix in the 1866 edition.
Property / citation
 
Property / citation: Black Self-Publishing (reference work) / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / format
 
Property / format: pamphlet / rank
 
Normal rank

Latest revision as of 18:38, 24 May 2024

1867 Hartford Case, Lockwood and Company edition of the Life of James Mars
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Life of James Mars, A Slave Born and Sold in Connecticut (1867 Hartford Case, Lockwood and Company edition)
1867 Hartford Case, Lockwood and Company edition of the Life of James Mars

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    LIFE OF JAMES MARS, | A SLAVE | BORN AND SOLD IN | CONNECTICUT. | FIFTH EDITION. | [rule] | WRITTEN BY HIMSELF. | [rule] | HARTFORD: | PRESS OF CASE, LOCKWOOD & COMPANY. | 1867.
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    Continues the narrative through to the present, including his marriage and move to Hartford, his successful efforts to keep an enslaved girl from being shipped south via writ of habeus corpus, and the reaction of the community. Brief biographies of his children, an injury from a fall, his recovery, and his anger at post-war disenfranchisement in Connecticut.
    top of page 37, notes he is in his 78th year of age.
    About 2 pages longer than the Appendix in the 1866 edition.
    0 references
    [4], 38 pages
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    Small textual changes begin at least as early as page 30, where "ninety" dollars (from the 1864 edition) becomes $90. On page 33, the paragraph break at "Things all went along pleasantly" has been removed. On page 33, "West" becomes "west." On page 34, what is third person narration in the 1864 edition becomes quoted speech: "There is nothing I want to stay here for. . ."
    0 references
    0 references