• Mission
  • Blog
    • Course
    • The Exam
    • Concept Outline
  • Prepare
  • Perform
    • Thematic Review
    • Chronogical Review
    • Review Resources
    • APUSH Proper Nouns
Menu

APUSH Online

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
Ideas and Resources for Advanced Placement United States History

Your Custom Text Here

APUSH Online

  • Mission
  • Blog
  • Course
    • Course
    • The Exam
    • Concept Outline
  • Prepare
  • Perform
  • Review
    • Thematic Review
    • Chronogical Review
    • Review Resources
    • APUSH Proper Nouns
1992 Candidates.jpg

Blog

A Ride for Liberty

December 12, 2019 Rick Hengsterman
A Ride for Liberty.jpg

Born in 1824 in Lovell, Maine, Eastman Johnson took to art early in life, setting up a portrait studio in Augusta when he was 18 years old. He later worked in Boston and Washington, D.C., and in 1849 traveled to Europe where he received extensive training in drawing and painting.

In 1859, Johnson opened an exhibit in New York which featured Negro Life in the South. It was a turning point in his career -- one which would lead to his becoming, for many years, the foremost genre painter in the United States.

This painting, A Ride for Liberty -- The Fugitive Slaves, depicts a black family fleeing toward freedom. It is based on an incident which Johnson witnessed during the Civil War battle of Manassas. The mother, holding a small child in her arms, looks back apprehensively for possible pursuer.

← Rescue of Charles NalleJohn Tyler is my Grandfather →

Powered by Squarespace