Lewis George Clarke published the story of his life as a slave in 1845,
after he had escaped from Kentucky and become a well-regarded
abolitionist lecturer throughout the North. His book was the first work
by a slave to be acquired by the Library of Congress and copyrighted.
During the 1840s he lived in the Cambridge, Massachusetts, home of Aaron
and Mary Safford, where he encountered Mary's stepsister, Harriet
Beecher Stowe, along with Frederick Douglass, Lewis Tappan, Gerrit
Smith, Josiah Henson, John Brown, Lydia Child, and Martin Delaney. His
experiences are evident in Uncle Tom's Cabin, published in 1852, and
Stowe identified him as the prototype for the book's rebellious
character George Harris.
This facsimile edition of Clarke's book is introduced by his great
grandson, Carver Clark Gayton, who has served as director of Affirmative
Action Programs at the University of Washington; corporate director of
educational relations and training for the Boeing Company; lecturer at
the Evans School of Public Administration, University of Washington; and
executive director of the Northwest African American Museum. He lives in
Seattle.
A V Ethel Willis White Book