Combee Audiobook By Dr. Edda L. Fields-Black cover art

Combee

Harriet Tubman, the Combahee River Raid, and Black Freedom During the Civil War

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Combee

By: Dr. Edda L. Fields-Black
Narrated by: Machelle Williams
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About this listen

The story of the Combahee River Raid, one of Harriet Tubman's most extraordinary accomplishments, based on original documents and written by a descendant of one of the participants

Edda L. Fields-Black shows how Tubman commanded a ring of spies, scouts, and pilots and participated in military expeditions behind Confederate lines. On June 2, 1863, Tubman and her crew piloted two regiments of Black US Army soldiers, the Second South Carolina Volunteers, and their white commanders up coastal South Carolina's Combahee River in three gunboats. In a matter of hours, they torched eight rice plantations and liberated 730 people.

Using previously unexamined documents, Fields-Black brings to life intergenerational, extended enslaved families, neighbors, praise-house members, and sweethearts forced to work in South Carolina's deadly tidal rice swamps, sold, and separated during the antebellum period. When Tubman and the gunboats arrived and blew their steam whistles, many of those people clambered aboard, sailed to freedom, and were eventually reunited with their families. The able-bodied Black men freed in the Combahee River Raid enlisted in the Second South Carolina Volunteers and fought behind Confederate lines for the freedom of others still enslaved not just in South Carolina but Georgia and Florida.

©2024 Edda L. Fields-Black (P)2024 HighBridge, a division of Recorded Books
American Civil War State & Local South Carolina
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Bringing the forgotten to life

This book is a beautifully told and compelling account of the lives of those who liberated themselves after the Combee raid of June 1863. Dr Fields-Black makes us understand the people, their family connections, their faith, their sorrows, their languages, and the epic way they transformed themselves after they liberated themselves with the help, of course, of the heroic Harriet Tubman. The audible recording is simply exquisite. Thank you especially for pronouncing Beaufort correctly!

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