From Slavery to Freedom Symposium

Why historian John Hope Franklin鈥檚 work remains essential today

鈥淲hat an incredible experience that was,鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淗e talked about his relationship to this institution and how important it was for him as a young scholar to be able to be here, and the challenges in the 1940s in doing research as a Black scholar but being able to come back to North Carolina College as it was known at that time to an environment where he was welcomed and accepted.鈥

I knew him from a human perspective. I didn鈥檛 realize how accomplished he was. I just knew him as a neighbor.

Joyce Cordelia Page

Joyce Cordelia Page, who attended the two-day event held on successive days at NCCU and 老牛影视, was a child in the 1940s when her parents lived next door to the Franklins. Her parents operated a small, whitewashed grocery store across the street from the two-story apartment building.

鈥淗e was a very nice man, a wonderful person, and a kind person,鈥 Page said. 鈥淗e would visit my grandmother and always sent her pictures of his son. My grandmother would put the pictures on her coffee table under glass. That鈥檚 how we knew him,鈥 she added.

鈥淚 knew him from a human perspective. I didn鈥檛 realize how accomplished he was. I just knew him as a neighbor. I didn鈥檛 realize the national impact he had, which was typical. We were so unique in Durham. Famous Black people spent more time in their communities because they didn鈥檛 have many options.鈥

The second day of the symposium, 鈥淔rom Slavery to Freedom: From Durham To The World,鈥 took place at the Gothic Reading Room in Duke鈥檚 Rubenstein Library.

Dr. Kerry Haynie, speaks from a podium. He stands in front of a seated audience and behind him are the bookshelves and large windows of the Gothic Reading Room. To his right a sign language interpreter looks up and behind at a grand portrait of Dr. John Hope Franklin.
Kerry Haynie, Dean of Social Sciences, 老牛影视 gives opening remarks at the symposium on historian John Hope Franklin鈥檚 鈥楩rom Slavery to Freedom鈥

Adriane Lentz-Smith, associate professor of history at Duke, noted that institutions played important roles in Franklin鈥檚 career. 

Franklin鈥檚 life at N.C. Central was 鈥渇ormative,鈥 Lentz-Smith said. 鈥淚t came early in his career, and was one of his first academic appointments. Duke came at the end of an incredibly illustrious career where Dr. Franklin was the first of many things. It鈥檚 a nice way to celebrate him鈥ith the bookends that marked sort of who he was as a scholar over a long career, and also to acknowledge how important a figure he is in Duke's institutional history in North Carolina, Central's institutional history, and really as one of the many intellectual lights who have made Durham kind of the heart of black intellectual vitality in the Upper South.鈥

Three speakers are seated, listening. Next to them a sign language interpreter signs for the audience (off camera) while a speaker stands at the podium
Panel: "Black Women Histories"
Seated: Nell Irvin Painter (Princeton), Jasmine Nichole Cobb (Duke), Crystal Sanders (Emory)
Speaking: Tracey Burns (NC Dept of Natural and Cultural Resources)
Not shown: Tiffany Willoughby-Herard (University of California, Irvine)

Johnson, Page and Lentz-Smith were among the nearly 300 historians, students, activists and others from across the United States gathered on the two Durham campuses 鈥 with an additional 300 in attendance virtually 鈥 to celebrate 鈥淔rom Slavery to Freedom,鈥 Franklin鈥檚 best-known book, according to a Rubenstein Library exhibit spotlighting the work.

鈥淭he completed manuscript was over five hundred pages and was released to rave reviews but only moderate sales,鈥 according to the exhibit. 鈥淗owever, the book gained substantial attention with the emergence of Black Studies as an academic field in the late 1960s and 1970s.鈥

Franklin was in his early 30s, when he completed 鈥淔rom Slavery to Freedom.鈥 He was among a cadre of Jim Crow-era historians who wanted to correct the myths, errors, stereotypes and omissions that littered the mainstream historical perspective on Black American life. The work encouraged other historians to address the impact the Black struggle for freedom has had on advancing American progress.

Johnson said 鈥淔rom Slavery to Freedom鈥 is 鈥渢he preeminent volume on the Black experience in the United States.鈥 

鈥淎nd here you have John Hope Franklin, who had the wisdom to start our history not enslaved, not in slavery, but on the continent of Africa,鈥 Johnson said, 鈥渁nd to remind us that the experience of enslavement was but an episode in a very long and proud history of our people.鈥

The book, Johnson added, 鈥渙pened the eyes of so many Americans, African Americans, our friends in the white community as well.鈥

Franklin鈥檚 work resonated deeply across the anatomy of America鈥檚 racial landscape and internationally. Now in its tenth edition, the work has been translated into Japanese, Portuguese, French and German.

Mark Anthony Neal, James B. Duke Distinguished Professor of African and African American Studies, called Franklin the dean of African American history, and said 鈥淔rom Slavery to Freedom鈥 was his 鈥済rand intellectual work,鈥 that helped introduce Neal to African American history.

I think the fact that the book has had this longevity speaks a great deal about its importance to not just African-American life, but American life.

Mark Anthony Neal
Three people with microphones sit in chairs. The closest is talking to the audience, while the other two look on, listening.
Mark Anthony Neal (Duke), Adriane Lentz-Smith (Duke) and Brandon Winford (University of Tennessee, Knoxville) panel the discussion 鈥淒urham, Duke, NCCU and Scholarship in the Jim Crow South鈥

Franklin鈥檚 body of work as a very public historian continues to reverberate today.聽

A woman stands at a podium emphasizing a point. She stands next to a poster showing the ten different covers of the editions of John Hope Franklin's book,  "From Slavery to Freedom"
Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham

The centerpiece of the two-day symposium was a series of panel discussions that explored Durham, Duke, NCCU and scholarship in the Jim Crow South; New Black Histories that build on the foundation of 鈥淔rom Slavery to Freedom,鈥 Black women histories, the book鈥檚 impact in public histories, and Franklin鈥檚 international legacy.

Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, the Harvard historian who has co-authored and contributed to editions of 鈥淔rom Slavery to Freedom鈥 since 2004, delivered a riveting keynote address during the second day of the symposium. Higginbotham said by the early 2000s, Franklin collaborated with historian Alfred Moss Jr. because Franklin understood that for the 40th anniversary edition, he needed a younger co-author, 鈥渨hose different perspectives and ample energies would assist in giving the new edition the freshness and energies that it requires and deserved.鈥

Higginbotham also noted that Franklin lived long enough to see the election of the nation鈥檚 first Black president.

鈥淚n fact, John Hope Franklin rode around with Barack Obama trying to get him elected in North Carolina, which was no small thing. But North Carolina came through,鈥 she said. 

鈥淚鈥檒l tell you one thing that all of us know, without a doubt: that we stand on the shoulders of generations of scholars before us. People who pondered the dangers and the racial obstacles of their time, just as we are encountering the problems of our time,鈥 Higginbotham said. 

鈥淎s we face the conundrums, and the complexities, the dangers and difficulties to our nation, and our world today; there is no shoulder more sturdy, more steady to stand on with hope, and with faith than John Hope Franklin and the legacy he left us, 鈥楩rom Slavery to Freedom.鈥欌

Learn More

About John Hope Franklin and the John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute (FHI)