"What to the slave is the Fourth of July?," asked Frederick Douglass in
1852. In Enjoy the Same Liberty, Edward Countryman addresses Douglass's
question. He shows how the American Revolution began the world-wide
destruction of slavery, how black Americans who seized their chances for
freedom during the Revolution changed both themselves and their epoch,
and how their heirs, including Douglass, pondered what the Revolution
meant for them. Thanks in good part to black people, what began as
colonial tax protests became something of far greater significance. But
this book also shows how that same Revolution led to an immensely
powerful slave society in the South, so strong that destroying it
required the cataclysm of the Civil War.