Skip to content ↓

The Road to Dawn

The Road to Dawn

It’s always fascinating to me which characters history doesn’t remember and which ones history cannot forget. Sometimes key players fall out of our consciousness altogether while lesser ones are raised to legendary status. Sometimes real-life characters are lost to the mists of time while fictional ones are treasured forever. This is exactly the case with Josiah Henson. Though he has largely been forgotten, the character who was based on his life lives on. Henson was a significant part of the inspiration behind Harriet Beecher Stowe’s most famous character, Uncle Tom, in her book Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Josiah Henson is also the subject of The Road To Dawn, an excellent new biography by Jared Brock.

Josiah Henson was born in Maryland in or around 1789. From the moment of his first breath he was the property of others, to be bought and sold, to be used and abused. And he was. When he was nine he was valued at $30 and sold, torn from his mother (though, thankfully, reunited with her before long). When he was a young man he was beaten so severely he was permanently maimed. But he endured. As he grew in age and competence he was given increasing trust and responsibility by the man who owned him. Yet this man soon fell upon hard times and transferred his slaves to his brother’s farm in Kentucky. His brother eventually attempted to sell Henson to a plantation in New Orleans and he was saved from this fate only through the timely sickness of his master’s son.

Henson came to understand he must make a break for freedom. With his wife and four children, he made a long, terrifying, and arduous journey to Canada, eventually crossing the Niagara River in 1830. He was free at last. He soon became involved in founding a settlement for freedmen in Dawn Township, Upper Canada. This community became home to the British-American Institute which existed to educate former slaves and their children and to train them in key trades. Henson served as one of the leaders of this institution and its community while also overseeing farms, mills, and other industries. He became a key black leader in Canada and beyond.

Somewhere behind that war, that woman, and her key character, was the incredible life of Josiah Henson.

And he was just getting started. Converted at age 18 upon his very first hearing of Scripture, he became a Methodist preacher and traveled far and wide to preach to whites and blacks alike. He made many journeys into the American south to help rescue other slaves. He traveled to England for business and ministry purposes where he dined with the Archbishop of Canterbury, had an audience with Queen Victoria, won a medal at the World Fair, and preached in Spurgeon’s pulpit. Along the way he recorded an autobiography which came into the hands of Harriet Beecher Stowe who saw in Henson the seeds of the character she would call Uncle Tom. Stowe would become, according to Abraham Lincoln, the little lady whose book would begin a great and terrible war. And somewhere behind that war, that woman, and her key character, was the incredible life of Josiah Henson.

Drawing predominantly on Henson’s autobiography, but also referencing other key sources, Jared Brock does a skillful job of recounting this life. He aptly captures the horror of the slavery Henson endured and the indomitable spirit and strength of character that sustained him through it. He captures Henson in both his many strengths and his inevitable weaknesses. He also leaves some interesting trails unfollowed, such as the nature of Henson’s Christian faith and the strange contradiction with his commitment to Freemasonry. Henson’s life and circumstances are such that many facts we might wish to know went unrecorded and are now forever lost.

The book closes with an epilogue and an appendix titled “Clarion Call” and here Brock attempts to suggest how we can best honor Henson’s legacy today and how we can continue to make amends for the great transgression that was slavery. In my assessment, much of what he suggests or demands here is ill-thought, impractical, and perhaps even patronizing. Thankfully, though, while these two chapters add little to the strengths of the book, they also do little to detract from them.

The Road To Dawn is a well-written, fast-paced, and popular-level biography that would be of interest to just about any reader. It introduces a man who deserves to be known and remembered, both for the remarkable life he actually lived and for the fictional character he helped inspire.


  • Carney Trump

    How Donald Trump Upended Canadian Politics and Helped the Liberals Win

    On April 28, Canadians elected the Liberal Party of Canada to a fourth consecutive term. This is a rare feat for a political party in Canada and in this case, one of special significance, for just months ago, the Liberals seemed destined for near-complete destruction. The cost of living was spiking, the quality of life…

  • A La Carte Collection cover image

    A La Carte (April 30)

    A La Carte: Young men wanted / The glory and danger of apologetics / God’s guidelines for sex aren’t arbitrary / How much is our church worth? / People loved the darkness / and more.

  • Erics Greatest Race

    Releasing Today: Eric’s Greatest Race

    My new book releases today! Eric’s Greatest Race is a fully illustrated graphic novel that tells young readers the story of Eric Liddell, the famous Olympian whose steadfast courage and commitment to Christ has inspired generations of believers. It is my sincere hope that it will introduce a whole new generation to a man whose…

  • A La Carte Collection cover image

    A La Carte (April 29)

    A La Carte: Has the decline of U.S. Christianity finally stopped? / Holding space for joy and sorrow / No one ever hated his own body / Wisdom principles for Christian parenting / The article you don’t want to read / A new book / Kindle deals / and more.

  • The Pursuit of Virtue

    God’s character is the essence of virtue. The heart of virtue is to know the Lord and to become like him, as a child resembles her father. That is the goal, privilege, and destiny of the redeemed. #Sponsored

  • When God Plants an Acorn

    When God Plants an Acorn, He Means an Oak

    We stood together on the crest of a hill, a gentle breeze rustling the meadow around our feet. The fields ran gently downward until they met a creek that gurgled happily in its course. A few years prior, an acorn had somehow made its way to the highest point of this hill, carelessly dropped there…