The Trials of Nance Legins-Costley - The First Slave Freed by Abraham Lincoln
by Carl Adams
For more information, visit www.NanceBook.com
The "Trials of Nance" is the true story of the three Illinois Supreme Court trials of Mrs. Nance Legins-Costley (1813-1873). The dramatic non-fiction narrative is based on the original sworn and witnessed court records written with quill and buried deep in the archives of the court and other record depositories.
This is the only known historical biography to receive awards from an African-American Museum as well as the Illinois State Historical Society. The editor of the Illinois History Journal claimed this is the only story about Abraham Lincoln that is really new. The truth of the story was actually buried by white supremecist attitudes for over 100 years. It was discovered there are more old records on Nance than any other Illinois slavery case.
Nance actually tried to free herself, but needed lawyer Lincoln to make it legal. Her struggles began as a teenager, and it took 15 years to win her freedom. She is the only known slave in American history who managed to get to a state supreme court THREE times.
The book holds a piece of history to own: a copy of Nance's original signature from her historic testimony in 1827 -- ten years before Abraham Lincoln became a lawyer -- and the story of how she risked everything for the sake of her eight children, both born and the unborn.