Twelve Years a Slave
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About this ebook
The story that inspired the major motion picture, with an introduction by the bestselling author of Wench, Dolen Perkins-Valdez, Twelve Years a Slave is a harrowing, vividly detailed, and utterly unforgettable account of slavery.
Solomon Northup was an entrepreneur and dedicated family man, father to three young children, Elizabeth, Margaret, and Alonzo. What little free time he had after long days of manual and farm labor he spent reading books and playing the violin. Though his father was born into slavery, Solomon was born and lived free.
In March 1841, two strangers approached Northup, offering him employment as a violinist in a town hundreds of miles away from his home in Saratoga Springs, New York. Solomon bid his wife farewell until his return. Only after he was drugged and bound did he realize the strangers were kidnappers—that nefarious brand of criminals in the business of capturing runaway and free blacks for profit. Thus began Northup's horrific life as a slave.
Dehumanized, beaten, and worked mercilessly, Northup suffered all the more, wondering what had become of his family. One owner was savagely cruel and Northup recalls he was “indebted to him for nothing, save undeserved abuse.” Just as he felt the summer of his life fade and all hope nearly lost, he met a kindhearted stranger who changed the course of his life.
With its firsthand account of this country's Peculiar Institution, this is a book no one interested in American history can afford to miss.
Editor's Note
Freedom found…
The true story behind the Oscar-winning film, this first-hand account of Solomon Northup, a free man who was kidnapped and enslaved for a decade, captures — and celebrates — the ferocity of human hope.
Solomon Northup
Solomon Northup (1808–1857) was a free-born African American from Saratoga Springs, New York. In 1841, he was kidnapped and forced into slavery for twelve years. With the help of his family and his father’s former master, Northup ultimately won his freedom and took the traders who betrayed him to court. He is best known for his autobiographical account of his enslavement, Twelve Years a Slave.
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Reviews for Twelve Years a Slave
156 ratings65 reviews
What our readers think
Readers find this title to be a captivating and enlightening book about the true horrors of slavery. It provides an insight into the lives of slaves and their struggle for freedom. The book is highly recommended for anyone interested in this genre. It is considered to be an excellent and inspiring read that touches the heart and leaves a lasting impact.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
May 20, 2019
Solomon Northup was born a free man in New York State. At the age of 33 he was kidnapped in Washington D.C. and placed in an underground slave pen. Northup was transported by ship to New Orleans where he was sold into slavery. He spent the next 12 years working as a carpenter, driver, and cotton picker. This narrative reveals how Northup survived the harsh conditions of slavery, including smallpox, lashings, and an attempted hanging. Solomon Northup was among a select few who were freed from slavery.My Thoughts:The description of the book really tells the reader what to expect with this true account of the authors experiences. The story is really harrowing and it is awful what human beings can do to each other.I wouldn’t say that the book is an enjoyable one because of its content and at times it was awful. I especially found the floggings terrible and worse of all was what happened to Patsey. After that event I found that I couldn’t stand anymore so I was skipping towards the end just to see how the author did find his freedom again.A very harrowing tale but at times very compelling but I wouldn’t say it was a nice read. I am glad that I did read this book albeit it hard at times to read the content. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
May 20, 2019
There is no question that Solomon Northup is a hero of American History. This Slave narrative, 12 YEARS A SLAVE, by SOLOMON NORTHUP, is unforgettable. I think the story is not only amazing but also miraculous. When I met Solomon Northup, he was a slave. Solomon Northup is born a free man. He lives in Upstate New York. He has a wife named Anne and three children. He is a hard working man and a honest man. Until one day his whole life changes. It is difficult to believe there are indeed rascals and scoundrels on the earth and in the vicinity where you live especially when you've been taught all the bad men or evil masters are down South. On this particular day, Mr. Northup befriends two men. Two men who will take him South and sell him to a Southern planter. Solomon Northup had no idea of their ugly plans. For twelve years Solomon Northup does not mention he is a free man. He works harder than a dog. He is beaten. He is treated like he was born into slavery. I could not see how his life could ever change, how he could regroup from such a trial and test. I can't imagine losing my whole family in one day. Never hearing whether they are dead or alive for twelve long years. This man, now not a man but an animal, to his slave holders, continues to struggle through each day. I think he had quite a bit of faith. He never praises himself in the narrative. He does finally call himself upright. How does he look upon slavery? He calls it a "peculiar institution." Other than that he will not judge this way of life in any way. He will leave it to other men and women. Along with Solomon Northup, I met the other slaves around him. I had the chance to read about them. One woman still lives in my head. She had two children. She begged, screamed, begged, "please don't sell my children from me." Those who know about American slavery can guess what happened to her and her children. I could hear her voice in my head because it was my voice. If any man would have taken my children from me to an unknown place, I would have died. I would not have had the fortitude to live on. But how many men and women did live through those days without hope of seeing or hearing their children again? Only an inhumane person could do such a thing to another person. This woman's story is a testament to the horrors of slavery. It made me think about my values in life. I now believe more fully nothing is impossible in life. Perhaps this is why people say the truth is stranger than fiction. Number two is that I must always keep putting one foot in front of the other foot as I journey through the adventures, unwanted adventures, of my life. I must also remember my scars from life whether emotional or physical in no way touch what the slave ancestors lived each and every day of their short lives. Strange, one man's narrative has the power two and a half centuries later to give hope to people of another generation. His voice speaks from the grave. He still lives because his story lives. His last wish was to lie in the church graveyard and finally go home to the Lord. Little did he know how much his life would mean to future old and young people. It is a disservice if these slave narratives are not read in our schools and discussed with relevance.I have been moved by other slave narratives: for example Frederick Douglass's narrative and The Incidents in a Slave Girl's Life. Truly, I think this one, 12 YEARS A SLAVE, is my favorite. Why? Simply because he already had that most precious gift, freedom. He had experienced it. Not just wished for it. He had it. It was stolen from him. How in the world must he have felt? And that is what made me want to read this narrative. I named two lesson from the narrative by Solomon Northup. There are more than any two I named. As I remember Northup, I will not forget Epps, his wife or the other slaves who worked around him. The slaves had no idea he was a free man until the day Henry Northup came to pick him up and take him back to New York State and his family. Therefore, Solomon Northup taught me the importance of knowing the power of silence at the right hour.As the young people say, "he kept it "real" for twelve long years. That's a mighty long time to give free labor while you are treated as less than a man in every way. In the end, Epps still called Northup "that d______d nigger." He didn't change one bit in his thinking. As a matter of fact he headed out on his horse to find a way to stop this foolish behavior. Had the world gone nuts? To Epps and white men like him, yes, the world was losing its way. Their workers in a few year would be set free. The Land of Cotton was in danger. Who else would do such work with so little food and clothing while being beater with whips?If only the "men or masters" around Northup, had looked at that last name. It would have told them life was going to change for the better and the North would help it happen. When it begun to happen, the Civil War, there would be no way for the slaves to go but "up." Up in their geography and Up in their thinking..america.aljazeera.com/watch/shows/america-tonight/subject-of-12yearsaslave150yearsinwronggrave.html - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
May 20, 2019
The true story of a black American freeman in the 1840s-50s who was kidnapped and sold into slavery in the southern states. After enduring 12 years of servitude he was eventually freed after managing to contact a relative of the man who had set his ancestors free. The experiences he recounts are both shocking and moving, though he himself notes at the end that he may have given an overly positive impression of life as a slave. It was a difficult read, but well worth it. His faith through all circumstances is as inspiring as is disgusting the way certain owners misused scripture to support their barbaric treatment. Although he makes reference to the abolitionist movement he is careful not to overstep the role alotted him as a black man in those days by presuming to preach to the reader, instead leaving them to draw their own conclusions. I certainly don't think I could have been so diplomatic if I were in his place. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Jan 25, 2017
captivating and excellent read. Throughly enjoyed this book which was more informative than the movie - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
May 28, 2018
wonderful book. would recommend to anyone interested in this genre - Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5
Jul 17, 2016
s'il vous plait je veux la version française des livres - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Aug 22, 2016
A realistic review. Solomon Norhup gives us an insight into slavery. A heavy reading well scripted book that makes you want to rescue slaves to freedom. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Jan 20, 2020
Best book I have read in my whole life!!!! Everyone should read this book. I am from Venezuela and I started studying History of US. This book touched my heart, made me cry, made me happy, made me another person! - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Jan 9, 2016
An enlightening book about the true horrors of slavery. I am white and was not part of that culture. Thank God. I have always been an advocate of blacks as my equal in every way. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Feb 14, 2016
Inspiring :')1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Nov 20, 2015
Commendable - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Aug 28, 2015
So much more than the movie hinted at - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Aug 23, 2024
While this story is alarmingly violent and more horrible because it's a true story, it was easier, for me, reading it, than it was to watch the movie... Somehow, knowing I can put the book down when it becomes unbearably sad, scary, aggravating... that makes it easier for me. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
May 16, 2015
This was required reading in my college Louisiana History class. It was the best book I read during my college years. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Apr 29, 2015
Excellent story - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5
Feb 27, 2015
best book in such a time - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Feb 11, 2024
What a great book was hidden here waiting for me! It is the autobiography of an American citizen, free, but he is black, and he has the misfortune of crossing paths with two beings greedy for money, for whom life is only worth the coins they can earn from it.
It is a testimony as raw as it is real, written in the first person from the perspective of someone who was kidnapped and sold like cattle, who survived being a slave, who was smart enough to seek help from the right person, who was able to get out and tell it all.
He was able to do it, while there are thousands of others who did not succeed and disappeared forever.
It is a wonderful story that deserves to be better known. A movie was made a few years ago, but it went by unnoticed; the memory of all these people deserves something more. A tough but highly recommended read. (Translated from Spanish) - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Jan 21, 2024
"12 Years a Slave" is an autobiographical novel written by Solomon Northup, a free black man who was kidnapped and sold into slavery in the southern United States in the 1840s. The novel recounts his experiences as a slave on various cotton plantations, including the inhuman conditions in which he lived and worked, the brutalities he suffered at the hands of his masters and overseers, and his struggle to regain his freedom.
Northup details the cruelty and injustice of the slavery system in the United States, as well as the resistance and dignity of the slaves who fought for their freedom. The novel is a powerful critique of slavery and a call to action to abolish it.
In summary, "12 Years a Slave" is a powerful and moving work that reminds us of the importance of freedom and human dignity. (Translated from Spanish) - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
May 23, 2024
Don't be off-put by the Victorian language. We can blame Northup's editor for that. The book is a must-read document. I would have found the story too incredible to believe if not for the painstaking research of Clifford Brown, Rachel Seligman, and David Friske who drew on original sources for their biography, Solomon Northup: The Complete Story of the Author of Twelve Years A Slave. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Sep 21, 2021
Rolex watch (Translated from Spanish) - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Jul 19, 2020
In this chilling tale, everything abhorrent about humanity is repeatedly highlighted. Told by the protagonist himself, it is a story steeped in inequality and the supremacy of some beings over others, where the geographical area in which each individual is located will determine their fate and freedom in every sense. With episodes of cruelty and malice taken to unsuspected limits, I could feel nothing but shame and anguish in the face of the parade of aberrations, injustices, fears, and cowardly silences of those who do not attack but also do not prevent so many humiliating, sadistic, and despicable deeds. Despite not being a pleasant tale, I recommend reading it, as it is a fact that occurred and unfortunately persists even in the 21st century. For those who cannot tolerate horror stories, do not think of King, Poe, or Lovecraft. The true terror is caused by humans to our own species, and that is truly frightening. (Translated from Spanish) - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Mar 15, 2020
No man, in his full capacities, can remain indifferent to the "queen of fears." Every living being values its life; the worm that crawls on the ground would fight with all its strength for it. Its freedom. (Translated from Spanish) - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Mar 7, 2020
It tells the harsh reality of slavery never seen before... With situations that make you wonder to what extent the cruelty of humanity can go. (Translated from Spanish) - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Apr 11, 2019
I really had no idea about the strategies that were being carried out in those times, but this book illustrates the history very well. (Translated from Spanish) - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Dec 27, 2018
A free black man in New York is kidnapped and sold into slavery in Louisiana, where he remains for a dozen years before he is rescued. It pulls no punches when describing the horrors of slavery, but what really struck me is how hard Northup worked to see the best in everyone. He does put a little more detail into the act of farming cotton and the description of stocks than I found strictly necessary, but his purpose was to educate his contemporaries about the realities of slavery, setting the record straight. He goes to great pains to give evidence that his story is true, and while he does speak about the wrongness of slavery as an institution, he is reasonable rather than preachy. Fascinating story. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Nov 25, 2018
A book I read a few years ago, another episode that humanity must not repeat, it is sad that despite the struggles carried out, such practices of slavery still occur in the world. I believe that one of the main purposes of this book is to raise awareness of this issue that we, as a society, must eradicate at its roots. Solomon, an admirable man who always fought for something he should have always had and that should never have been taken from him, which is freedom. Like every human being, simply by being one, he is born free, but it is in this dark and shameful time that this fundamental right has been violated in many ways. Stories like these allow us to delve into what it truly means to be a slave. We have the obligation to ensure that episodes like this do not continue to be repeated. (Translated from Spanish) - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Jun 24, 2018
I was way ahead on reading Battle Cry of Freedom for my Civil War reading group, so I decided to take a break and read something related. I'd been meaning to read this since seeing the heart-breaking movie, and as I'd found a nice copy at my favorite used bookstore last year, this seemed an obvious choice.
I thought the movie did a fairly good job of keeping faithful to the book, so most of the horrors of this story were already familiar. So what impressed me most in this reading were Northup's remarkable insights into the people around him -- both the slaves who have known such treatment their entire lives, but also the slave owners. Some of his observations of the very real cost to their humanity by the brutalities they have inflicted and/or witnessed as members of the slave-holding class struck me. Northup wasn't just a man thrust into extraordinary circumstances -- he was clearly himself extraordinary, as a writer and observer, to be able to produce such an account. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Jul 30, 2017
This unforgettable memoir was the basis for the Academy Award-winning film 12 Years a Slave. This is the true story of Solomon Northup, who was born and raised as a freeman in New York. He lived the American dream, with a house and a loving family - a wife and two kids. Then one day he was drugged, kidnapped, and sold into slavery in the deep south. These are the true accounts of his twelve hard years as a slave - many believe this memoir is even more graphic and disturbing than the film. His extraordinary journey proves the resiliency of hope and the human spirit despite the most grueling and formidable of circumstances. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Oct 4, 2016
2.5 stars
In the mid-1800s, Solomon Northup was a free black man from New York. He was married and had three kids. He was kidnapped and sold into slavery in Louisiana. This is his story.
I think I made the mistake of listening to the audio. Even worse, my library had the choice of three different audio books, with three different narrators. I chose the narrator I recognized (though I've not listened to him narrate a book before): Louis Gossett, Jr. Unfortunately, the book rarely held my attention. It did some, and the parts I paid attention to were ok, but overall, I missed out on too much of the book to really “like” it. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Jul 11, 2016
This audio book brought Solomon’s voice through Louis Gossett Jr. as he read the book to me in my car. Mr. Gossett Jr. did a fantastic job bringing the emotion through making Solomon very real to me. This book was heart breaking, gut wrenching, and opened my eyes even further to another part of slavery. I have not watched the movie yet as I wanted to read the book first.
First of all, the concept of slavery just boggles my mind to begin with, it always has. The fact that white people thought they had the right to own another human has always baffled me and even more after listening to this book. It showed that there were a lot of bullies back then as there still are today. The brutal lashings after being stripped down and secured to the ground, the sorrow of children being taken from their mother, I can’t imagine anyone going through it. To be ripped away from what you know and love and then beaten to almost your death, there are no words.
I still can’t believe slavery was abolished in 1865. That wasn’t very long ago yet the youth of today don’t realize how recently it happened. It chills me to think that just a hundred years before I was born this was going on. This book should be part of the American History curriculum for every High School. I know Solomon will be with me for the rest of my life.
Book preview
Twelve Years a Slave - Solomon Northup
INTRODUCTION
Dolen Perkins-Valdez, PhD
THOUGH A young child when the television miniseries Roots first aired in 1977, I vividly remember how my family would gather around the television before shooing me off to sleep, eager to watch what is still widely considered one of the most memorable shows in television history. For those eight nights, they seemed lost to the screen in front of them. I now know they were riveted by depictions of slavery that were virtually unfamiliar to all. Two years later, my parents allowed me to join them and watch the first of two sequels to the original. This part of the story, based on the final chapters of Alex Haley’s eponymous book, took place closer to us, just forty-eight miles north of Memphis in Henning, Tennessee. I remember being filled with questions after the movie ended: Who were my ancestors? What happened to them? The questions stayed with me for years, informing a curiosity that would eventually lead to my writing a novel that probed the legacy of slavery, Wench.
At the time, Roots was a series every American had to see. The horrific theater of American slavery played out in living rooms across the country. If the early autobiographical slave narratives had set out to appeal to the country’s collective sense of justice, expose America’s troubling ironies, and advocate for abolition, Roots and its sequels carried the questions forward.
It is, perhaps, an exceptional feature of the United States that we have the freedom to probe our past. In the years since over a half million brave Americans lost their lives fighting the Civil War, we have unearthed many more details about the peculiar institution
that marked America’s landscape for more than two hundred and forty years. The myth of moonlight and magnolias set forth by southerners after the war has been contested by stories of heroism and rebellion against a brutal system. Yet we are still preoccupied, as a nation, with the simplest yet most profound question of all. Who are we?
While fiction certainly has the power to profoundly influence how we think about history and humanity, firsthand accounts of slavery are still, perhaps, the most revelatory documents we possess to answer that question. As I read Twelve Years a Slave by Solomon Northup, I could not move from my seat. Every American must read this. Every American must know this story. It is still relevant, and still surprising even given all we know about slavery, to realize that it was possible for a freeborn man, married with a family, to be kidnapped and sold into slavery by avaricious and corrupt men. It is important to see how that wronged man, Northup, maintained a kindling in his breast, a desire for better days, even in the face of violence and the inability of his captors and owners
to recognize his humanity. And it’s important to know that so many had to be convinced of the humanity of blacks. As odd as they may sound to our twenty-first-century ears, these documents—whether Northup’s narrative or Harriet Jacobs’s Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, or still other first-person accounts of slavery—were meant to convince readers that black folks were made of the same flesh and blood as white folks. Several times in Northup’s memoir, when he is speaking through the consciousness of slaveholders, he refers to his enslaved companions as animals.
When he and the others are waiting to be auctioned, they stay in pens,
a word likening their holding cells to the pens of farm animals. One of Northup’s owners, Epps, when asked what’s the difference between a white man and a black one?
answers You might as well ask what the difference is between a white man and a baboon.
Northup contrasts this outward gaze with descriptions of his domestic life in freedom: referring to the life he shared with his wife, Anne, before he was kidnapped, he reminds the reader, We occupied a house.… In the winter seasons, I relied upon my violin, though during the construction of the Troy and Saratoga railroad, I performed many hard days’ labor upon it.
And where blacks were thought to have emotional lives no greater than those of monkeys, Northup describes his emotions for his family as boundless: From the time of my marriage to this day the love I have borne my wife has been sincere and unabated; and only those who have felt the glowing tenderness a father cherishes for his offspring, can appreciate my affection for the beloved children which have since been born to us.
Northup astutely answers southern arguments of inequality not only by painting a portrait of his life outside slavery’s brutality but also through his use of erudite language—he uses words such as cachinnations
—and through revelations about his musical accomplishments. He manages to remark upon his own talents without seeming prideful, offering his frequent engagement at gatherings as proof of his gifts. His literary and musical talents remind us of the possibilities of an unfettered human being.
What more might Northup—an entrepreneur, craftsman, musician, husband, and father—have accomplished had he not been held in bondage? I’m reminded of something the Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Isabel Wilkerson and author of The Warmth of Other Suns said at one of her readings. As a result of leaving the South, many blacks went on to fulfill their destiny. At one reading she remarked, had Toni Morrison’s parents not uprooted to the North, they may have never met and produced one of the most acclaimed novelists of our time. The same can be said of the great jazz musician Miles Davis and the acclaimed playwright August Wilson, she argued. The questions should also be asked: What might have become of the companions who labored side by side with Northup in Louisiana under the burden of slavery had they been free? Who might his enslaved brothers and sisters have become had they not toiled their potential away, as was the case with Patsey, with whom Northup toiled at Epps’s farm until her spirit was broken and her back nearly so? Or Uncle Abram, prematurely aged and foggy? And what would have become of Eliza’s children, Randall and Emily, if they had grown up with their mother’s counsel?
In contrast to the brave heroics of Solomon Northup, the enslaved women in my novel, Wench, are much more undecided as a group. Some contemplate escape, but others are held back by the thought of losing contact with their families. What kind of mother, one might ask, runs away and leaves her children behind? What kind of mother, one might ask, does not attempt escape with the hopes of returning for her offspring?
We return to the question, Who are we? Northup’s compassion for his fellow human beings also reveals his humane side. Northup admits that, notwithstanding the immutable corruption of the system, there were benevolent as well as cruel whites entangled within slavery’s clutches. In Northup’s dexterous prose it does not feel as if he is making apologetic allowances for a sensitive, white readership. On the contrary, he convincingly draws a complicated portrait of white southerners that allows for areas of gray. Likewise, Northup acknowledges the complex lives of slaves when he describes a traitorous enslaved man who was a pariah among his community. These gray, in-between spaces can reveal a more nuanced understanding of our history. Flattened conversations that do not acknowledge the numerous daily rebellions against the system, as well as the kindnesses of well-meaning whites, will not result in productive and truthful acknowledgments of this shared history.
Without a depth of understanding of the multifaceted world of the millions of enslaved Africans in America, it’s easy to experience a knee-jerk rejection of what we might perceive as passivity in some slave quarters. As present-day readers reading a story such as this one, we might find our most vehement inner voices flaring up. I would not have done that. I would have escaped. I would have killed him. Yet Northup reminds even his contemporary readers to be careful about such judgments if they have not experienced slavery themselves. In Wench, the main character, Lizzie, reminds us of the tenacity with which owners held on to their property: If she left, there was no doubt in her mind that Drayle would find her. He would hire every bounty hunter in the country. She would not get far.
It seems odd, given the many accounts of misery that enslaved people experienced, that the American narrative about slavery is, in some circles, still imbued with intonations of golden antebellum days. There remains an entire narrative around the Lost Cause of the South, the same discourse that denies slavery was a primary catalyst of the Civil War. Northup takes great care to repeatedly insist that even the well-treated enslaved person desires freedom. It is his own thirst for freedom that inspires him to carry on. What must it have taken for Solomon Northup to maintain the secret of his former life and hope for a return to it for over a decade?
The enduring optimism of Solomon Northup is not unlike the sentiment expressed by the nation’s founding fathers. Although enslaved people had been abducted from their native lands in Africa, their carefully placed echoes of optimism, which can be gleaned in these first-person accounts, places them firmly within the rhetoric of American ideals. I believe Northup’s tale is a story of faith, not of victimhood. It is a story of survival, family, and community. It is a quintessential American story that resoundingly answers the question of who we are.
CHAPTER 1
HAVING BEEN born a freeman, and for more than thirty years enjoyed the blessings of liberty in a free State—and having at the end of that time been kidnapped and sold into Slavery, where I remained, until happily rescued in the month of January, 1853, after a bondage of twelve years—it has been suggested that an account of my life and fortunes would not be uninteresting to the public.
Since my return to liberty, I have not failed to perceive the increasing interest throughout the Northern States, in regard to the subject of Slavery. Works of fiction, professing to portray its features in their more pleasing as well as more repugnant aspects, have been circulated to an extent unprecedented, and, as I understand, have created a fruitful topic of comment and discussion.
I can speak of Slavery only so far as it came under my own observation—only so far as I have known and experienced it in my own person. My object is, to give a candid and truthful statement of facts: to repeat the story of my life, without exaggeration, leaving it for others to determine, whether even the pages of fiction present a picture of more cruel wrong or a severer bondage.
As far back as I have been able to ascertain, my ancestors on the paternal side were slaves in Rhode Island. They belonged to a family by the name of Northup, one of whom, removing to the State of New York, settled at Hoosic, in Rensselaer county. He brought with him Mintus Northup, my father. On the death of this gentleman, which must have occurred some fifty years ago, my father became free, having been emancipated by a direction in his will.
Henry B. Northup, Esq., of Sandy Hill, a distinguished counselor at law, and the man to whom, under Providence, I am indebted for my present liberty, and my return to the society of my wife and children, is a relative of the family in which my forefathers were thus held to service, and from which they took the name I bear. To this fact may be attributed the persevering interest he has taken in my behalf.
Sometime after my father’s liberation, he removed to the town of Minerva, Essex county, N. Y., where I was born, in the month of July, 1808. How long he remained in the latter place I have not the means of definitely ascertaining. From thence he removed to Granville, Washington county, near a place known as Slyborough, where, for some years, he labored on the farm of Clark Northup, also a relative of his old master; from thence he removed to the Alden farm, at Moss Street, a short distance north of the village of Sandy Hill; and from thence to the farm now owned by Russel Pratt, situated on the road leading from Fort Edward to Argyle, where he continued to reside until his death, which took place on the 22d day of November, 1829. He left a widow and two children—myself, and Joseph, an elder brother. The latter is still living in the county of Oswego, near the city of that name; my mother died during the period of my captivity.
Though born a slave, and laboring under the disadvantages to which my unfortunate race is subjected, my father was a man respected for his industry and integrity, as many now living, who well remember him, are ready to testify. His whole life was passed in the peaceful pursuits of agriculture, never seeking employment in those more menial positions, which seem to be especially allotted to the children of Africa. Besides giving us an education surpassing that ordinarily bestowed upon children in our condition, he acquired, by his diligence and economy, a sufficient property qualification to entitle him to the right of suffrage. He was accustomed to speak to us of his early life; and although at all times cherishing the warmest emotions of kindness, and even of affection towards the family, in whose house he had been a bondsman, he nevertheless comprehended the system of Slavery, and dwelt with sorrow on the degradation of his race. He endeavored to imbue our minds with sentiments of morality, and to teach us to place our, trust and confidence in Him who regards the humblest as well as the highest of his creatures. How often since that time has the recollection of his paternal counsels occurred to me, while lying in a slave hut in the distant and sickly regions of Louisiana, smarting with the undeserved wounds which an inhuman master had inflicted, and longing only for the grave which had covered him, to shield me also from the lash of the oppressor. In the church yard at Sandy Hill, an humble stone marks the spot where he reposes, after having worthily performed the duties appertaining to the lowly sphere wherein God had appointed him to walk.
Up to this period I had been principally engaged with my father in the labors of the farm. The leisure hours allowed me were generally either employed over my books, or playing on the violin—an amusement which was the ruling passion of my youth. It has also been the source of consolation since, affording, pleasure to the simple beings with whom my lot was cast, and beguiling my own thoughts, for many hours, from the painful contemplation of my fate.
On Christmas day, 1829, I was married to Anne Hampton, a colored girl then living in the vicinity of our residence. The ceremony was performed at Fort Edward, by Timothy Eddy, Esq., a magistrate of that town, and still a prominent citizen of the place. She had resided a long time at Sandy Hill, with Mr. Baird, proprietor of the Eagle Tavern, and also in the family of Rev. Alexander Proudfit, of Salem. This gentleman for many years had presided over the Presbyterian society at the latter place, and was widely distinguished for his learning and piety. Anne still holds in grateful remembrance the exceeding kindness and the excellent counsels of that good man. She is not able to determine the exact line of her descent, but the blood of three races mingles in her veins. It is difficult to tell whether the red, white, or black predominates. The union of them all, however, in her origin, has given her a singular but pleasing expression, such as is rarely to be seen. Though somewhat resembling, yet she cannot properly be styled a quadroon, a class to which, I have omitted to mention, my mother belonged.
I had just now passed the period of my minority, having reached the age of twenty-one years in the month of July previous. Deprived of the advice and assistance of my father, with a wife dependent upon me for support, I resolved to enter upon a life of industry; and notwithstanding the obstacle of color, and the consciousness of my lowly state, indulged in pleasant dreams of a good time coming, when the possession of some humble habitation, with a few surrounding acres, should reward my labors, and bring me the means of happiness and comfort.
From the time of my marriage to this day the love I have borne my wife has been sincere and unabated; and only those who have felt the glowing tenderness a father cherishes for his offspring, can appreciate my affection for the beloved children which have since been born to us. This much I deem appropriate and necessary to say, in order that those who read these pages, may comprehend the poignancy of those sufferings I have been doomed to bear.
Immediately upon our marriage we commenced house-keeping, in the old yellow building then standing at the southern extremity of Fort Edward village, and which has since been transformed into a modern mansion, and lately occupied by Captain Lathrop. It is known as the Fort House. In this building the courts were sometime held after the organization of the county. It was also occupied by Burgoyne in 1777, being situated near the old Fort on the left bank of the Hudson.
During the winter I was employed with others repairing the Champlain Canal, on that section over which William Van Nortwick was superintendent. David McEachron had the immediate charge of the men in whose company I labored. By the time the canal opened in the spring, I was enabled, from the savings of my wages, to purchase a pair of horses, and other things necessarily required in the business of navigation.
Having hired several efficient hands to assist me, I entered into contracts for the transportation of large rafts of timber from Lake Champlain to Troy. Dyer Beckwith and a Mr. Bartemy, of Whitehall, accompanied me on several trips. During the season I became perfectly familiar with the art and mysteries of rafting—a knowledge which afterwards enabled me to render profitable service to a worthy master, and to astonish the simple-witted lumbermen on the banks of the Bayou Boeuf.
In one of my voyages down Lake Champlain, I was induced to make a visit to Canada. Repairing to Montreal, I visited the cathedral and other places of interest in that city, from whence I continued my excursion to Kingston and other towns, obtaining a knowledge of localities, which was also of service to me afterwards, as will appear towards the close of this narrative.
Having completed my contracts on the canal satisfactorily to myself and to my employer, and not wishing to remain idle, now that the navigation of the canal was again suspended, I entered into another contract with Medad Gunn, to cut a large quantity of wood. In this business I was engaged during the winter of 1831–32.
With the return of spring, Anne and myself conceived the project of taking a farm in the neighborhood. I had been accustomed from earliest youth to agricultural labors, and it was an occupation congenial to my tastes. I accordingly entered into arrangements for a part of the old Alden farm, on which my father formerly resided. With one cow, one swine, a yoke of fine oxen I had lately purchased of Lewis Brown, in Hartford, and other personal property and effects, we proceeded to our new home in Kingsbury. That year I planted twenty-five acres of corn, sowed large fields of oats, and commenced farming upon as large a scale as my utmost means would permit. Anne was diligent about the house affairs, while I toiled laboriously in the field.
On this place we continued to reside until 1834. In the winter season I had numerous calls to play on the violin. Wherever the young people assembled to dance, I was almost invariably there. Throughout the surrounding villages my fiddle was notorious. Anne, also, during her long residence at the Eagle Tavern, had become somewhat famous as a cook. During court weeks, and on public occasions, she was employed at high wages in the kitchen at Sherrill’s Coffee House.
We always returned home from the performance of these services with money in our pockets; so that, with fiddling, cooking, and farming, we soon found ourselves in the possession of abundance, and, in fact, leading a happy and prosperous life. Well, indeed, would it have been for us had we remained on the farm at Kingsbury; but the time came when the next step was to be taken towards the cruel destiny that awaited me.
In March, 1834, we removed to Saratoga Springs.
We occupied a house belonging to Daniel O’Brien, on the north side of Washington street. At that time Isaac Taylor kept a large boarding house, known as Washington Hall, at the north end of Broadway. He employed me to drive a hack, in which capacity I worked for him two years. After this time I was generally employed through the visiting season, as also was Anne, in the United States Hotel, and other public houses of the place. In winter seasons I relied upon my violin, though during the construction of the Troy and Saratoga railroad, I performed many hard days’ labor upon it.
I was in the habit, at Saratoga, of purchasing articles necessary for my family at the stores of Mr. Cephas Parker and Mr. William Perry, gentlemen towards whom, for many acts of kindness, I entertained feelings of strong regard. It was for this reason that twelve years afterwards, I caused to be directed to them the letter, which is hereinafter inserted, and which was the means, in the hands of Mr. Northup, of my fortunate deliverance.
While living at the United States Hotel, I frequently met with slaves, who had accompanied their masters from the South. They were always well dressed and well provided for, leading apparently an easy life, with but few of its ordinary troubles to perplex them. Many times they entered into conversation with me on the subject of Slavery. Almost uniformly I found they cherished a secret desire for liberty. Some of them expressed the most ardent anxiety to escape, and consulted me on the best method of effecting it. The fear of punishment, however, which they knew was certain to attend their re-capture and return, in all cases proved sufficient to deter them from the experiment. Having all my life breathed the free air of the North, and conscious that I possessed the same feelings and affections that find a place in the white man’s breast; conscious, moreover, of an intelligence equal to that of some men, at least, with a fairer skin. I was too ignorant, perhaps too independent, to conceive how any one could be content to live in the abject condition of a slave. I could not comprehend the justice of that law, or that religion, which upholds or recognizes the principle of Slavery; and never once, I am proud to say, did I fail to counsel any one who came to me, to watch his opportunity, and strike for freedom.
I continued to reside at Saratoga until the spring of 1841. The flattering anticipations which, seven years before, had seduced us from the quiet farm house, on the east side of the Hudson, had not been realized. Though always in comfortable circumstances, we had not prospered. The society and associations at that world-renowned watering place, were not calculated to preserve the simple habits of industry and economy to which I had been accustomed, but, on the contrary, to substitute others in their stead, tending to shiftlessness and extravagance.
At this time we were the parents of three children—Elizabeth, Margaret, and Alonzo. Elizabeth, the eldest, was in her tenth year; Margaret was two
