|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewA founder of the New York Anti-Slavery Society, William Jay was one of the most prolific and influential abolitionists of his day, yet Americans know little about him. This is the first extensive examination of his life and work in over 100 years. Like many of his contemporaries, Jay looked at a rapidly changing America and it frightened him. As a conservative social reformer, it was not merely sinfulness that alarmed Jay, but the perception that America was betraying its founding principles. From his early involvement in local temperance societies to his conversion to the cause of immediate abolition of slavery, Jay would emerge as one of the most influential reformers. A fierce and vocal opponent of the efforts to repatriate blacks to Africa as well as the U.S. annexation of Northern Mexico, Jay stood at the center of the abolitionist and anticolonialist movements. The son of founding father John Jay, William Jay felt an obligation to help purify America so that it could continue to adhere to the republican principles that had helped create it. Not only does Budney examine the motivation for multifaceted reform, he also probes how advocates of abolition, peace activists, and temperance attempted to craft their appeals to influence the greatest number of people. Many scholars have attributed the vitality of the reform movement—particularly the abolitionists—to the more radical elements such as the Garrisons; however, most reformers would have preferred a more gentle approach to persuading Americans of the veracity of their efforts. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Stephen BudneyPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Praeger Publishers Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.425kg ISBN: 9780275985554ISBN 10: 0275985555 Pages: 200 Publication Date: 28 February 2005 Recommended Age: From 7 to 17 years Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsWilliam Jay, the son of America's first chief justice, John Jay, is a significant but overlooked figure in the annals of antebellum reform. In this short but important book, Budney maintains that Jay was led to reform by his religious convictions, his republican principles, and his father's humanitarian example. Early in his career, he was active in religious benevolence and in the peace movement. He was sympathetic to, but remained aloof from, abolitionism. Budney asserts that it was the antiabolitionist riots and racial violence of the 1830s that galvanized Jay to activism. He endorsed the newly formed American Antislavery Society and denounced the American Colonization Society's efforts to colonize freed African Americans in Africa. Although never as radical in his speeches and writings as William Lloyd Garrison and his followers, Jay condemned the annexation of Texas and the war with Mexico as examples of a conspiracy to spread slavery in the West. Jay remained active in both the antislavery and peace movements until his death in 1857. Budney's book restores Jay to his rightful place in the abolitionist movement and helps the reader understand the complexity of antislavery. The bibliography enhances the book's worth....Recommended. All levels/libraries. - Choice Endorsement From Winthrop D. Jordon University of Mississippi: For many years historians have correctly called William Jay a neglected but important figure in this nation's greatest reform movement. This study is much more than just a biography, for it deals not only with abolition but Jay's opposition to the counter movement to rid the nation of mostly American-born black slaves by shipping them 'back to Africa.' Thus this first-rate study illuminates the tension between two vital, longstanding, and contradictory sets of feelings among a great many white Americans. William Jay, the son of America's first chief justice, John Jay, is a significant but overlooked figure in the annals of antebellum reform. In this short but important book, Budney maintains that Jay was led to reform by his religious convictions, his republican principles, and his father's humanitarian example. Early in his career, he was active in religious benevolence and in the peace movement. He was sympathetic to, but remained aloof from, abolitionism. Budney asserts that it was the antiabolitionist riots and racial violence of the 1830s that galvanized Jay to activism. He endorsed the newly formed American Antislavery Society and denounced the American Colonization Society's efforts to colonize freed African Americans in Africa. Although never as radical in his speeches and writings as William Lloyd Garrison and his followers, Jay condemned the annexation of Texas and the war with Mexico as examples of a conspiracy to spread slavery in the West. Jay remained active in both the antislavery and peace movements until his death in 1857. Budney's book restores Jay to his rightful place in the abolitionist movement and helps the reader understand the complexity of antislavery. The bibliography enhances the book's worth….Recommended. All levels/libraries. * Choice * Stephen P. Budney's insightful biography of William Jay (1789-1857) extends the historiography of abolitionism beyond well-worn tales of Garrisonian reformers in antebellum New England….Jay is fortunate to have found a sympathetic and probing biographer whose compact book brings both conservative abolitionists and the American nation-state back into the story of antislavery activism. * The Journal of American History * William Jay, the son of America's first chief justice, John Jay, is a significant but overlooked figure in the annals of antebellum reform. In this short but important book, Budney maintains that Jay was led to reform by his religious convictions, his republican principles, and his father's humanitarian example. Early in his career, he was active in religious benevolence and in the peace movement. He was sympathetic to, but remained aloof from, abolitionism. Budney asserts that it was the antiabolitionist riots and racial violence of the 1830s that galvanized Jay to activism. He endorsed the newly formed American Antislavery Society and denounced the American Colonization Society's efforts to colonize freed African Americans in Africa. Although never as radical in his speeches and writings as William Lloyd Garrison and his followers, Jay condemned the annexation of Texas and the war with Mexico as examples of a conspiracy to spread slavery in the West. Jay remained active in both the antislavery and peace movements until his death in 1857. Budney's book restores Jay to his rightful place in the abolitionist movement and helps the reader understand the complexity of antislavery. The bibliography enhances the book's worth...Recommended. All levels/libraries. - Choice Stephen P. Budney's insightful biography of William Jay (1789-1857) extends the historiography of abolitionism beyond well-worn tales of Garrisonian reformers in antebellum New England...Jay is fortunate to have found a sympathetic and probing biographer whose compact book brings both conservative abolitionists and the American nation-state back into the story of antislavery activism. - The Journal of American History William Jay, the son of America's first chief justice, John Jay, is a significant but overlooked figure in the annals of antebellum reform. In this short but important book, Budney maintains that Jay was led to reform by his religious convictions, his republican principles, and his father's humanitarian example. Early in his career, he was active in religious benevolence and in the peace movement. He was sympathetic to, but remained aloof from, abolitionism. Budney asserts that it was the antiabolitionist riots and racial violence of the 1830s that galvanized Jay to activism. He endorsed the newly formed American Antislavery Society and denounced the American Colonization Society's efforts to colonize freed African Americans in Africa. Although never as radical in his speeches and writings as William Lloyd Garrison and his followers, Jay condemned the annexation of Texas and the war with Mexico as examples of a conspiracy to spread slavery in the West. Jay remained active in both the antislavery and peace movements until his death in 1857. Budney's book restores Jay to his rightful place in the abolitionist movement and helps the reader understand the complexity of antislavery. The bibliography enhances the book's worth....Recommended. All levels/libraries. - Choice Stephen P. Budney's insightful biography of William Jay (1789-1857) extends the historiography of abolitionism beyond well-worn tales of Garrisonian reformers in antebellum New England....Jay is fortunate to have found a sympathetic and probing biographer whose compact book brings both conservative abolitionists and the American nation-state back into the story of antislavery activism. - The Journal of American History Author InformationStephen P. Budney is Professor of History at Pikeville College. Born in Connecticut, he studied history at the University of Maine and the University of Mississippi. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |