Author peter burchard biography
- Peter Burchard was an author, free-lance designer, and illustrator.
- Peter Burchard (March 1, 1921 – July 3, 2004) was an author, free-lance designer, and illustrator.
- Peter Burchard (1921–2004) was the author of over twenty fiction and nonfiction books for young readers and adults, including One Gallant Rush: Robert Gould.
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About the Author
Includes the name: Peter Burchard (jacket)
Works by Peter Burchard
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Jim Cutter was one of the diggers, one of twenty men who knew about the tunnel. Rat Hell is the story of his escape, against heavy odds, from Libby Prison in Richmond, Virginia. It is fiction based on fact, set against somber reality: for the people of show more the South, priva
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Peter Burchard
American writer
Peter Burchard (March 1, 1921 – July 3, 2004)[1] was an author, free-lance designer, and illustrator. He wrote the book One Gallant Rush (1965), about Colonel Robert Gould Shaw and the 54th Massachusetts Regiment, the first African-American unit in the Union Army. It was adapted for the 1989 film Glory, which won numerous awards.[1]
World War II
Burchard served on convoys in the North Atlantic during World War II. During this time, his drawings were published by Yank magazine.[1]
Books
Burchard primarily wrote children's books about slavery, abolitionism, and the American Civil War. He wrote 26 books and illustrated over 100.[1]
His book One Gallant Rush: Robert Gould Shaw and His Brave Black Regiment, was the basis for the Oscar-winning 1989 film Glory.
His works include:
Adult
- One Gallant Rush: Robert Gould Shaw and His Brave Black Regiment (1965/reprint 1990)
Juvenile
- Balloons: From Paper Bags to Skyhooks
- Jed
- North by Night
- Stra
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Frederick Douglass
Nantucket
On Tuesday, August 10, 1841, Frederick Douglass, three years a fugitive from slavery, paced the top deck of the ferry that was taking him from New Bedford to the island of Nantucket.
At twenty-three, he stood above the six-foot mark and, having labored in shipyards in Maryland and Massachusetts, was both broad and muscular. His skin was golden brown. His wide forehead and prominent cheekbones framed dark and penetrating eyes, a broad nose, and a generous mouth. His hands were tough and leathery.
With Douglass on the little steamer was a large and sometimes boisterous crowd of passengers, most of them white, some of them black. All but a few were abolitionists -- men and women speaking out against the cruelties of slavery in the South and prejudice and racial violence in the North. Most were firm believers in nonviolence. Earlier that morning, in a strong but peaceful demonstration in New Bedford, Massachusetts, the white majority had gained for their black friends the right to travel with them on the upper deck and in the cabin of the steamer.
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