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Henry Wiencek

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Henry Wiencek


Born
in Dorchester, Massachusetts, The United States
January 01, 1952

Genre


Henry Wiencek is a prominent American historian and editor whose work has encompassed historically significant architecture, the Founding Fathers, various topics relating to slavery, and the Lego company. In 1999, The Hairstons: An American Family in Black and White, a biographical history which chronicles the racially intertwined Hairston clan of the noted Cooleemee Plantation House, won the National Book Critics Circle Award for biography.

Wiencek has come to be particularly associated with his work on Washington and slavery as a result of his most recent book, An Imperfect God: George Washington, His Slaves, and the Creation of America, which earned him the Los Angeles Times Book Award for history. Partly as a result of this book, Wiencek
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Average rating: 4.06 · 2,549 ratings · 352 reviews · 28 distinct worksSimilar authors
An Imperfect God: George Wa...

4.03 avg rating — 1,018 ratings — published 2003 — 17 editions
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Master of the Mountain: Tho...

3.98 avg rating — 830 ratings — published 2012 — 12 editions
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The Hairstons: An American ...

4.25 avg rating — 467 ratings — published 1999 — 16 editions
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Stan and Gus: Art, Ardor, a...

3.88 avg rating — 78 ratings4 editions
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World of Lego Toys

4.21 avg rating — 29 ratings — published 1987 — 2 editions
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National Geographic Guide t...

4.24 avg rating — 25 ratings — published 1999
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The Smithsonian Guide to Hi...

4.48 avg rating — 21 ratings — published 1989 — 5 editions
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The Moodys of Galveston and...

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4.05 avg rating — 21 ratings — published 2010 — 3 editions
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The Smithsonian Guide To Hi...

4.31 avg rating — 13 ratings — published 1989 — 5 editions
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The Lords of Japan

3.91 avg rating — 11 ratings — published 1982 — 6 editions
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More books by Henry Wiencek…
Quotes by Henry Wiencek  (?)
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“Genealogy becomes a mania, an obsessive struggle to penetrate the past and snatch meaning from an infinity of names. At some point the search becomes futile – there is nothing left to find, no meaning to be dredged out of old receipts, newspaper articles, letters, accounts of events that seemed so important fifty or seventy years ago. All that remains is the insane urge to keep looking, insane because the searcher has no idea what he seeks. What will it be? A photograph? A will? A fragment of a letter? The only way to find out is to look at everything, because it is often when the searcher has gone far beyond the border of futility that he finds the object he never knew he was looking for.”
Henry Wiencek, The Hairstons: An American Family in Black and White

“In the West Indies and South America, slaves were worked to death and replaced with fresh imports, but in the continental North American colonies of Great Britain the situation was the opposite. By about 1710, as Morgan notes, “Virginia’s slave population began to grow from natural increase, an unprecedented event for any New World slave population.…In 1700 Virginia had 13,000 slaves; in 1730, 40,000; in 1750, 105,000, of whom nearly 80 percent were Virginia born.”
Henry Wiencek, An Imperfect God: George Washington, His Slaves, and the Creation of America

“Of one slave Carter wrote, “dismembering will reclaim him.… I have cured many a Negro of running away by this means.” This horrible practice, legalized in 1705, evidently became widespread, with much resultant butchery; it received further legal blessing in the tightening of the slave laws in 1723, when the Virginia Assembly absolved owners and surgeons of manslaughter if such “dismembering” resulted in the slave’s death. The lawmakers assumed that no sane man would deliberately destroy his own very valuable property. It is hideous to imagine that doctors would participate in such medical atrocities, but they did.”
Henry Wiencek, An Imperfect God: George Washington, His Slaves, and the Creation of America



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