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About The Book
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Early in his life Hardin knew he was born a free person of color and by the time he was twenty he knew he had a more comprehensive education than most of the white men of his age. In the West he actually looked French or Spanish but he still was proud that he was of one-eighth African descent. In 1850 Hardin was twenty when the Fugitive Slave Law created a terrible threat to a free person of color as slave-catchers then roamed the northern states seeking people they could seize process through the poor enforcement of the law and resell southward. He soon moved to Canada as a safer place to live but didn't like that country and returned to Wisconsin (a part of the old Northwest Territory where slavery was illegal). Then in 1857 the Supreme Court said that people of African descent were inferior whether slave or free. In Colorado in 1863 Hardin was a barber that favorite occupation of African American men who associated with the upper classes of white men and if personable-as Hardin was-made valuable friends. Soon he was speaking to overflow crowds even though he was telling the story of a Haitian slave's successful revolt against the French. He even got a job with the Denver mint. But although he had never been a slave the ghost of slavery still lurked behind him and an editor writing about the mint job said that Hardin had an ugly black mug.