Faye Gibbons

Horace King: Bridges to Freedom

"I was born in South Carolina, a slave," Horace King remembered in 1878 when he was an old man. King's birthday was September 8, 1807. His father, Edmund King, was a mulatto, meaning he had both black and white people in his family tree. King's mother was of mixed Catawba Indian and black Ancestry.
...Like a few of those blacks whose memories were recorded, Horace King likely learned to read as a child. Certainly as an adult he believed in education. "Ignorance breeds poverty," he often said.


Selected Works

Biography
Horace King: Bridges to Freedom
An African-American rises from slavery to become the best bridge-builder in the Southeast.
Picture book
THE DAY THE PICTURE MAN CAME
The day nothing goes right for Emily Howard turns into a hilarious adventure when the traveling photographer arrives.
NIGHT IN THE BARN
Four boys decide to sleep in the barn on a darker-than dark, autumn night. Though full of suspense, the story has a happy ending.

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