Enoch Pratt Free Library
Pulitzer Prize–winning former Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson tells our nation’s torturous racial history through his own family’s story, starting with his great-grandfather’s freedom from slavery and threading his way to his own narrative and reaching today’s Black Lives Matter movement, asking whether this time will be different.
On March 27, 1829, a wealthy white planter and entrepreneur named Richard Fordham purchased four enslaved African Americans from a woman named Isabella Perman. One of them was journalist Eugene Robinson’s great-great-grandfather, a boy called Harry.
Starting from this transaction, which took place in Charleston, South Carolina, Freedom Lost, Freedom Won brings to life 200 years of our nation’s history through the eyes of the remarkable family that Harry founded. Assigned a formal name—Henry Fordham—and put to work as a blacksmith, he achieved his own freedom a decade before the Civil War. He was there when victorious Union troops marched into Charleston in 1865, ending slavery and guaranteeing liberty for Black people—only on paper, though, and only for a time.
Robinson traces the arc of his familial lineage through the repeated cycles in which African Americans have fought their way upward toward freedom and opportunity, been forced back down again, and renewed their determined climb.
From his great-great-grandfather’s achievement in becoming a “free person of color” before emancipation to his great-grandfather’s Reconstruction-era success, from his father’s odyssey of the Great Migration to his own coming-of-age during the civil rights movement, Robinson delves into a rich archive of Black narratives, arguing that we still have a long way to go before it is possible to speak of a “post-racial America.”
Setting his extensive research within the larger historical context, Robinson provides both an indictment of structural racism and an illustration of how it has been fought and, at times, courageously overcome. Freedom Lost, Freedom Won tells our country’s tortuous racial history through Robinson’s family’s story of struggle and survival, pushing us to consider how far the nation has come—willingly or not—and how far it still has to go.
Eugene Robinson will be joined in conversation by Karsonya Wise Whitehead, host of Today with Dr. Kaye on WEAA 88.9 FM
05/18/2026
Did you know the history of Maryland libraries dates back to the 17th century? The first libraries in Maryland were organized in 1695 by Thomas Bray as parochial libraries, laymen's libraries intended as lending libraries for the public at large, and non-circulating libraries.
Fast-forward nearly 200 years to 1886, when businessman and philanthropist Enoch Pratt established Enoch Pratt Free Library in Baltimore (pictured in 1938). Enoch Pratt Free Library has since grown to more than 20 branches across the city.
In 1902, the State Library Commission was authorized to develop public libraries throughout Maryland. The state now has more than 190 public libraries in all 23 counties and Baltimore City. And in 1905, the first mobile library in the nation began operating as a horse-drawn wagon in Washington County.
Learn more about the history of Maryland libraries from our friends at the Maryland State Archives: https://loom.ly/hSWp35g
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