Background:
Slavery was foundational to the economy and culture of the United States of America. It was designed to break the will of those enslaved and reinforce the power and profit of enslavers. Every enslaved person was an individual whose rights and liberties were violated, yet each had a different experience. Read the two primary source letters below that reveal aspects of life under slavery.
Essential Question:
What do these sources help you understand about the experience of slaves in the United States?
Historians use primary sources to better understand how people in the past experienced their lives and the world around them. Using the details from both sources, answer the prompt below:
What do these sources help you better understand about the experience of enslaved people in the United States in the 19th century?
Charlottesville Oct 8th 1852
Dear Husband,
I write you a letter to let you know of my distress [worry] my master has sold albert to a trader on Monday court day and myself and other child is for sale also and I want to you let hear from you very soon before next cort [court date] if you can I don't know when I don't want you to wait till Christmas I want you to tell Dr. Hamelton and your master if either will buy me they can attend to it know and then I can go afterwards.
I don't want a trader to get me they asked me if I had got any person to buy me and I told them no they took me to the court house too they never put me up a man buy the name of brady bought albert and is gone I don't know whare [where] they say he lives in Scottesville my things is in several places some is in staunton and if I should be sold I don’t know what will become of them I don't expect to meet with the luck to get that way till I am quite heartsick nothing more I am and ever will be your kind wife Maria Perkins.
To Richard Perkins
Source: U. B. Phillips, Life and Labor in the Old South, (Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1929), 212
Why does Maria Perkins want her husband's master or Dr. Hamelton to purchase her?
Excerpted by Actively Learn staff
Dear Sir:—I thank God that I am not property now, but am regarded as a man like yourself. Although I live far north, I am enjoying a comfortable living by my own industry. If you should ever chance to be traveling this way, and will call on me, I will use you better than you did me while you held me as a slave. Think not that I have any malice against you, for the cruel [unkind] treatment which you inflicted [applied] on me while I was in your power. As it was the custom of your country, to treat your fellow men as you did me and my little family, I can freely forgive you.
I wish to be remembered in love to my aged mother, and friends; please tell her that if we should never meet again in this life, my prayer shall be to God that we may meet in Heaven, where parting shall be no more.
You wish to be remembered to King and Jack. I am pleased, sir, to inform you that they are both here, well, and doing well. They are both living in Canada West. They are now the owners of better farms than the men are who once owned them.
You may perhaps think hard of us for running away from slavery, but as to myself, I have but one apology to make for it, which is this: I have only to regret that I did not start at an earlier period. I might have been free long before I was.
To be compelled [forced] to stand by and see you whip and slash my wife without mercy, when I could afford her no protection, not even by offering myself to suffer the lash in her place, was more than I felt it to be the duty of a slave husband to endure [take], while the way was open to Canada. My infant child was also frequently flogged [whipped] by Mrs. Gatewood, for crying, until its skin was bruised literally purple. This kind of treatment was what drove me from home and family, to seek a better home for them. But I am willing to forget the past. I should be Pleased to hear from you again, on the reception of this, and should also be very happy to correspond with you often, if it should be agreeable to yourself.
I subscribe myself a friend to the oppressed [people whose power is taken forcibly], and Liberty forever.
Source: Henry Bibb to William Gatewood, Detroit, March 23, 1844 in Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Henry Bibb, an American Slave, Written by Himself. (New York: Published by the Author, 1849), 175–78.
What phrase or sentence from the letter does Henry use to justify running away from his master?
Complete the following sentence:
Based on the details in this letter, we can make evidence-based inference about _________.
Select the TWO correct answers.