Misplaced Pages

Escape of 28 enslaved people from Maryland (1857)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Twenty-eight enslaved men, women and children escaping from the Eastern Shore of Maryland

A group of 28 enslaved people from Maryland escaped their slaveholders on October 24, 1857. They were a group of two dozen enslaved men, women, and children who fled from Dorchester County, Maryland. Four men joined their group to travel north along the Underground Railroad.

In a remarkable escape the rainy night of October 24, 1857 when two dozen people escaped from their Dorchester County, Maryland enslavers, Willis Brannock, Jane Cator, Rueben E. Phillips, Richard Keene, Samuel Pattison, and Rev. Levi D. Travers. Nearly all of Pattison's bondspeople had run away. The event is notable because of the size of the group of people, who traveled with infants and other children, through days of heavy rains.

Aaron and Daffney Comish ran away with six of their children, one of which was a two-week-old baby. Daffney and six of their children were owned by Jane Cator and Rueben E. Phillips, Jane's step-father. Two of their children who were teenagers unable to be included in the escape because they had been hired out away from the rest of the family. Aaron was owned by Rev. Levi D. Travers. There were two families who ran away from Samuel Pattison. Susan Viney and her four children, Lloyd, Frank, Albert(a), and nine-month-old J.W. were held by Pattison. Viney's husband Joe, who was hired out to work in Dorchester County by a Virginia planter, ran away with his family, which also included his three older sons, Henry, Joe, and Tom. Leah and Kit Anthony ran away with their young children Adam, Mary, and one-year-old Murray. Alice Hill and her son Henry, both of whom were free, ran away with their husband and father, Joseph Hill. Joseph's 25-year-old sister Sarah Jane, who was hired out to another plantation also escaped. Joseph and Sarah Jane were also owned by Pattison. Over the first three days it rained heavily and their group grew to 28 people when Marshall Dutton, George and Solomon Light, and Silas Long joined them. They prepared for run-ins with slave capturers by carrying pistols, knives, and other weapons.

It was a group of 28 freedom seekers, including seventeen children and two infants, who met up with William Brinkley and his associates who took them north to Centerville in the Wilmington area. Wilmington was generally a dangerous place because slave catchers looked for runaways there, but it was even more so when news circulated about this large group that was heading north, so they avoided going into the center of Wilmington. Samuel Pattison was also catching up with them. In an effort to outrun any slave catchers, Brinkley drove his carriage too fast and it broke down and the horse was injured. The group, especially the children, were exhausted, cold, hungry and ill. Some of the people were barefoot. Word got to Thomas Garrett by the 31st that most of the group was in Centreville, which he relayed to William Still. There was a 14-year-old-boy who became separated from the rest of the group.

Irishmen attacked eighteen of the runaways and a black conductor named Jackson with clubs. One of the runaways shot or stabbed one of the Irishmen. The fugitives split into smaller groups and went to a number of places outside of Philadelphia. They pushed through unusually heavy snowstorms throughout November. Most of the group made it to St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada.

References

  1. ^ Larson, Katherine Clifford (Spring 2003). "Asanti Daughter of Zion" (PDF). University of New Hampshire, Durham. pp. 277–280.
  2. ^ Ames, D. L. (2009). Delaware Scenic and Historic Highway Nomination Application Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway. Delaware Department of Transportation Scenic and Historic Highways Program. pp. 98, 103–104, 112. Downloaded from Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway, University of Delaware Library, Museums, and Press
Underground Railroad
People
Places
Events
Topics
Related
See also: Slavery in the United States and Slavery in Canada
Slave narratives
Individuals
by continent
of enslavement
Africa
Asia
Europe
Ottoman Empire
North America:
Canada
North America:
Caribbean
North America:
United States
South America
Non-fiction books
Fiction/novels
Young adult books
Essays
Plays
Documentaries
Related
African Americans
History
Culture
Notable people
Education, science
and technology
Religion
Political movements
Civic and economic
groups
Sports
Athletic associations
and conferences
Ethnic subdivisions
Demographics
Languages
By state/city
Diaspora
Lists
Categories:
Escape of 28 enslaved people from Maryland (1857) Add topic