Fort Mose: And the Story of the Man Who Built the First Free Black Settlement in Colonial America
by Glennette Tilley Turner
Abrams Books for Young Readers (Sep 01, 2010)
Nonfiction, Hardcover, 48 pages
Target Age Group: Middle Grade
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Description of Fort Mose: And the Story of the Man Who Built the First Free Black Settlement in Colonial America by Glennette Tilley Turner
Discover the story of Fort Mose in the only book for children about the first free Black community in America.
In 1724, Francisco Menendez escaped from a plantation in the colony of South Carolina and, with a small group of men, headed south to Florida, at the time a Spanish colony, to the town of St. Augustine. There he was granted his freedom. He soon became a member of the Black militia and helped defend the area from English invaders. In 1738, Menendez helped found the first legally sanctioned free Black community in America. It was called Fort Mose, and it lay just north of St. Augustine.
There were thirty-eight households of men, women, and children living together at Fort Mose, creating a frontier community that drew on a range of African backgrounds and blended them with the local Spanish, Native American, and English peoples and cultures. Fort Mose became a southern destination for travelers of the Underground Railroad many years before the birth of its legendary “conductor,” Harriet Tubman.

Additional Book Information:
- ISBN: 9780810940567
- Imprint: Abrams Books for Young Readers
- Publisher: Abrams
- Parent Company: La Martinière Groupe
Books similiar to Fort Mose: And the Story of the Man Who Built the First Free Black Settlement in Colonial America may be found in the categories below:
- JUVENILE NONFICTION / African American & Black
- Juvenile Nonfiction / Biography & Autobiography / Historical
- Juvenile Nonfiction / History / United States / Colonial & Revolutionary Periods