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        <title>Twelve Years a Slave. Narrative of Solomon Northup, a Citizen of
New-York, Kidnapped in Washington City in 1841, and Rescued in 1853...:
Electronic Edition.</title>
        <author>Solomon Northup (b. 1808)</author>
        <respStmt>
          <resp>Text scanned (OCR) by</resp>
          <name id="cg">Christopher Gwyn</name>
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        <respStmt>
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          <name id="ns">Natalia Smith</name>
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        <edition>First edition, <date>1997.</date></edition>
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      <extent>ca. 700K</extent>
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        <publisher>Academic Affairs Library, UNC-CH</publisher>
        <pubPlace>University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, </pubPlace>
        <date>1997.</date>
        <availability status="unknown">
          <p>This work is the property of the University of North Carolina 
at Chapel Hill. It may be used freely by individuals for research, teaching and personal use as long as this statement of availability is included in the text.</p>
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      <notesStmt>
        <note anchored="yes">Call number E444 .N87 (Wilson Annex, 
UNC-CH)</note>
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        <bibl><title>Twelve Years a Slave. Narrative of Solomon Northup, a Citizen of New-York, Kidnapped in Washington City in 1841, and Rescued in 1853, From a Cotton Plantation Near the Red River in Louisiana.</title><author>Solomon Northup </author>
<imprint><pubPlace>Auburn:</pubPlace><publisher>Derby and Miller.</publisher><pubPlace>Buffalo:</pubPlace><publisher>Derby. Orton and Mulligan.</publisher><date>1853</date></imprint></bibl>
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            <item>Northup, Solomon, b. 1808.</item>
            <item>African Americans -- New York (State) -- Biography.</item>
            <item>Kidnapping -- Washington D.C. -- History -- 19th century.</item>
            <item>Slaves -- Louisiana -- Biography.</item>
            <item>Slavery -- Louisiana.</item>
            <item>Slaves' writings, American -- Louisiana.</item>
            <item>Plantation life -- Louisiana -- History -- 19th century.</item>
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  <text>
    <front>
      <div1 type="frontispiece">
        <p>
          <figure id="frontis" entity="northupfp">
            <p>SOLOMON IN HIS PLANTATION SUIT.<lb/>[Frontispiece Image]</p>
          </figure>
        </p>
      </div1>
      <titlePage>
        <titlePart type="main">TWELVE YEARS A SLAVE.</titlePart>
        <titlePart type="main">NARRATIVE
OF
<emph rend="bold">SOLOMON NORTHUP,</emph></titlePart>
        <titlePart type="main">A CITIZEN OF NEW-YORK,
KIDNAPPED IN WASHINGTON CITY IN 1841
AND
RESCUED IN 1853, FROM A COTTON PLANTATION NEAR THE RED RIVER
IN LOUISIANA.</titlePart>
        <docImprint><pubPlace>AUBURN:</pubPlace>
<publisher>DERBY AND MILLER.</publisher>
<pubPlace>BUFFALO:</pubPlace>
<publisher>DERBY, ORTON AND MULLIGAN.</publisher>
<pubPlace>LONDON:</pubPlace>
<publisher>SAMPSON LOW, SON &amp; COMPANY, 47 LUDGATE HILL</publisher>
<date>1853.</date></docImprint>
        <titlePart type="verso">Entered according to act of Congress, in the year
one thousand eight hundred 
and fifty-three, by
DERBY AND MILLER,
In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Northern District of
New-York.</titlePart>
        <titlePart type="main">ENTERED IN LONDON AT STATIONERS' HALL.</titlePart>
      </titlePage>
      <div1 type="title page image">
        <p>
          <figure id="title" entity="northuptp">
            <p>[Title Page Image]</p>
          </figure>
        </p>
      </div1>
      <div1 type="dedication">
        <p>TO
<emph rend="bold">HARRIET BEECHER STOWE:</emph>
WHOSE NAME,
THROUGHOUT THE WORLD, IS IDENTIFIED WITH THE
GREAT REFORM:
THIS NARRATIVE, AFFORDING ANOTHER
<hi rend="italics">Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin,</hi>
IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED</p>
      </div1>
      <div1>
        <epigraph>
          <lg type="poem">
            <l>“Such dupes are men to custom, and so prone</l>
            <l>To reverence what is ancient, and can plead</l>
            <l>A course of long observance for its use,</l>
            <l>That even servitude, the worst of ills,</l>
            <l>Because delivered down from sire to son,</l>
            <l>Is kept and guarded as a sacred thing.</l>
            <l>But is it fit or can it bear the shock</l>
            <l>Of rational discussion, that a man</l>
            <l>Compounded and made up, like other men,</l>
            <l>Of elements tumultuous, in whom lust</l>
            <l>And folly in as ample measure meet,</l>
            <l>As in the bosom of the slave he rules,</l>
            <l>Should be a despot absolute, and boast</l>
            <l>Himself the only freeman of his land?”</l>
          </lg>
        </epigraph>
        <lg>
          <l>Cowper.</l>
        </lg>
      </div1>
      <div1>
        <pb id="northupvii" n="vii"/>
        <head>CONTENTS.</head>
        <list type="simple">
          <item>EDITOR'S PREFACE, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northupxv">15</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER I. 
Introductory—Ancestry—The Northup Family—Birth and
	Parentage—Mintus Northup—Marriage with Anne Hampton
	—Good Resolutions—Champlain Canal—Rafting Excursion
	to Canada—Farming—The Violin—Cooking—
	Removal to Saratoga—Parker and Perry—Slaves—and Slavery—The Children—The Beginning of Sorrow, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup17">17</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER II.
The two Strangers—The Circus Company—Departure from
	Saratoga—Ventriloquism and Legerdemain—Journey to
	New York—Free Papers—Brown and  Hamilton—The
	haste to reach the Circus—Arrival in  Washington—Funeral
	of Harrison—The Sudden Sickness—The Torment of
	Thirst—The Receding Light—Insensibility—Chains and
	Darkness, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup28">28</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER III.
Painful Meditations—James H. Burch—Williams' Slave Pen
	in Washington—The Lackey, Radburn—Assert my Freedom—The Anger of the Trader—The Paddle and  Cat-o'-nine-
	tails—The Whipping—New Acquaintances—Ray, Williams,
	and Randall—Arrival of Little Emily and her Mother in the
	Pen—Maternal Sorrows—The Story of Eliza, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup40">40</ref></item>
          <pb id="northupviii" n="viii"/>
          <item>CHAPTER IV.
Eliza's Sorrows—Preparation to Embark—Driven Through
	the Streets of  Washington—Hail, Columbia—The Tomb of
	Washington—Clem Ray—The Breakfast on the Steamer—
	The happy Birds—Aquia Creek—Fredericksburgh—Arrival
	in Richmond—Goodin and his Slave Pen—Robert, of
	Cincinnati—David and his Wife—Mary and Lethe—Clem's
	Return—His subsequent Escape to Canada—The Brig Orleans
—James H. Burch, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup54">54</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER V.
Arrival at Norfolk—Frederick and Maria—Arthur, the Freeman—Appointed Steward—Jim, Cuffee, and Jenny—The
	Storm—Bahama Banks—The Calm—The Conspiracy—The
	Long Boat—The Small-Pox—Death of Robert—Manning,
	the Sailor—The Meeting in the Forecastle—The Letter—
	Arrival At New-Orleans—Arthur's Rescue—Theophilus Free-
	man, the Consignee—Platt—First Night in the New-Orleans
	Slave Pen, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup65">65</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER VI.
Freeman's Industry—Cleanliness and Clothes—Exercising in
	the Show Room—The Dance—Bob, the Fiddler—Arrival
	of Customers—Slaves Examined—The Old Gentleman of
	New-Orleans—Sale of David, Caroline, and Lethe—Parting
	of Randall and Eliza—Small-Pox—The Hospital—Recovery
	and Return to Freeman's Slave Pen—The Purchaser of
	Eliza, Harry, and Platt—Eliza's Agony on Parting from
	Little Emily, . . . . 		<ref targOrder="U" target="northup78">78</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER VII.
The Steamboat Rodolph—Departure from New-Orleans—William
	Ford—Arrival at Alexandra, on Red River—Resolutions
—The Great Pine Woods—Wild Cattle—Martin's Summer Residence—The Texas Road—Arrival at Master Ford's
	—Rose—Mistress Ford—Sally and her Children—John, the
	Cook—Walter, Sam, and Antony—The Mills on Indian
	Creek—Sabbath Days—Sam's Conversion—The Profit of
<pb id="northupix" n="ix"/>
	Kindness—Rafting—Adam Taydem, the Little White Man—
	Cascalla and his Tribe—The Indian Ball—John M. Tibeats
—The Storm approaching, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup89">89</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER VIII.
Ford's Embarrassments—The Sale to Tibeats—The Chattel
	Mortgage—Mistress Ford's Plantation on Bayou Boeuf—
	Description of the Latter—Ford's Brother-in-Law, Peter Tanner
—Meeting with Eliza—She still Mourns for her Children
—Ford's Overseer, Chapin—Tibeats' Abuse—The Keg
	of Nails—The First Fight with Tibeats—His Discomfiture
	and Castigation—The attempt to Hang me—Chapin's  Interference
	and Speech—Unhappy Reflections—Abrupt Departure
	of Tibeats, Cook, and Ramsey—Lawson and the
	Brown Mule—Message to the Pine Woods, . . . .                		<ref targOrder="U" n="105" target="northup105">105</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER IX.
The Hot Sun—Yet bound—The Cords sink into my Flesh—
	Chapin's Uneasiness—Speculation—Rachel, and her Cup of
	Water—Suffering increases—The Happiness of Slavery—
	Arrival of Ford—He cuts the Cords which bind me, and
	takes the Rope from my Neck—Misery—The gathering of
	Slaves in Eliza's Cabin—Their Kindness—Rachel Repeats
	the Occurrences of the Day—Lawson entertains his
	Companions with an Account of his Ride—Chapin's Apprehensions
	of Tibeats—Hired to Peter Tanner—Peter expounds
	the Scriptures—Description of the Stocks, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup118">118</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER X.
Return Tibeats—Impossibility of pleasing him—He attacks me with a Hatchet—The Struggle over the Broad Axe
—The Temptation to Murder him—Escape across the Plantation
—Observations from the Fence—Tibeats approaches,
	followed by the Hounds—They take my Track—Their loud
	Yells—They almost overtake me—I reach the Water—
	The Hounds confused—Moccasin Snakes—Alligators—Night
	in the “Great Pacoudrie. Swamp”—The Sounds of Life—
<pb id="northupx" n="x"/>
	North-West Course—Emerge into the Pine Woods—Slave
	and his Young Master—Arrival At Ford's—Food and Rest, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup131">131</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER XI.
The Mistress' Garden—The Crimson and Golden Fruit—Orange
	and Pomegranate Trees—Return to Bayou Boeuf—
	Master Ford's Remarks on the way—The Meeting with Tibeats
—His Account of the Chase—Ford censures his Brutality
—Arrival At the Plantation—Astonishment of the Slaves
	on seeing me—The anticipated Flogging—Kentucky John
	Mr. Eldret, the Planter—Eldret's Sam—Trip to the “Big
	Cane Brake”—The Tradition of “Sutton's Field”—Forest
	Trees—Gnats and Mosquitoes—The Arrival of Black Women
	in the Big Cane—Lumber Women—Sudden Appearance
	of Tibeats—His Provoking Treatment—Visit to Bayou
	Boeuf—The Slave Pass—Southern Hospitality—The
        Last of Eliza—Sale to Edwin Epps, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" n="146" target="northup146">146</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER XII
Personal Appearance of Epps—Epps, Drunk and Sober—A
	Glimpse of his History—Cotton Growing—The Mode of
	Ploughing and Preparing Ground—Of Planting, of Hoeing,
	of Picking, of Treating Raw Hands—The difference in
	Cotton Pickers—Patsey a remarkable one—Tasked according
	to Ability—Beauty of a Cotton Field—The Slave's Labors
—Fear of Approaching the Gin-House—Weighing—
	“Chores”—Cabin Life—The Corn Mill—The Uses of the
	Gourd—Fear of Oversleeping—Fear continually—Mode of
	Cultivating Corn—Sweet Potatoes—Fertility of the Soil
	—Fattening Hogs—Preserving Bacon—Raising Cattle—
	Shooting Matches—Garden Products—Flowers and Verdure, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup162">162</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER XIII.
The Curious Axe-Helve—Symptoms of Approaching Illness—
	Continue to decline—The Whip ineffectual—Confined
<pb id="northupxi" n="xi"/>
	to the Cabin—Visit by Dr. Wines—Art—Partial Recovery—Failure
	at Cotton Picking—What may be heard on Epps' Plantation
—Lashes Graduated—Epps in a Whipping Mood—
	Epps in a Dancing Mood—Description of the Dance—Loss
	of Rest no Excuse—Epps' Characteristics—Jim Burns—Removal
	from Huff Power to Bayou Boeuf—Description of
	Uncle Abram; of Wiley; of Aunt Phebe; of Bob, Henry,
	and Edward; of Patsey; with a Genealogical Account of
	each—Something of their Past History, and Peculiar Characteristics
—Jealousy and Lust—Patsey, the Victim, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" n="176" target="northup176">176</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER XIV.
Destruction of the Cotton Crop in 1845—Demand for Laborers
	in St. Mary's Parish—Sent thither in a Drove—The Order
	of the March—The Grand Coteau—Hired to Judge Turner on
	Bayou Salle—Appointed Driver in his Sugar House—Sunday
	Services—Slave Furniture; how obtained—The Party
	at Yarney's, in Centreville—Good Fortune—The Captain
	of the Steamer—His Refusal to Secrete me—Return to Bayou
	Boeuf—Sight of Tibeats—Patsey's Sorrows—Tumult
	and Contention—Hunting the Coon and Opossum—The
	Cunning of the latter—The Lean Condition of the Slave—
	Description of the Fish Trap—The Murder of the Man from
	Natchez—Epps Chalenged by Marshall—The Influence of
	Slavery—The Love of Freedom, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup191">191</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER XV.
Labors on Sugar Plantations—The Mode of Planting Cane—
	of Hoeing Cane—Cane Ricks—Cutting Cane—Description
	of the Cane Knife—Winrowing—Preparing for Succeeding
	Crops—Description of Hawkins' Sugar Mill on Bayou Boeuf
—The Christmas Holidays—The Carnival Season of the
	Children of Bondage—The Christmas Supper—Red, the Favorite
	Color—The Violin, and the Consolation it Afforded—
	The Christmas Dance—Lively, the Coquette—Sam Roberts,
	and his Rivals—Slave Songs—Southern Life as it is—Three
	Days in the Year—The System of Marriage—Uncle Abram's
	Contempt of Matrimony, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup208">208</ref></item>
          <pb id="northupxii" n="xii"/>
          <item>CHAPTER XVI. 
Overseers—How they are Armed and Accompanied—The
	Homicide—His Execution At Marksville—Slave Drivers—
Appointed Driver on removing to—Bayou Boeuf—Practice
	makes perfect—Epps's Attempt to Cut Platt's Throat—The
	Escape from him—Protected by the Mistress—Forbids Reading
	and Writing—Obtain a Sheet of Paper After Nine Years'
	Effort—The Letter—Armsby, the Mean White—Partially
	confide in him—His Treachery—Epps' Suspicions—How
	they were quieted—Burning the Letter—Armsby leaves
	the Bayou—Disappointment and Despair, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" n="223" target="northup223">223</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER XVII.
Wiley disregards the counsels of Aunt Phebe and Uncle Abram,
	and is caught by the Patrollers—The Organization and Duties of the latter—Wiley Runs Away—Speculations in regard
	to him—His Unexpected Return—His Capture
	on the Red River, and Confinement in Alexandria Jail—Discovered
	by Joseph B. Roberts—Subduing Dogs in Anticipation of
	Escape—The Fugitives in the Great Pine Woods—Captured
	by Adam Taydem and the Indians—Augustus killed by
	Dogs—Nelly, Eldret's Slave Woman—The Story of Celeste
—The Concerted Movement—Lew Cheney, the Traitor—
	The Idea of Insurrection, . . . . 	<ref targOrder="U" target="northup236">236</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER XVIII.
O'Niel, the Tanner—Conversation with Aunt Phebe overheard
—Epps in the Tanning Business—Stabbing of Uncle Abram
—The Ugly Wound—Epps is Jealous—Patsey is Missing—
	Her Return from Shaw's—Harriet, Shaw's Black Wife—
	Epps Enraged—Patsey denies his Charges—She is Tied
	Down Naked to Four Stakes—The Inhuman Flogging—
	Flaying of Patsey—The Beauty of the Day—The Bucket of
	Salt Water—The Dress stiff with Blood—Patsey grows
	Melancholy—Her Idea of God and Eternity—Of Heaven and
	Freedom—The Effect of Slave-Whipping—Epps' Oldest Son
—“The Child is Father to the Man,” . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup250">250</ref></item>
          <pb id="northupxiii" n="xiii"/>
          <item>CHAPTER  XIX. 
Avery, on Bayou Rouge—Peculiarity of Dwellings—Epps
	builds a New House—Bass, the Carpenter—His Noble Qualities
—His Personal Appearance and Eccentricities—Bass
	and Epps discuss the Question of Slavery—Epps' Opinion
	of Bass—I make myself known to him—Our Conversation
—His Surprise—The Midnight Meeting on the Bayou Bank
	Bass' Assurances—Declares War against-Slavery—Why
	I did not Disclose my History—Bass writes Letters—Copy
of his Letter to Messrs. Parker and Perry—The Fever of
	Suspense—Disappointments—Bass endeavors to cheer me
—My Faith in him, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup263">263</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER  XX.
Bass faithful to his word—His Arrival on Christmas Eve—
	The Difficulty of Obtaining An Interview—The Meeting in
	the Cabin—Non-arrival of the Letter—Bass announces his
	Intention to proceed North—Christmas—Conversation between
	Epps and Bass—Young Mistress McCoy, the Beauty
        of Bayou Boeuf—The “<foreign lang="lat">Ne plus ultra</foreign>” of Dinners—Music
	and Dancing—Presence of the Mistress—Her Exceeding
	Beauty—The Last Slave Dance—William Pierce—Oversleep
myself—The Last Whipping—Despondency—Cold
	Morning—Epps' Threats—The Passing Carriage—Strangers
	Approaching through the Cotton-Field—Last Hour on
	Bayou Boeuf, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup279">279</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER XXI.
The Letter reaches Saratoga—Is forwarded to Anne—Is laid
	before Henry B. Northup—The Statute of May 14, 1840—
	Its provisions—Anne's Memorial to the Governor—The affidavits
	Accompanying it—Senator Soule's Letter—Departure
	of the Agent Appointed by the Governor—Arrival at 
	Marksville—The Hon. John P. Waddill—The Conversation
	on New-York Politics—It suggests a Fortunate Idea—The
	Meeting with Bass—The Secret out—Legal Proceedings instituted
Departure of Northup and the Sheriff from Marksville
<pb id="northupxiv" n="xiv"/>
	for Bayou Boeuf—Arrangements on the Way—Reach
	Epps' Plantation—Discover his Slaves in the Cotton-Field—
The Meeting—The Farewell, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup289">289</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPTER  XXII.
Arrival in New-Orleans—Glimpse of Freeman—Genois, the
	Recorder—His Description of Solomon—Reach Charleston
	Interrupted by Custom House Officers—Pass through Richmond
—Arrival in Washington—Burch Arrested—Shekels
	and Thorn—Their Testimony—Burch acquitted—Arrest
	of Solomon—Burch withdraws the Complaint—The Higher
Tribunal—Departure from Washington—Arrival at Sandy
	Hill—Old Friends and Familiar Scenes—Proceed to
	Glens Falls—Meeting with Anne, Margaret, and Elizabeth—
Solomon Northup Staunton—Incidents,—Conclusion, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup310">310</ref></item>
          <item>APPENDIX, . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="northup323">323</ref></item>
        </list>
      </div1>
      <div1>
        <head>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</head>
        <list type="simple">
          <item>PORTRAIT OF SOLOMON IN HIS PLANTATION
SUIT, ...... <ref targOrder="U" target="frontis">1</ref></item>
          <item>SCENE IN THE SLAVE PEN AT WASHINGTON,..... 
<ref targOrder="U" target="illustr2">2</ref></item>
          <item>SEPARATION OF ELIZA AND HER LAST CHILD,..... <ref targOrder="U" target="illustr3">3</ref></item>
          <item>CHAPIN RESCUES SOLOMON FROM HANGING,..... <ref targOrder="U" target="illustr4">4</ref></item>
          <item>THE STAKING OUT AND FLOGGING OF THE GIRL PATSEY,..... <ref targOrder="U" target="illustr5">5</ref></item>
          <item>SCENE IN THE COTTON FIELD, AND SOLOMON'S DELIVERY,..... <ref targOrder="U" target="illustr6">6</ref></item>
          <item>ARRIVAL HOME, AND FIRST MEETING WITH HIS WIFE AND CHILDREN,
..... <ref targOrder="U" target="illustr7">7</ref></item>
        </list>
      </div1>
      <pb id="northupxv" n="xv"/>
      <div1>
        <head>EDITOR'S PREFACE.</head>
        <p>When the editor commenced the preparation of the following
narrative, he did not suppose it would reach the size of this
volume. In order, however, to present all the facts which have
been communicated to him, it has seemed necessary to
extend it to its present length.</p>
        <p>Many of the statements contained in the following pages are
corroborated by abundant evidence—others rest entirely upon
Solomon's assertion. That he has adhered strictly to the truth
the editor, at least, who has had an opportunity of detecting any
contradiction or discrepancy in his statements, is well satisfied.
He has invariably repeated the same story without deviating in the
slightest particular, and has also carefully perused the
manuscript, dictating an alteration wherever the most
trivial inaccuracy has appealed.</p>
        <p>It was Solomon's fortune, during his captivity, to be owned
by several masters. The treatment he received while at the “Pine
Woods” shows that among slaveholders there are men of humanity
as well of cruelty. Some of them are spoken of with
emotions of gratitude—others in a spirit of bitterness. It is
<pb id="northupsvi" n="xvi"/>
believed that the following account of his experience on Bayou
Boeuf presents a correct picture of Slavery in all its lights, and
shadows, as it now exists in that locality. Unbiased, as he
conceives, by any prepossessions or prejudices, the only object
of the editor has been to give a faithful history of Solomon
Northup's life, as he received it from his lips.</p>
        <p>In the accomplishment of that object, he trusts he has succeeded,
notwithstanding the numerous faults of style and of
expression it may be found to contain.</p>
        <closer><signed>DAVID WILSON.</signed>
<dateline>WHITEHALL, N. Y., May, 1853.</dateline></closer>
      </div1>
    </front>
    <body>
      <pb id="northup17" n="17"/>
      <div1>
        <head>NARRATIVE OF SOLOMON NORTHUP.</head>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>CHAPTER I.</head>
          <argument>
            <p>INTRODUCTORY—ANCESTRY—THE NORTHUP FAMILY—
BIRTH AND PARENTAGE—MINTUS NORTHUP—MARRIAGE WITH ANNE HAMPTON—GOOD RESOLUTIONS—CHAMPLAIN CANAL—RAFTING EXCURSION TO CANADA—FARMING—THE VIOLIN—COOKING—REMOVAL TO SARATOGA—PARKER AND PERRY—SLAVES—AND SLAVERY 
—THE CHILDREN—THE BEGINNING OF SORROW</p>
          </argument>
          <p>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.</p>
          <p>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
<pb id="northup18" n="18"/>
circulated to an extent unprecedented, and, as I understand,
have created a fruitful topic of comment and
discussion.</p>
          <p>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.</p>
          <p>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.</p>
          <p>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.</p>
          <p>Sometime after my father's liberation, he removed
to the town of Minerva, Essex county, N. Y., where I
<pb id="northup19" n="19"/>
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.</p>
          <p>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
<pb id="northup20" n="20"/>
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.</p>
          <p>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.</p>
          <p>On Christmas day, 1829, I was married to Anne
<pb id="northup21" n="21"/>
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.</p>
          <p>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
<pb id="northup22" n="22"/>
acres, should reward my labors, and bring
me the means of happiness and comfort.</p>
          <p>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 day, in order that those who read these
pages, may comprehend the poignancy of those sufferings
I have been doomed to bear.</p>
          <p>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.</p>
          <p>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.</p>
          <pb id="northup23" n="23"/>
          <p>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.</p>
          <p>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.</p>
          <p>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.</p>
          <p>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
<pb id="northup24" n="24"/>
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.</p>
          <p>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.</p>
          <p>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.</p>
          <p>In March, 1834, we removed to Saratoga Springs.
<pb id="northup25" n="25"/>
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.</p>
          <p>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.</p>
          <p>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
<pb id="northup26" n="26"/>
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.</p>
          <p>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.</p>
          <p>At this time we were the parents of three children—Elizabeth, Margaret, and Alonzo. Elizabeth, the
<pb id="northup27" n="27"/>
eldest, was in her tenth year; Margaret was two
years younger, and little Alonzo had just passed his
fifth birth-day. They filled our house with gladness.
Their young voices were music in our ears. Many an
airy castle did their mother and myself build for the
little innocents. When not at labor I was always
walking with them, clad in their best attire, through
the streets and groves of Saratoga. Their presence
was my delight; and I clasped them to my bosom
with as warm and tender love as if their clouded skins
had been as white as snow.</p>
          <p>Thus far the history of my life presents nothing
whatever unusual—nothing but the common hopes,
and loves, and labors of an obscure colored man, making
his humble progress in the world. But now I
had reached a turning point in my existence—reached
the threshold of unutterable wrong, and sorrow,
and despair. Now had I approached within the shadow
of the cloud, into the thick darkness whereof I was
soon to disappear, thenceforward to be hidden from
the eyes of all my kindred, and shut out from the
sweet light of liberty, for many a weary year.</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="northup28" n="28"/>
        <div2>
          <head>CHAPTER II.</head>
          <argument>
            <p>THE TWO STRANGERS—THE CIRCUS COMPANY—
DEPARTURE FROM SARATOGA—VENTRILOQUISM AND LEGERDEMAIN—JOURNEY TO NEW YORK—FREE PAPERS—BROWN AND  HAMILTON—THE HASTE TO REACH THE CIRCUS—ARRIVAL IN  WASHINGTON—FUNERAL OF HARRISON—THE SUDDEN SICKNESS—
THE TORMENT OF THIRST—THE RECEDING LIGHT—INSENSIBILITY—
CHAINS AND DARKNESS.</p>
          </argument>
          <p>ONE morning, towards the latter part of the month
of March, 1841, having at that time no particular
business to engage my attention, I was walking about
the village of Saratoga Springs, thinking to myself
where I might obtain some present employment, until
the busy season should arrive. Anne, as was her
usual custom, had gone over to Sandy Hill, a distance
of some twenty miles, to take charge of the Culinary
department at Sherrill's Coffee House, during
the session of the court. Elizabeth, I think, had accompanied
her. Margaret and Alonzo were with
their aunt at Saratoga.</p>
          <p>On the corner of Congress street and Broadway
near the tavern, then, and for aught I know to the
contrary, still kept by Mr. Moon, I was met by two
gentlemen of respectable appearance, both of whom
were entirely unknown to me. I have the impression
<pb id="northup29" n="29"/>
that they were introduced to me by some one of
my acquaintances, but who, I have in vain endeavored
to recall, with the remark that I was an expert
player on the violin.</p>
          <p>At any rate, they immediately entered into conversation
on that subject, making numerous inquiries
touching my proficiency in that respect. My responses
being to all appearances satisfactory, they proposed
to engage my services for a short period, stating,
at the same time, I was just such a person as their
business required. Their names, as they afterwards
gave them to me, were Merrill Brown and Abram
Hamilton, though whether these were their true appellations,
I have strong reasons to doubt. The former
was a man apparently forty years of age, somewhat
short and thick-set, with a countenance indicating
shrewdness and intelligence. He wore a black
frock coat and black hat, and said he resided either at
Rochester or at Syracuse. The latter was a young
man of fair complexion and light eyes, and, I should
judge, had not passed the age of twenty-five. He
was tall and slender, dressed in a snuff-colored coat,
with glossy hat, and vest of elegant pattern. His
whole apparel was in the extreme of fashion. His
appearance was somewhat effeminate, but prepossessing
and there was about him an easy air, that showed
he had mingled with the world. They were connected,
as they informed me, with a circus company, then
in the city of Washington; that they were on their
<pb id="northup30" n="30"/>
way thither to rejoin it, having left it for a short time
to make an excursion northward, for the purpose of
seeing the country, and were paying their expenses
by an occasional exhibition. They also remarked
that they had found much difficulty in procuring music
for their entertainments, and that if I would accompany
them as far as New-York, they would give
me one dollar for each day's services, and three dollars
in addition for every night I played at their performances,
besides sufficient to pay the expenses of
my return from New-York to Saratoga.</p>
          <p>I at once accepted the tempting offer, both for the
reward it promised, and from a desire to visit the
metropolis. They were anxious to leave immediately.
Thinking my absence would be brief, I did not deem it
necessary to write to Anne whither I had gone;
in fact supposing that my return, perhaps, would be
as soon as hers. So taking a change of linen and my
violin, I was ready to depart. The carriage was
brought round—a covered one, drawn by a pair of
noble bays, altogether forming an elegant establishment.
Their baggage, consisting of three large
trunks, was fastened on the rack, and mounting to
the driver's seat, while they took their places in the
rear, I drove away from Saratoga on the road to
Albany, elated with my new position, and happy as
I had ever been, on any day in all my life.</p>
          <p>We passed through Ballston, and striking the ridge
road, as it is called, if my memory correctly serves
<pb id="northup31" n="31"/>
me, followed it direct to Albany. We reached that
city before dark, and stopped at a hotel southward
from the Museum.
This night I had an opportunity of witnessing one of
their performances—the only one, during the whole
period I was with them. Hamilton was stationed at
the door; I formed the orchestra, while Brown provided
the entertainment. It consisted in throwing
balls, dancing on the rope, frying pancakes in a hat,
causing invisible pigs to squeal, and other like feats
of ventriloquism and legerdemain. The audience
was extraordinarily sparse, and not of the <sic>selectest</sic>
character at that, and Hamilton's report of the proceeds
but a “beggarly account of empty boxes.”</p>
          <p>Early next morning we renewed our journey. The
burden of their conversation now was the expression
of an anxiety to reach the circus without delay.
They hurried forward, without again stopping to exhibit,
and in due course of time, we reached New-York,
taking lodgings at a house on the west side of
the city, in a street running from Broadway to the
river. I supposed my journey was at an end, and
expected in a day or two at least, to return to my
friends and family at Saratoga. Brown and Hamilton,
however, began to importune me to continue with
them to Washington. They alleged that immediately
on their arrival, now that the summer season was approaching,
the circus would set out for the north.
 They promised me a situation and high wages if I 
<pb id="northup32" n="32"/>
would accompany them. Largely did they expatiate
on the advantages that would result to me, and such
were the flattering representations they made, that I
finally concluded to accept the offer.</p>
          <p>The next morning they suggested that, inasmuch
as we were about entering a slave State, it would be
well, before leaving New-York, to procure free papers.
The idea struck me as a prudent one, though I
think it would scarcely have occurred to me, had they
not proposed it. We proceeded at once to what I understood
to be the Custom House. They made oath to
certain facts showing I was a free man. A paper was
drawn up and handed us, with the direction to take it
to the clerk's office. We did so, and the clerk having
added something to it, for which he was paid six shillings,
we returned again to the Custom House. Some further
formalities were gone through with before it
was completed, when, paying the officer two dollars,
I placed the papers in my pocket, and started with
my two friends to our hotel. I thought at the time
I must confess, that the papers were scarcely worth the
cost of obtaining them—the apprehension of danger
to my personal safety never having suggested itself
to me in the remotest manner. The clerk, to whom
we were directed, I remember, made a memorandum
in a large book, which, I presume, is in the office
yet. A reference to the entries during the latter part
of March, or first of April, 1841, I have no doubt
will satisfy the incredulous, at least so far as this particular
transaction is concerned.</p>
          <pb id="northup33" n="33"/>
          <p>With the evidence of freedom in my possession, the next
day after our arrival in New-York, we crossed the ferry to
Jersey City, and took the road to Philadelphia. Here we
remained one night, continuing our journey towards
Baltimore early in the morning. In due time, we arrived in
the latter city, and stopped at a hotel near the railroad
depot, either kept by a Mr. Rathbone, or known as the
Rathbone House. All the way from New-York, their anxiety
to reach the circus seemed to grow more and more intense.
We left the carriage at Baltimore, and entering the cars,
proceeded to Washington, at which place we arrived just
at nightfall, the evening previous to the funeral of General
Harrison, and stopped at Gadsby's Hotel, on Pennsylvania
Avenue.</p>
          <p>After supper they called me to their apartments,
and paid me forty-three dollars, a sum greater than
my wages amounted to, Which act of generosity was
in consequence, they said, of their not having exhibited
as often as they had given me to anticipate, during
our trip from Saratoga. They moreover informed
me that it had been the intention of the circus
company to leave Washington the next morning, but
that on account of the funeral, they had concluded to
remain another day. They were then, as they had been
from the time of our first meeting, extremely kind.
No opportunity was omitted of addressing me in the
language of approbation; while, on the other hand,
I was certainly much prepossessed in their favor. I
<pb id="northup34" n="34"/>
gave them my confidence without reserve, and would
freely have trusted them to almost any extent. Their
constant conversation and manner towards me—their
foresight in suggesting the idea of free papers, and a
hundred other little acts, unnecessary to be repeated—
all indicated that they were friends indeed, sincerely
solicitous for my welfare. I know not but they were.
I know not but they were innocent of the great wickedness
of which I now believe them guilty. Whether
they were accessory to my misfortunes—subtle and
inhuman monsters in the shape of men—designedly
luring me away from home and family, and liberty,
for the sake of gold—those these read these pages
will have the same means of determining as myself
If they were innocent, my sudden disappearance
must have been unaccountable indeed; but revolving
in my mind all the attending circumstances, I
never yet could indulge, towards them, so charitable
a supposition.</p>
          <p>After receiving the money from them, of which
they appeared to have an abundance, they advised
me not to go into the streets that night, inasmuch
as I was unacquainted with the customs of the city.
Promising to remember their advice, I left them together,
and soon after was shown by a colored servant
to a sleeping room in the back part of the hotel,
on the ground floor. I laid down to rest, thinking of
home and wife, and children, and the long distance
that stretched between us, until I fell asleep. But
<pb id="northup35" n="35"/>
no good angel of pity came to my bedside, bidding
me to fly—no voice of mercy forewarned me in my
dreams of the trials that were just at hand.</p>
          <p>The next day there was a great pageant in Washington.
The roar of cannon and the tolling of bells
filled the air, while many houses were shrouded with
<sic>crape</sic>, and the streets were black with people. As
the day advanced, the procession made its appearance,
coming slowly through the Avenue, carriage
after carriage, in long succession, while thousands
upon thousands followed on foot—all moving to the
sound of melancholy music. They were bearing the
dead body of Harrison to the grave.</p>
          <p>From early in the morning, I was constantly in the
company of Hamilton and Brown. They were the
only persons I knew in Washington. We stood together
as the funeral pomp passed by. I remember
distinctly how the window glass would break and
rattle to the ground, after each report of the cannon
they were firing in the burial ground. We went to
the Capitol, and walked a long time about the grounds.
In the afternoon, they strolled towards the President's
House, all the time keeping me near to them,
and pointing out various places of interest. As yet,
I had seen nothing of the circus. In fact, I had
thought of it but little, if at all, amidst the excitement
of the day.</p>
          <p>My friends, several times during the afternoon, entered
drinking saloons, and called for liquor. They
were by no means in the habit, however, so far as I
<pb id="northup36" n="36"/>
knew them, of indulging to excess. On these occasions,
after serving themselves, they would pour out
a glass and hand it to me. I did not become intoxicated,
as may be inferred from what subsequently
occurred. Towards evening, and soon after partaking
of one of these potations, I began to experience
most unpleasant sensations. I felt extremely ill. My
head commenced aching—a dull, heavy pain, inexpressibly
disagreeable. At the supper table, I was
without appetite; the sight and flavor of food was
nauseous. About dark the same servant conducted
me to the room I had occupied the previous night.
Brown and Hamilton advised me to retire, commiserating
me kindly, and expressing hopes that I would be
better in the morning. Divesting myself of coat and
boots merely, I threw myself upon the bed. It was
impossible to sleep. The pain in my head continued
to increase, until it became almost unbearable. In a
short time I became thirsty. My lips were parched.
I could think of nothing but water—of lakes and
flowing rivers, of brooks where I had stooped to
drink, and of the dripping bucket, rising with its cool
and overflowing nectar, from the bottom of the well.
Towards midnight, as near as I could judge, I arose,
unable longer to bear such intensity of thirst. I
was a stranger in the house, and knew nothing of its
apartments. There was no one up, as I could observe.
Groping about at random, I knew not where, I found
the way at last to a kitchen in the basement. Two
or three colored servants were moving through it, one
<pb id="northup37" n="37"/>
of whom, a woman, gave me two glasses of water.
It afforded momentary relief, but by the time I had
reached my room again, the same burning desire of
drink, the same tormenting thirst, had again returned.
It was even more torturing than before, as was also
the wild pain in my head, if such a thing could be.
I was in sore distress—in most excruciating agony!
I seemed to stand on the brink of madness! The
memory of that night of horrible suffering will follow
me to the grave.</p>
          <p>In the course of an hour or more after my return
from the kitchen, I was conscious of some one entering
my room. There seemed to be several—a mingling
of various voices,—but how many, or who
they were, I cannot tell. Whether Brown and Hamilton
were among them, is a mere matter of conjecture.
I only remember with any degree of distinctness,
that I was told it was necessary to go to a physician
and procure medicine, and that pulling on my boots,
without coat or hat, I followed them through a long
passage-way, or alley, into the open street. It ran
out at right angles from Pennsylvania Avenue. On
the opposite side there was a light burning in a window.
My impression is there were then three persons
with me, but it is altogether indefinite and
vague, and like the memory of a painful dream.
Going towards the light, which I imagined proceeded
from a physician's office, and which seemed to recede
as I advanced, is the last glimmering recollection
I can now recall. From that moment I was
<pb id="northup38" n="38"/>
insensible. How long I remained in that condition—
whether only that night, or many days and nights—
I do not know; but when consciousness returned I
found myself alone, in utter darkness, and in chains.</p>
          <p>The pain in my head had subsided in a measure,
but I was very faint and weak. I was sitting upon a
low bench, made of rough boards, and without coat
or hat. I was hand cuffed. Around my ankles also
were a pair of heavy fetters. One end of a chain was
fastened to a large ring in the floor, the other to the
fetters on my ankles. I tried in vain to stand upon
my feet. Waking from such a painful trance, it
was some time before I could collect my thoughts.
Where was I? What was the meaning of these
chains? Where were Brown and Hamilton? What
had I done to deserve imprisonment in such a dungeon?
I could not comprehend. There was a blank
of some indefinite period, preceding my awakening
in that lonely place, the events of which the utmost
stretch of memory was unable to recall. I listened
intently for some sign or sound of life, but nothing
broke the oppressive silence, save the clinking of my
chains, whenever I chanced to move. I spoke aloud,
but the sound of my voice startled me. I felt of my pockets,
so far as the fetters would allow—far enough,
indeed, to ascertain that I had not only been robbed
of liberty, but that my money and free papers were
also gone! Then did the idea begin to break upon
my mind, at first dim and confused, that I had been
kidnapped. But that I thought was incredible.
<pb id="northup39" n="39"/>
There must have been some misapprehension—some
unfortunate mistake. It could not be that a free
citizen of New-York, who had wronged no man, nor
violated any law, should be dealt with thus inhumanly.
The more I contemplated my situation, however, the
more I became confirmed in my suspicions. It was a
desolate thought, indeed. I felt there was no trust or
mercy in unfeeling man; and commending myself to
the God of the oppressed, bowed my head upon my
fettered hands, and wept most bitterly.</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="northup40" n="40"/>
        <div2>
          <head>CHAPTER III.</head>
          <argument>
            <p>PAINFUL MEDITATIONS—JAMES H. BURCH—
WILLIAMS' SLAVE PEN IN WASHINGTON—THE LACKEY, RADRURN—
ASSERT MY FREEDOM—THE ANGER OF THE TRADER—
THE PADDLE AND CAT-O'—NINETAILS—THE WHIPPING—NEW ACQUAINTANCES—
RAY, WILLIAMS, AND RANDALL—ARRIVAL OF LITTLE EMILY AND HER MOTHER 
IN THE PEN—MATERNAL SORROWS—THE STORY OF ELIZA.</p>
          </argument>
          <p>SOME three hours elapsed, during which time I remained
seated on the low bench, absorbed in painful
meditations. At length I heard the crowing of a
cock, and soon a distant rumbling sound, as of carriages
hurrying through the streets, came to my ears,
and I knew that it was day. No ray of light, however,
penetrated my prison. :Finally, I heard footsteps
immediately overhead, as of some one walking
to and fro. It occurred to me then that I must be
in an underground apartment, and the damp, mouldy 
odors of the place confirmed the supposition. The
noise above continued for at least an hour, when,
at last, I heard footsteps approaching from without.
A key rattled in the lock—a strong door swung back
upon its hinges, admitting a flood of light, and two
men entered and stood before me. One of them was
a large, powerful man, forty years of age, perhaps,
<pb id="northup41" n="41"/>
with dark, chestnut-colored hair, slightly interspersed
with gray. His face was full, his complexion flush,
his features grossly coarse, expressive of nothing but
cruelty and cunning. He was about five feet ten
inches high, of full habit, and, without prejudice, I
must be allowed to say, was a man whose whole appearance
was sinister and repugnant. His name was
James H. Burch, as I learned afterwards—a well-known
slave-dealer in Washington; and then, or lately
connected in business, as a partner, with Theophilus
Freeman, of New-Orleans. The person who
accompanied him was a simple lackey, named Ebenezer
Radburn, who acted merely in the capacity of
turnkey. Both of these men still live in Washington,
or did, at the time of my return through that city
from slavery in January last.</p>
          <p>The light admitted through the open door enabled
me to observe the room in which I was confined. It
was about twelve feet square—the walls of solid masonry.
The floor was of heavy plank. There was
one small window, crossed with great iron bars, with
an outside shutter, securely fastened.</p>
          <p>An iron-bound door led into an adjoining cell, or
vault, wholly destitute of windows, or any means of
admitting light. The furniture of the room in which
I was, consisted of the wooden bench on which I sat,
an old-fashioned, dirty box stove, and besides these,
in either cell, there was neither bed, nor blanket, nor
any other thing whatever. The door, through which
<pb id="northup42" n="42"/>
Burch and Radburn entered, led through a small
passage, up a flight of steps into a yard, surrounded
by a brick wall ten or twelve feet high, immediately
in rear of a building of the same width as itself.
The yard extended rearward from the house about
thirty feet. In one part of the wall there was a
strongly ironed door, opening into a narrow, covered
passage, leading along one side of the house into the
street. The doom of the colored man, upon whom
the door leading out of that narrow passage closed,
was sealed. The top of the wall supported one end
of a roof, which ascended inwards, forming a kind of
open shed. Underneath the roof there was a crazy
loft all round, where slaves, if so disposed, might
sleep at night, or in inclement weather seek shelter
from the storm. It was like a farmer's barnyard in
most respects, save it was so constructed that the outside
world could never see the human cattle that were
herded there.</p>
          <p>The building to which the yard was attached, was
two stories high, <sic>fronting</sic> on one of the public streets
of Washington. Its outside presented only the appearance
of a quiet private residence. A stranger
looking at it, would never have dreamed of its execrable
uses. Strange as it may seem, within plain
sight of this same house, looking down from its commanding
height upon it, was the Capitol. The voices
of patriotic representatives boasting of freedom and
equality, and the rattling of the poor slave's chains,
<pb id="northup43" n="43"/> 
almost commingled. A slave pen within the very
shadow of the Capitol!</p>
          <p>Such is a correct description as it was in 1841, of
Williams' slave pen in Washington, in one of the cellars
of which I found myself so unaccountably confined.</p>
          <p>“Well, my boy, how do you feel now?” said
Burch, as he entered through the open door. I replied
that I was sick, and inquired the cause of my
imprisonment. He answered that I was his slave—
that he had bought me, and that he was about to send
me to New-Orleans. I asserted, aloud and boldly,
that I was a freeman—a resident of Saratoga, where
I had a wife and children, who were also free, and
that my name was Northup. I complained bitterly
of the strange treatment I had received, and threatened,
upon my liberation, to have satisfaction for the
wrong. He denied that I was free, and with an emphatic
oath, declared that I came from Georgia.
Again and again I asserted I was no man's slave, and
insisted upon his taking off my chains at once. He
endeavored to hush me, as if he feared my voice
would be overheard. But I would not be silent, and
denounced the authors of my imprisonment, whoever
they might be, as unmitigated villains. Finding he
could not quiet me, he flew into a towering passion.
With blasphemous oaths, he called me a black liar, a
runaway from Georgia, and every other profane and
<pb id="northup44" n="44"/>
vulgar epithet that the most indecent fancy could
conceive.</p>
          <p>During this time Radburn was standing silently
by. His business was, to oversee this human, or
rather inhuman stable, receiving slaves, feeding, and
whipping them, at the rate of two shillings a head
per day. Turning to him, Burch ordered the paddle
and cat-o'-ninetails to be brought in. He disappeared,
and in a few moments returned with these instruments
of torture. The paddle, as it is termed in
slave-beating parlance, or at least the one with which I
first became acquainted, and of which I now speak, was
a piece of hard-wood board, eighteen or twenty inches
long, moulded to the shape of an old-fashioned pudding
stick, or ordinary oar The flattened portion, which
was about the size in circumference of two open
hands, was bored with a small auger in numerous
places. The cat was a large rope of many strands—
the strands unraveled, and a knot tied at the extremity
of each.</p>
          <p>As soon as these formidable whips appeared, I was
seized by both of them, and roughly divested of my
clothing. My feet, as has been stated, were fastened
to the floor. Drawing me over the bench, face downwards,
Radburn placed his heavy foot upon the fetters,
between my wrists, holding them painfully to the
floor. With the paddle, Burch commenced beating
me. Blow after blow was inflicted upon my naked
body. When his unrelenting arm grew tired, he
<pb id="northup44a" n="44a"/>
<figure id="illustr2" entity="northup45"><p>SCENE IN THE SLAVE PEN AT WASHINGTON.</p></figure>
<pb id="northup45" n="45"/>
stopped and asked if I still insisted I was a free man.
I did insist upon it, and then the blows were renewed,
faster and more energetically, if possible, than before.
When again tired, he would repeat the same question,
and receiving the same answer, continue his cruel
labor. All this time, the incarnate devil was uttering
most fiendish oaths. At length the paddle broke,
leaving the useless handle in his hand. Still I would
not yield. All his brutal blows could not force from
my lips the foul lie that I was a slave. Casting madly
on the floor the handle of the broken paddle, he
seized the rope. This was far more painful than the
other. I struggled with all my power, but it was in
vain. I prayed for mercy, but my prayer was only
answered with imprecations and with stripes. I
thought I must die beneath the lashes of the accursed
brute. Even now the flesh crawls upon my bones, as
I recall the scene. I was all on fire. My sufferings
I can compare to nothing else than the burning agonies
of hell!</p>
          <p>At last I became silent to his repeated questions.
I would make no reply. In fact, I was becoming almost
unable to speak. Still he plied the lash without
stint upon my poor body, until it seemed that the
lacerated flesh was stripped from my bones at every
stroke. A man with a particle of mercy in his soul
would not have beaten even a dog so cruelly. At
length Radburn said that it was useless to whip
me any more—that I would be sore enough. Thereupon
Burch desisted, saying, with an admonitory
<pb id="northup46" n="46"/>
shake of his fist in my face, and hissing the words
through his firm-set teeth, that if ever I dared to
utter again that I was entitled to my freedom, that I
had been kidnapped, or any thing whatever of the
kind, the castigation I had just received was nothing
in comparison with what would follow. He swore
that he would either conquer or kill me. With these
consolatory words, the fetters were taken from my
wrists, my feet still remaining fastened to the ring;
the shutter of the little barred window, which had
been opened, was again closed, and going out, locking
the great door behind them, I was left in darkness
as before.</p>
          <p>In an hour, perhaps two, my heart leaped to my
throat, as the key rattled in the door again. I, who
had been so lonely, and who had longed so ardently
to see some one, I cared not who, now shuddered
at the thought of man's approach. A human face
was fearful to me, especially a white one. Radburn
entered, bringing with him, on a tin plate, a
piece of shriveled fried pork, a slice of bread and a
cup of water. He asked me how I felt, and remarked
that I had received a pretty severe flogging. He
remonstrated with me against the propriety of asserting
my freedom. In rather a patronizing and
confidential manner, he gave it to me as his advice,
that the less I said on that subject the better it would
be for me. The man evidently endeavored to appear
kind—whether touched at the sight of my sad condition,
or with the view of silencing, on my part, any
<pb id="northup47" n="47"/>
further expression of my rights, it is not necessary
now to conjecture. He unlocked the festers from my
ankles, opened the shutters of the little window, and
departed, leaving me again alone.</p>
          <p>By this time I had become stiff and sore; my
body was covered with blisters, and it was with great
pain and difficulty that I could move. From the
window I could observe nothing but the roof resting
on the adjacent wall. At night I laid down upon the
damp, hard floor, without any pillow or covering
whatever. Punctually, twice a day, Radburn came
in, with his pork, and bread, and water. I had but
little appetite, though I was tormented with continual
thirst. My wounds would not permit me to remain
but a few minutes in any one position; so, sitting,
or standing, or moving slowly round, I passed
the days and nights. I was heart sick and discouraged.
Thoughts of my family, of my wife and children,
continually occupied my mind. When sleep
overpowered me I dreamed of them—dreamed I was
again in Saratoga—that I could see their faces, and
hear their voices calling me. Awakening from the
pleasant phantasms of sleep to the bitter realities
around me, I could but groan and weep. Still my
spirit was not broken. I indulged the anticipation of
escape, and that speedily. It was impossible, I reasoned,
that men could be so unjust as to detain me as
a slave, when the truth of my case was known.
Burch, ascertaining I was no runaway from Georgia,
would certainly let me go. Though suspicions of
<pb id="northup48" n="48"/>
Brown and Hamilton were not unfrequent, I could
not reconcile myself to the idea that they were instrumental
to my imprisonment. Surely they would
seek me out—they would deliver me from <sic>thraldom</sic>.
Alas! I had not then learned the measure of “man's
inhumanity to man,” nor to what limitless extent of
wickedness he will go for the love of gain.</p>
          <p>In the course of several days the outer door was
thrown open, allowing me the liberty of the yard.
There I found three slaves—one of them a lad of ten
years, the others young men of about twenty and
twenty-five. I was not long in forming an acquaintance,
and learning their names and the particulars of
their history.</p>
          <p>The eldest was a colored man named Clemens Ray.
He had lived in Washington; had driven a hack, and
worked in a livery stable there for a long time. He
was very intelligent, and fully comprehended his situation.
The thought of going south overwhelmed
him with grief. Burch had purchased him a few
days before, and had placed him there until such time
as he was ready to send him to the New-Orleans market.
From him I learned for the first time that I was
in William's Slave Pen., a place I had never heard of
previously. He described to me the uses for which
it was designed. I repeated to him the particulars of
my unhappy story, but he could only give me the
consolation of his sympathy. He also advised me to
be silent henceforth on the subject of my freedom
for, knowing, the character of Burch, he assured me
<pb id="northup49" n="49"/>
that it would only be attended with renewed whip-ping.
The next eldest was named John Williams. He
was raised in Virginia, not far from Washington.
Burch had taken him in payment of a debt, and he
constantly entertained the hope that his master would
redeem him—a hope that was subsequently realized.
The lad was a sprightly child, that answered to the
name of Randall. Most of the time he was playing
about the yard, but occasionally would cry, calling
for his mother, and wondering when she would come.
His mother's absence seemed to be the great and only
grief in his little heart. He was too young to realize
his condition, and when the memory of his mother
was not in his mind, he amused us with his pleasant
pranks.</p>
          <p>At night, Ray, Williams, and the boy, slept in the
loft of the shed, while I was locked in the cell. Finally
we were each provided with blankets, such as
are used upon horses—the only bedding I was allowed
to have for twelve years afterwards. Ray and
Williams asked me many questions about New-York
—how colored people were treated there; how they
could have homes and families of their own, with none
to disturb and oppress them; and Ray, especially,
sighed continually for freedom. Such conversations, however,
were not in the hearing of Burch, or the
keeper Radburn. Aspirations such as these would
have brought down the lash upon our backs.</p>
          <p>It is necessary in this narrative, in order to present
a full and truthful statement of all the principal events
<pb id="northup50" n="50"/>
in the history of my life, and to portray the institution
of Slavery as I have seen and known it, to speak
of well-known places, and of many persons who are
yet living. I am, and always was, an entire stranger
in Washington and its vicinity—aside from Burch
and Radburn, knowing no man there, except as I have
heard of them through my enslaved companions
What I am about to say, if false, can be easily contradicted.</p>
          <p>I remained in Williams, slave pen about two
weeks. The night previous to my departure a woman
was brought in, weeping bitterly, and leading by the
hand a little child. They were Randall's mother and
half-sister. On meeting them he was overjoyed,
clinging to her dress, kissing the child, and exhibiting
every demonstration of delight. The mother also
clasped him in her arms, embraced him tenderly, and
gazed at him fondly through her tears, calling him by
many an endearing name.</p>
          <p>Emily, the child, was seven or eight years old, of
light complexion, and with a face of admirable beauty.
Her hair fell in curls around her neck, while the
style and richness of her dress, and the neatness of
her whole appearance indicated she had been brought
up in the midst of wealth. She was a sweet child
indeed. The woman also was arrayed in silk, with
rings upon her fingers, and golden ornaments suspended
from her ears. Her air and manners, the correctness
and propriety of her language—all showed
evidently, that she had sometime stood above the
<pb id="northup51" n="51"/>
common level of a slave. She seemed to be amazed
at finding herself in such a place as that. It was
plainly a sudden and unexpected turn of fortune that
had brought her there. Filling the air with her complaining
she was hustled, with the children and myself,
into the cell. Language can convey but an inadequate
impression of the lamentations to which she
gave incessant utterance. Throwing herself upon the
floor, and encircling the children in her arms, she
poured forth such touching words as only maternal love
and kindness can suggest. They nestled closely
to her, as if <hi rend="italics">there</hi> only was there any safety or protection.
At last they slept, their heads resting upon
her lap. While they slumbered, she smoothed the
hair back from their little foreheads, and talked to
them all night long. She called them her darlings
—her sweet babes—poor innocent things, that knew
not the misery they were destined to endure. Soon
they would have no mother to comfort them—they
would be taken from her. What would become of
them? Oh! she could not live away from her little
Emmy and her dear boy. They had always been
good children, and had such loving ways. It would
break her heart, God knew, she said, if they were taken
from her; and yet she knew they meant to sell
them, and, may be, they would be separated, and
could never see each other any more. It was enough
to melt heart of stone to listen to the pitiful expressions
of that desolate and distracted mother. Her
<pb id="northup52" n="52"/>
name was Eliza; and this was the story of her life, as she
afterwards related it:</p>
          <p>She was the slave of  a rich man, living
in the neighborhood of Washington. She was
born, I think she said, on his plantation. Years before,
he had fallen into dissipated habits, and quarreled
with his wife. In fact, soon after the birth of
Randall, they separated. Leaving his wife and daughter
in the house they had always occupied, he erected
a new one nearby, on the estate. Into this house he
brought Eliza; and, on condition of her living with
him, she and her children were to be emancipated.
She resided with him there nine years, with servants
to attend upon her, and provided with every comfort
and luxury of life. Emily was his child! Finally,
her young mistress, who had always remained with
her mother at the homestead, married a Mr. Jacob
Brooks. At length, for some cause, (as I gathered
from her relation,) beyond Berry's control, a division
of his property was made. She and her children fell
to the share of Mr. Brooks. During the nine years
she had lived with Berry, in consequence of the position
she was compelled to occupy, she and Emily had
become the object of Mrs. Berry and her daughter's
hatred and dislike. Berry himself she represented as
a man of naturally a kind heart, who always promised
her that she should have her freedom, and who,
she had no doubt, would arrant it to her then, if it
were only in his power. As soon as they thus came
<pb id="northup53" n="53"/>
into the possession and control of the daughter, it became
very manifest they would not live long together.
The sight of Eliza seemed to be odious to Mrs. Brooks;
neither could she bear to look upon the child, half-sister,
and beautiful as she was!</p>
          <p>The day she was led into the pen, Brooks had
brought her from the estate into the city, under pretence
that the time had come when her free papers were
to be executed, in fulfillment of her master's
promise. Elated at the prospect of immediate liberty,
she decked herself and little Emmy in their best
apparel, and accompanied him with a joyful heart.
On their arrival in the city, instead of being baptized
into the family of freemen, she was delivered to the
trader Burch. The paper that was executed was a
bill of sale. The hope of years was blasted in a moment.
From the <sic>hight</sic> of most exulting happiness
to the utmost depths of wretchedness, she had that
day descended. No wonder that she wept, and filled
the pen with wailings and expressions of heart-rending
woe.</p>
          <p>Eliza is now dead. Far up the Red River, where
it pours its waters sluggishly through the unhealthy
low lands of Louisiana, she rests in the grave at last—the only resting place of the poor slave! How all her
fears were realized—how she mourned day and night,
and never would be comforted—how, as she predicted,
her heart did indeed break, with the burden of
maternal sorrow, will be seen as the narrative proceeds.</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="northup54" n="54"/>
        <div2>
          <head>CHAPTER IV.</head>
          <argument>
            <p>ELIZA'S SORROWS—PREPARATION TO EMBARK—
DRIVEN THROUGH THE STREET'S OF WASHINGTON—HALL, COLUMBIA—
THE TOMB OF WASHINGTON—CLEM RAY—THE BREAKFAST ON THE STEAMER—
THE HAPPY BIRDS—AQUIA CREEK—FREDERICKSBURG—ARRIVAL IN RICHMOND—GOODIN AND HIS SLAVE PEN—ROBERT, OF CINCINNATI—DAVID AND HIS WIFE—MARY AND LETHE—
CLEM'S RETURN—HIS SUBSEQUENT ESCAPE TO CANADA—THE BRIG ORLEANS—JAMES H. BURCH.</p>
          </argument>
          <p>AT intervals during the first night of Eliza's incarceration
in the pen, she complained bitterly of Jacob
Brook's, her young mistress' husband. She declared
that had she been aware of the deception he intended
to practice upon her, he never would have brought
her there alive. They had chosen the opportunity
of getting her away when Master Berry was absent from
the plantation. He had always been kind to her.
She wished that she could see him; but she knew that
even he was unable now to rescue her. Then would
she commence weeping again—kissing the sleeping
children—talking first to one, then to the other, as
they lay in their unconscious slumbers, with their
heads upon her lap. So wore the long night away;
and when the morning dawned, and night had come
again, still she kept mourning on, and would not be
consoled.</p>
          <pb id="northup55" n="55"/>
          <p>About midnight following, the cell door opened,
and Burch and Radburn entered, with lanterns in
their hands. Burch, with an oath, ordered us to roll
up our blankets without delay, and get ready to go
on board tile boat. He swore we would be left unless
we hurried fast. He aroused the children from their
slumbers with a rough shake, and said they were
d-d sleepy, it appeared. Going out into the yard,
he called Clem Ray, ordering him to leave the loft
and come into the cell, and bring his blanket with
him. When Clem appeared, he placed us side by
side, and fastened us together with hand-cuffs—my
left hand to his right. John Williams had been taken
out a day or two before, his master having
redeemed him, greatly to his delight. Clem and I
were ordered to march, Eliza and the children following,
We were conducted into the yard, from
thence into the covered passage, and up a flight of
steps through a side door into the upper room, where
I had heard the walking to and fro. Its furniture was
a stove, a few old chairs, and a long table, covered
with papers. It was a white-washed room, without
any carpet on the floor, and seemed a sort of office.
By one of the windows, I remember, hung a rusty
sword, which attracted my attention. Burch's trunk
was there. In obedience to his orders, I took hold of
one of its handles with my unfettered hand, while he
taking hold of the other, we proceeded out of the
front door into the street in the same order as we had
left the cell.</p>
          <pb id="northup56" n="56"/>
          <p>It was a dark night. All was quiet. I could see
lights, or the reflection of them, over towards Pennsylvania
Avenue, but there was no one, not even a
straggler, to be seen. I was almost resolved to attempt
to break away. Had I not been hand-cuffed
the attempt would certainly have been made, whatever
consequence might have followed. Radburn
was in the rear, carrying a large stick, and hurrying
up the children as fast as the little ones could walk.
So we passed, hand-cuffed and in silence, through the
streets of Washington through the Capital of a nation,
whose theory of government, we are told, rests
on the foundation of man's inalienable right to life,
LIBERTY, and the pursuit of happiness!  Hail! Columbia,
happy land, indeed!</p>
          <p>Reaching the steamboat, we were quickly hustled
into the hold, among barrels and boxes of freight. A
colored servant brought a light, the bell rung, and
soon the vessel started down the Potomac, carrying
us we knew not where. The bell tolled as we passed
the tomb of Washington! Burch, no doubt, with uncovered
head, bowed reverently before the sacred ashes
of the man who devoted his illustrious life to the
liberty of his country.</p>
          <p>None of us slept that night but Randall and little
Emmy. For the first time Clem Ray was wholly
overcome. To him the idea of going south was terrible
in the extreme. He was leaving the friends and
associations of his youth every thing, that was dear
and precious to his heart—in all probability never
<pb id="northup57" n="57"/>
to return. He and Eliza mingled their tears together,
bemoaning their cruel fate. For my own part, difficult
as it was, I endeavored to keep up my spirits. I
resolved in my mind a hundred plans of escape, and
fully determined to make the attempt the first desperate
chance that offered. I had by this time become
satisfied, however, that my true policy was to say nothing
further on the subject of my having been born a
freeman. It would but expose me to mal- treatment,
and diminish the chances of liberation.</p>
          <p>After sunrise in the morning we were called up on
deck to breakfast. Burch took our hand-cuffs off,
and we sat down to table. He asked Eliza if she would
take a dram. She declined, thanking him politely.
During the meal we were all silent—not a word passed
between us. A mulatto woman who served at table
seemed to take an interest in our behalf—told us
to cheer up, and not to be so cast down. Breakfast over,
the hand-cuffs were restored, and Burch ordered
us out on the stern deck. We sat down together on
some boxes, still saying nothing in Burch's presence.
Occasionally a passenger would walk out to where
we were, look at us for a while, then silently return.</p>
          <p>It was a very pleasant morning. The fields along
the river were covered with verdure, far in advance
of what I had been accustomed to see at that season
of the year. The sun shone out warmly; the birds
were singing in the trees. The happy birds—I envied
them. I wished for wings like them, that I
might cleave the air to where my birdlings waited
<pb id="northup58" n="58"/>
vainly for their father's coming, in the cooler region. of the
North.</p>
          <p>In the forenoon the steamer reached Aquia Creek.
There the passengers took stages—Burch and his five
slaves occupying one exclusively. He laughed with
the children, and at one stopping place went so far as
to purchase them a piece of gingerbread. He told
me to hold up my head and look smart. That I
might, perhaps, get a good master if I behaved myself.
I made him no reply. His face was hateful to
me, and I could not bear to look upon it. I sat in
the corner, cherishing in my heart the hope, not yet
extinct, of some day meeting the tyrant on the soil of
my native State.</p>
          <p>At Fredericksburgh we were transferred from the
stage coach to a car, and before dark arrived in Richmond,
the chief city of Virginia. At this city we
were taken from the cars, and driven through the
street to a slave pen, between the railroad depot and
the river, kept by a Mr. Goodin. This pen is similar
to Williams' in Washington, except it is somewhat
larger; and besides, there were two small houses
standing at opposite corners within the yard. These
houses are <sic>susually</sic> found within slave yards, being
used as rooms for the examination of human chattels
by purchasers before concluding a bargain. Unsoundness
in a slave, as well as in a horse, detracts
materially from his value. If no warranty is given,
a close examination is a matter of particular importance
to the negro jockey.</p>
          <pb id="northup59" n="59"/>
          <p>We were met at the door of Goodin's yard by that
gentleman himself—a short, fat man, with a round,
plump face, black hair and whiskers, and a complexion
almost as dark as some of his own negroes. He
had a hard, stern look, and was perhaps about fifty
years of age. Burch and he met with great cordiality.
They were evidently old friends. Shaking each
other warmly by the hand, Burch remarked he had
brought some company, inquired at what time the
brig would leave, and was answered that it would
probably leave the next day at such an hour. Goodin
then turned to me, took hold of my arm, turned
me partly round, looked at me sharply with the air of
one who considered himself a good judge of property,
and as if estimating in his own mind about how
much I was worth.</p>
          <p>“Well, boy, where did you come from?”
Forgetting myself, for a moment, I answered, “From
 New-York.”</p>
          <p>“New-York! H--l! what have you been doing
up there?” was his astonished interrogatory.</p>
          <p>Observing Burch at this moment looking at me with
an angry expression that conveyed a meaning it was
not difficult to understand, I immediately said, “O, I
have only been up that way a piece,” in a manner
intended to imply that although I might have been as
far as New-York, yet I wished it distinctly understood
that I did not belong to that free State, nor to any
other.</p>
          <p>Goodin then turned to Clem, and then to Eliza and
<pb id="northup60" n="60"/>
the children, examining them severally, and asking
various questions. He was pleased with Emily, as
was every one who saw the child's sweet countenance.
She was not as tidy as when I first beheld her; her
hair was now somewhat disheveled; but through its
unkempt and soft profusion there still beamed a little
face of most surpassing loveliness. “Altogether we
were a fair lot—a devilish good lot,” he said, enforcing
that opinion with more than one emphatic adjective
not found in the Christian vocabulary. Thereupon
we passed into the yard. Quite a number of
slaves, as many as thirty I should say, were moving
about, or sitting on benches under the shed. They
were all cleanly dressed—the men with hats, the women
with handkerchiefs tied about their heads.</p>
          <p>Burch and Goodin, after separating from us, walked
up the steps at the back part of the main building,
and sat down upon the door sill. They entered into
conversation, but the subject of it I could not hear.
Presently Burch came down into the yard, unfettered
me, and led me into one of the small houses.</p>
          <p>“You told that man you came from New-York,”
said he.</p>
          <p>I replied, “I told him I had been up as far as New-York,
to be sure, but did not tell him I belonged
there, nor that I was a freeman. I meant no harm at
all, Master Burch. I would not have said it had I
thought.”</p>
          <p>He looked at me a moment as if he was ready to
devour me, then turning round went out. In a few
<pb id="nothup61" n="61"/>
minutes he returned. “If ever I hear you say a word
about New-York, or about your freedom, I will be the
death of you—I will kill you; you may rely on
that,” he ejaculated fiercely.</p>
          <p>I doubt not he understood then better than I did,
the danger and the penalty of selling a free man into
slavery. He felt the necessity of closing my mouth
against the crime he knew he was committing. Of
course, my life would not have weighed a feather, in
any emergency requiring such a sacrifice. Undoubtedly,
he meant precisely what he said.</p>
          <p>Under the shed on one side of the yard, there was
constructed a rough table, while overhead were sleeping
lofts—the same as in the pen at Washington. After
partaking at this table of our supper of pork and
bread, I was hand-cuffed to a large yellow man, quite
stout and fleshy, with a countenance expressive of
the utmost melancholy. He was a man of intelligence
and information. Chained together, it was not
long before we became acquainted with each other's
history. His name was Robert. Like myself, he
had been born free, and had a wife and two children
in Cincinnati. He said he had come south with
two men, who had hired him in the city of his residence.
Without free papers, he had been seized at
Fredericksburgh, placed in confinement, and beaten
until he had learned, as I had, the necessity and the
policy of silence. He had been in Goodin's pen
about three weeks. To this man I became much
attached. We could sympathize with, and understand
<pb id="northup62" n="62"/>
each other. It was with tears and a heavy heart,
not many days subsequently, that I saw him die, and
looked for the last time upon his lifeless form!</p>
          <p>Robert and myself, with Clem, Eliza and her children,
slept that night upon our blankets, in one of the
small houses in the yard. There were four others, all
from the same plantation, who had been sold and
were now on their way south, who also occupied it
with us. David and his wife, Caroline, both mulattos,
were exceedingly affected. They dreaded the
thought of being put into the cane and cotton fields;
but their greatest source of anxiety was the apprehension
of being separated. Mary, a tall, lithe girl, of a
most jetty black, was listless and apparently indifferent.
Like many of the class, she scarcely knew there
was such a word as freedom. Brought up in the ignorance
of a brute, she possessed but little more than
a brute's intelligence. She was one of those, and
there are very many, who fear nothing but their master's
lash, and know no further duty than to obey his
voice. The other was Lethe. She was of an entirely
different character. She had long, straight hair, and
bore more the appearance of an Indian than a negro
woman. She had sharp and spiteful eyes, and continually
gave utterance to the language of hatred
and revenge. Her husband had been sold. She
knew not where she was. An exchange of masters,
she was sure, could not be for the worse. She cared
not whither they might carry her. Pointing to the
scars upon her face, the desperate creature wished
<pb id="northup63" n="63"/>
that she might see the day when she could wipe them
off in some man's blood!</p>
          <p>While we were thus learning the history of each
other's wretchedness, Eliza was seated in a corner by
herself, singing hymns and praying for her children.
Wearied from the loss of so much sleep, I could no
longer bear up against the advances of that “sweet
restorer,” and laying down by the side of Robert, on
the floor, soon forgot my troubles, and slept until the
dawn of day.</p>
          <p>In the morning, having swept the yard, and washed
ourselves, under Goodin's superintendence, we
were ordered to roll up our blankets, and make ready
for the continuance of our journey. Clem Ray was
informed that he would go no further, Burch, for some
cause, having concluded to carry him back to Washington.
He was much rejoiced. Shaking hands, we
parted in the slave pen at Richmond, and I have not
seen him since. But, much to my surprise, since my
return, I learned that he had escaped from bondage,
and on his way to the free soil of Canada, lodged one
night at the house of my brother-in-law in Saratoga,
informing my family of the place and the condition
in which he left me.</p>
          <p>In the afternoon we were drawn up, two abreast,
Robert and myself in advance, and in this order, driven
by Burch and Goodin from the yard, through the
streets of Richmond to the brig Orleans. She was
a vessel of respectable size, full rigged, and freighted
principally with tobacco. We were all on board by
<pb id="northup64" n="64"/>
five o'clock. Burch brought us each a tin cup and a
spoon. There were forty of us in the brig, being all,
except Clem, that were in the pen.</p>
          <p>With a small pocket knife that had not been taken
from me, I began cutting the initials of my name
upon the tin cup. The others immediately flocked
round me, requesting me to mark theirs in a similar
manner. In time, I gratified them all, of which they
did not appear to be forgetful.</p>
          <p>We were all stowed away in the hold at night, and
the hatch barred down. We laid on boxes, or where-
ever  there was room enough to stretch our blankets
on the floor.</p>
          <p>Burch accompanied us no farther than Richmond,
returning from that point to the capital with Clem.
Not until the lapse of almost twelve years, to wit, in
January last, in the Washington police office, did I
set my eyes upon his face again.</p>
          <p>James H. Burch was a slave-trader—buying men,
women and children at low prices, and selling them
at an advance. He was a speculator in human flesh
—a disreputable calling—and so considered at the
South. For the present he disappears from the scenes
recorded in this narrative, but he will appear again
before its close, not in the character of a man-whipping 
tyrant, but as an arrested, cringing criminal in
a court of law, that failed to do him justice.</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="northup65" n="65"/>
        <div2>
          <head>CHAPTER V.</head>
          <argument>
            <p>ARRIVAL AT NORFOLK—FREDERICK AND MARIA—
ARTHUR, THE FREEMAN APPOINTED STEWARD—
JIM, CUFFEE, AND JENNY—THE STORM—BAHAMA BANKS—
THE CALM—THE CONSPIRACY—THE LONG BOAT—THE SMALL-POX—
DEATH OF ROBERT—MANNING, THE SAILOR—THE MEETING IN THE FORECASTLE—
THE LETTER—ARRIVAL AT NEW-ORLEANS—ARTHUR'S RESCUE—
THEOPHILUS FREEMAN, THE CONSIGNEE—PLATT—FIRST
NIGHT IN THE NEW-ORLEANS SLAVE PEN.</p>
          </argument>
          <p>AFTER we were all on board, the brig Orleans proceeded
down James River. Passing into Chesapeake
Bay, we arrived next day opposite the city of Norfolk.
While lying at anchor, a lighter approached
us from the town, bringing four more slaves. Frederick,
a boy of eighteen, had been born a slave, as also
had Henry, who was some years older. They had
both been house servants in the city. Maria was a
rather genteel looting colored girl, with a faultless
form, but ignorant and extremely vain. The idea of
going to New-Orleans was pleasing to her. She entertained
an extravagantly high opinion of her own
attractions. Assuming a haughty mien, she declared
to her companions, that immediately on our arrival
in New-Orleans, she had no doubt, some wealthy single
gentleman of good taste would purchase her at
once!</p>
          <pb id="northup66" n="66"/>
          <p>But the most prominent of the four, was as a man
named Arthur. As the lighter approached, he struggled
stoutly with his keepers. It was with main
force that he was dragged aboard the brig. He protested,
in a loud voice, against the treatment he was
receiving, and demanded to be released. His face
was swollen, and covered with wounds and bruises,
and, indeed, one side of it was a complete raw sore.
He was forced, with all haste, down the hatchway
into the hold. I caught an outline of his story as he
was borne struggling along, of which he afterwards
gave me a more full relation, and it was as follows:
He had long resided in the city of Norfolk, and was a
free man. He had a family living there, and was a
mason by trade. Having been unusually detained,
he was returning late one night to his house in the
suburbs of the city, when he was attacked by a gang
of persons in an unfrequented street. He fought
until his strength failed him. Overpowered at last,
he was gagged and bound with ropes, and beaten,
until he became insensible. For several days they
secreted him in the slave pen at Norfolk—a very
common establishment, it appears, in the cities of the
South. The night before, he had been taken out and
put on board the lighter, which, pushing out from
shore, had awaited our arrival. For some time he
continued his protestations, and was altogether irreconcilable.
At length, however, he became silent.
He sank into a gloomy and thoughtful mood, and appeared
to be counseling with himself. There was in
<pb id="northup67" n="67"/>
the man's determined face, something that suggested
the thought of desperation.</p>
          <p>After leaving Norfolk the hand-cuffs were taken
off, and during the day we were allowed to remain
on deck. The captain selected Robert as his waiter,
and I was appointed to superintend the cooking department,
and the distribution of food and water. I
had three assistants, Jim, Cuffee and Jenny. Jenny's
business was to prepare the coffee, which consisted of
corn meal scorched in a kettle, boiled and sweetened
with molasses. Jim and Cuffee baked the hoe-cake
and boiled the bacon.</p>
          <p>Standing by a table, formed of a wide board resting
on the heads of the barrels, I cut and handed to
each a slice of meat and a “dodger” of the bread,
and from Jenny's kettle also dipped out for each a
cup of the coffee. The use of plates was dispensed
with, and their sable fingers took the place of knives
and forks. Jim and Cuffee were very demure and
attentive to business, somewhat inflated with their
situation as second cooks, and without doubt feeling
that there was a great responsibility resting on them.
I was called steward—a name given me by the captain.</p>
          <p>The slaves were fed twice a day, at ten and five
o'clock—always receiving the same kind and quantity
of fare, and in the same manner as above described.
At night we were driven into the hold, and securely
fastened down.</p>
          <p>Scarcely were we out of sight of land before we
<pb id="northup68" n="68"/>
were overtaken by a violent storm. The brig rolled
and plunged until we feared she would go down.
Some were sea-sick, others on their knees praying,
while some were fast holding to each other, paralyzed
with fear. The sea-sickness rendered the place of our
confinement loathsome and disgusting. It would
have been a happy thing for most of us—it would
have saved the agony of many hundred lashes, and
miserable deaths at last—had the compassionate sea
snatched us that day from the clutches of remorseless
men. The thought of Randall and little Emmy sinking
down among the monsters of the deep, is a more
pleasant contemplation than to think of them as they
are now, perhaps, dragging out lives of unrequited
toil.</p>
          <p>When in sight of the Bahama Banks, at a place
called Old Point Compass, or the Hole in the Wall,
we were becalmed three days. There was scarcely a
breath of air. The waters of the gulf presented a
singularly white appearance, like lime water.</p>
          <p>In the order of events, I come now to the relation
of an occurrence, which I never call to mind but with
sensations of regret. I thank God, who has since
permitted me to escape from the thralldom of slavery,
that through his merciful interposition I was prevented
from imbruing my hands in the blood of his creatures.
Let not those who have never been placed in
like circumstances, judge me harshly. Until they
have been chained and beaten—until they find themselves
in the situation I was, borne away from home
<pb id="northup69" n="69"/>
and family towards a land of bondage—let them refrain
from saying what they would not do for liberty.
How far I should have been justified in the sight of
God and man, it is unnecessary now to speculate upon.
It is enough to say that I am able to congratulate
myself upon the harmless termination of an affair
which threatened, for a time, to be attended with serious
results.</p>
          <p>Towards evening, on the first day of the calm, Arthur
and myself were in the bow of the vessel, seated
on the windlass. We were conversing together of
the probable destiny that awaited us, and mourning
together over our misfortunes. Arthur said, and I
agreed with him, that death was far less terrible than
the living prospect that was before us. For a long
time we talked of our children, our past lives, and of
the probabilities of escape. Obtaining possession of
the brig was suggested by one of us. We discussed
the possibility of our being able, in such an event, to
make our way to the harbor of New-York. I knew
little of the compass; but the idea of risking the experiment
was eagerly entertained. The chances, for
and against us, in an encounter with the crew, was
canvassed. Who could be relied upon, and who
could not, the proper time and manner of the attack,
were all talked over and over again. From the moment
the plot suggested itself I began to hope. I
revolved it constantly in my mind. As difficulty after
difficulty arose, some ready conceit was at hand,
demonstrating how it could be overcome. While
<pb id="northup70" n="70"/>
others slept, Arthur and I were maturing, our plans.
At length, with much caution, Robert was gradually
made acquainted with our intentions. He approved
of them at once, and entered into the conspiracy with
a zealous spirit. There was not another slave we
dared to trust. Brought up in fear and ignorance as
they are, it can scarcely be conceived how servilely
they will cringe before a white man's look. It was
not safe to deposit so bold a secret with any of them,
and finally we three resolved to take upon ourselves
alone the fearful responsibility of the attempt.</p>
          <p>At night, as has been said, we were driven into the
hold, and the hatch barred down. How to reach the
deck was the first difficulty that presented itself. On
the bow of the brig, however I had observed the
small boat lying bottom upwards. It occurred to me
that by secreting ourselves underneath it, we would
not be missed from the crowd, as they were hurried
down into the hold at night. I was selected to make
the experiment, in order to satisfy ourselves of its feasibility.
The next evening, accordingly, after supper,
watching my opportunity, I hastily concealed myself
beneath it. Lying close upon the deck, I could see
what was going on around me, while wholly unperceived
myself In the morning, as they came up, I
slipped from my hiding place without being observed.
The result was entirely satisfactory.</p>
          <p>The captain and mate slept in the cabin of the former.
From Robert, who had frequent occasion, in
his capacity of waiter, to make observations in that
<pb id="northup71" n="71"/>
quarter we ascertained the exact position of their
respective berths. He further informed us that there
were always two pistols and a cutlass lying on the
table. The crew's cook slept in the cook galley on
deck, a sort of vehicle on wheels, that could be moved
about as convenience required, while the sailors,
numbering only six, either slept in the forecastle, or
in hammocks swung among the rigging.</p>
          <p>Finally our arrangements were all completed. Arthur
and I were to steal silently to the captain's cabin,
seize the pistols and cutlass, and as quickly as possible
despatch him and the mate. Robert, with a club,
was to stand by the door leading from the deck down
into the cabin, and, in case of necessity, beat back the
sailors, until we could hurry to his assistance. We
were to proceed then as circumstances might require.
Should the attack be so sudden and successful as to
prevent resistance, the hatch was to remain barred
down; otherwise the slaves were to be called up, and
in the crowd, d, and hurry, and confusion of the time,
we resolved to regain our liberty or lose our lives. I
was then to assume the unaccustomed place of pilot,
and, steering northward, we trusted that some lucky
wind might bear us to the soil of freedom.</p>
          <p>The mate's name was Biddee, the captain's I cannot
now recall, though I rarely ever forget a name
once heard. The captain was a small, genteel man,
erect and prompt, with a proud bearing, and looked
the personification of courage. If he is still living,
and these pages should chance to meet his eye, he
<pb id="northup72" n="72"/>
will learn a fact connected with the voyage of the
brig, from Richmond to New-Orleans, in 1841, not
entered on his log-book.</p>
          <p>We were all prepared, and impatiently waiting an
opportunity of putting our designs into execution,
when they were frustrated by a sad and unforeseen
event. Robert was taken ill. It was soon announced
that he had the small-pox. He continued to grow
worse, and four days previous to our arrival in New-Orleans
he died. One of the sailors sewed him in his
blanket, with a large stone from the ballast at his feet,
and then laying him on a hatchway, and elevating it
with tackles above the railing, the inanimate body of
poor Robert was consigned to the white waters of the
gulf.</p>
          <p>We were all panic-stricken by the appearance of
the small-pox. The captain ordered lime to be scattered
through the hold, and other prudent precautions
to be taken. The death of Robert, however, and
the presence of the malady, oppressed me sadly, and
I gazed out over the great waste of waters with a
spirit that was indeed disconsolate.</p>
          <p>An evening or two after Robert's burial, I was
leaning on the hatchway near the forecastle, full of
desponding thoughts, when a sailor in a kind voice
asked me why I was so down-hearted. The tone and
manner of the man assured me, and I answered, because
I was a freeman, and had been kidnapped.
He remarked. that it was enough to make any one
down-hearted, and continued to interrogate me until
<pb id="northup73" n="73"/>
he learned the particulars of my whole history. He
was evidently much interested in my behalf, and, in
the blunt speech of a sailor, swore he would aid me
all he could, if it “split his timbers.” I requested
him to furnish me pen, ink and paper, in order that I
might write to some of my friends. He promised to
obtain them—but how I could use them undiscovered
was a difficulty. If I could only get into the forecastle
while his watch was off, and the other sailors
asleep, the thing could be accomplished. The small
boat instantly occurred to me. He thought we were
not far from the Balize, at the mouth of the Mississippi,
and it was necessary that the letter be written
soon, or the opportunity would be lost. Accordingly,
by arrangement, I managed the next night to secret
myself again under the long-boat. His watch was off
at twelve. I saw him pass into the forecastle, and in
about an hour followed him. He was nodding over
a table, half asleep, on which a sickly light was flickering,
and on which also was a pen and sheet of paper.
As I entered he aroused, beckoned me to a seat
beside him, and pointed to the paper. I directed the
letter to Henry B. Northup, of Sandy Hill—stating that
I had been kidnapped, was then on board the
brig Orleans, bound for New-Orleans; that it was
then impossible for me to conjecture my ultimate destination,
and requesting he would take measures to
rescue me. The letter was sealed and directed, and
Manning, having read it, promised to deposit it in the
New-Orleans post-office. I hastened back to my place
<pb id="northup74" n="74"/>
under the long-boat, and in the morning, as the slaves
came up and were walking round, crept out unnoticed
and mingled with them.</p>
          <p>My good friend, whose name was John Manning,
was an Englishman by birth, and a noble-hearted,
generous sailor as ever walked a deck. He had lived
in Boston—was a tall, well-built man, about twenty-four
years old, with a face somewhat pock-marked,
but full of benevolent expression.</p>
          <p>Nothing to vary the monotony of our daily life occurred,
until we reached New-Orleans. On coming
to the levee, and before the vessel was made fast, I
saw Manning leap on shore and hurry away into the
city. As he started off he looked back over his shoulder
significantly, giving me to understand the object
of his errand. Presently he returned, and passing
close by me, hunched me with his elbow, with a peculiar
wink, as much as to say, “it is all right.”</p>
          <p>The letter, as I have since learned, reached Sandy
Hill. Mr. Northup visited Albany and laid it before
Governor Seward, but inasmuch as it gave no definite
information as to my probable locality, it was not, at
that time, deemed advisable to institute measures for
my liberation. It was concluded to delay, trusting
that a knowledge of where I was might eventually be
obtained.</p>
          <p>A happy and touching scene was witnessed immediately
upon our reaching the levee. Just as Manning
left the brig, on his way to the post-office two
men came up and called aloud for Arthur. The latter,
<pb id="northup75" n="75"/>
as he recognized them, was almost crazy with delight.
He could hardly be restrained from leaping
over the brig's side; and when they met soon after,
he grasped them by the hand, and clung to them a
long, long time. They were men from Norfolk, who
had come on to New-Orleans to rescue him. His
kidnappers, they informed him, had been arrested,
and were then confined in the Norfolk prison. They
conversed a few moments with the captain, and then
departed with the rejoicing Arthur.</p>
          <p>But in all the crowd that thronged the wharf, there
was no one who knew or cared for me. Not one.
No familiar voice greeted my ears, nor was there a
single face that I had ever seen. Soon Arthur would
rejoin his family, and have the satisfaction of seeing
his wrongs avenged: my family, alas, should I ever
see them more? There was a feeling of utter desolation
in my heart, filling it with a despairing and regretful
sense, that I had not gone down with Robert
to the bottom of the sea.</p>
          <p>Very soon traders and consignees came on board.
One, a tall, thin-faced man, with light complexion
and a little bent, made his appearance, with a paper
in his hand. Burch's gang, consisting of myself, Eliza
and her children, Harry, Lethe, and some others,
who had joined us at Richmond, were consigned to
him. This gentleman was Mr. Theophilus Freeman.
Reading from his paper, he called, “Platt.” No one
answered. The name was called again and again, but
still there was no reply. Then Lethe was called, then
<pb id="northup76" n="76"/>
Eliza, then Harry, until the list was finished, each
one stepping forward as his or her name was called.</p>
          <p>“Captain, where's Platt?” demanded Theophilus
Freeman.</p>
          <p>The captain was unable to inform him, no one being,
on board answering to that name.</p>
          <p>“Who shipped <hi rend="italics">that</hi> nigger?” he again inquired of
the captain, pointing to me.</p>
          <p>“Burch,” replied the captain.</p>
          <p>“Your name is Platt—you answer  my description.
Why don't you come forward?” he demanded of me,
in an angry tone.</p>
          <p>I informed him that was not my name; that I had
never been called by it, but that I had no objection
to it as I knew of.</p>
          <p>“Well, I will learn you your name,” said he; “and
so you won't forget it either, by ----,” he added.</p>
          <p>Mr. Theophilus Freeman, by the way, was not a
whit behind his partner, Burch, in the matter of blasphemy.
On the vessel I had gone by the name of
“Steward,” and this was the first time I had ever
been designated as Platt—the name forwarded by
Burch to his consignee. From the vessel I observed
the chain-gang at work on the levee. We passed
near them as we were driven to Freeman's slave pen.
This pen is very similar to Goodin's in Richmond, except
the yard was enclosed by plank, standing upright,
with ends sharpened, instead of brick walls.</p>
          <p>Including us, there were now at least fifty in this 
pen. Depositing our blankets in one of the small
<pb id="northup77" n="77"/>
buildings in the yard, and having been called up and
fed, we were allowed to saunter about the enclosure
until night, when we wrapped our blankets round us
and laid down under the shed, or in the loft, or in the
open yard, just as each one preferred.</p>
          <p>It was but a short time I closed my eyes that night.
Thought was busy in my brain. Could it be possible
that I was thousands of miles from home—that I had
been driven through the streets like a dumb beast—
that I had been chained and beaten without mercy—that I
was even then herded with a drove of slaves, a
slave myself? Were the events of the last few weeks
realities indeed?—or was I passing only through
the dismal phases of a long, protracted dream? It was
no illusion. My cup of sorrow was full to overflowing.
Then I lifted up my hands to God, and in the
still watches of the night, surrounded by the sleeping
forms of my companions, begged for mercy on the
poor, forsaken captive. To the Almighty Father of
us all—the freeman and the slave—I poured forth
the supplications of a broken spirit, imploring strength
from on high to bear up against the burden of my
troubles, until the morning light aroused the slumberers,
ushering in another day of bondage.</p>
        </div2>
        <pb id="northup78" n="78"/>
        <div2>
          <head>CHAPTER VI.</head>
          <argument>
            <p>FREEMAN'S INDUSTRY—CLEANLINESS AND CLOTHES—
EXERCISING IN THE SHOW ROOM—THE DANCE—BOB, THE FIDDLER—
ARRIVAL OF CUSTOMERS—SLAVES EXAMINED—THE OLD GENTLEMAN OF NEW ORLEANS—SALE OF DAVID, CAROLINE AND LETHE—PARTING OF RANDALL AND
ELIZA—SMALL POX—THE HOSPITAL—RECOVERY AND RETURN TO
FREEMAN'S SLAVE PEN—THE PURCHASER OF ELIZA, HARRY AND PLATT—
ELIZA'S AGONY ON PARTING FROM LITTLE EMILY.</p>
          </argument>
          <p>The very amiable, pious-hearted Mr. Theophilus
Freeman, partner or consignee of James H. Burch,
and keeper of the slave pen in New-Orleans, was out
among his animals early in the morning. With an
occasional kick of the older men and women, and
many a sharp crack of the whip about the ears of the
younger slaves, it was not long before they were all
astir, and wide awake. Mr. Theophilus Freeman
bustled about in a very industrious manner, getting
his property ready for the sales-room, intending, no
doubt, to do that day a rousing business.</p>
          <p>In the first place we were required to wash thoroughly,
and those with beards, to shave. We were then
furnished with a new suit each, cheap, but clean.
The men had hat, coat, shirt, pants and shoes; the
women frocks of calico, and handkerchiefs to bind
about their heads. We were now conducted into a
large room in the front part of the building to which
<pb id="northup79" n="79"/>
the yard was attached, in order to be properly trained,
before the admission of customers. The men were
arranged on one side of the room, the women on the
other. The tallest was placed at the head of the row,
then the next tallest, and so on in the order of their
respective heights. Emily was at the foot of the
line of women. Freeman charged us to remember
our places; exhorted us to appear smart and lively,
- sometimes threatening, and again, holding out
various inducements. During the day he exercised
us in the art of “looking smart,” and of moving to
our places with exact precision.</p>
          <p>After being fed, in the afternoon, we were again
paraded and made to dance. Bob, a colored boy,
who had some time belonged to Freeman, played on
the violin. Standing near him, I made bold to inquire
if he could play the “Virginia Reel.” He answered
he could not, and asked me if I could play.
Replying in the affirmative, he handed me the violin.
I struck up a tune, and finished it. Freeman ordered
me to continue playing, and seemed well pleased,
telling Bob that I far excelled him—a remark that
seemed to grieve my musical companion very much.</p>
          <p>Next day many customers called to examine Freeman's
“new lot.” The latter gentleman was very
loquacious, dwelling at much length  upon our several
good points and qualities. He would make us hold
up our heads, walk briskly back and forth, while customers
would feel of our hands and arms and bodies,
turn us about, ask us what we could do, make us open
<pb id="northup80" n="80"/>
our mouths and show our teeth, precisely as a jockey
examines a horse which he is about to barter for or
purchase. Sometimes a man or woman was taken
back to the small house in the yard, stripped, and inspected
more minutely. Scars upon a slave's back
were considered evidence of a rebellious or unruly
spirit, and hurt his sale.</p>
          <p>One old gentleman, who said he wanted a coachman,
appeared to take a fancy to me. From his conversation
with Burch, I learned he was a resident in
the city. I very much desired that he would buy me,
because I conceived it would not be difficult to make
my escape from New-Orleans on some northern vessel.
Freeman asked him fifteen hundred dollars for me.
The old gentleman insisted it was too much, as times
were very hard. Freeman, however, declared that I
was sound and healthy, of a good constitution, and
intelligent. He made it a point to enlarge upon my
musical attainments. The old gentleman argued
quite adroitly that there was nothing extraordinary
about the nigger, and finally, to my regret, went out,
saying he would call again. During the day, however,
a number of sales were made. David and Caroline
were purchased together by a Natchez planter.
They left us, grinning broadly, and in the most happy
state of mind, caused by the fact of their not being separated.
Lethe was sold to a planter of Baton Rouge,
her eyes flashing with anger as she was led away.</p>
          <p>The same man also purchased Randall. The little fellow
was made to jump, and run across the floor,
<pb id="northup81" n="81"/>
and perform many other feats, exhibiting his activity
and condition. All the time the trade was going on,
Eliza was crying aloud, and wringing her hands. She
besought the man not to buy him, unless he also
bought her self and Emily. She promised, in that case,
to be the most faithful slave that ever lived. The
man answered that he could not afford it, and then
Eliza burst into a paroxysm of grief, weeping plaintively.
Freeman turned round to her, savagely, with
his whip in his uplifted hand, ordering her to stop her
noise, or he would flog her. He would not have such
work—such snivelling; and unless she ceased that
minute, he would take her to the yard and give her a
hundred lashes. Yes, he would take the nonsense out
of her pretty quick—if he didn't, might he be d--d.
Eliza shrunk before him, and tried to wipe away her
tears, but it was all in vain. She wanted to be with
her children, she said, the little time she had to live.
All the frowns and threats of Freeman, could not
wholly silence the afflicted mother. She kept on begging
and beseeching them, most piteously not to separate
the three. Over and over again she told them
how she loved her boy. A great many times she
repeated her former promises—how very faithful
and obedient she would be; how hard she would labor
day and night, to the last moment of her life, if he
would only buy them all together. But it was of no
avail; the man could not afford it. The bargain was
agreed upon, and Randall must go alone. Then Eliza
ran to him; embraced him passionately; kissed
<pb id="northup82" n="82"/>
him again and again; told him to remember her—
all the while her tears falling in the boy's face like rain.</p>
          <p>Freeman damned her, calling her a blubbering,
bawling wench, and ordered her to go to her place,
and behave herself; and be somebody. He swore he
wouldn't stand such stuff but a little longer. He
would soon give her something to cry about, if she
was not mighty careful, and <hi rend="italics">that</hi> she might depend
upon.</p>
          <p>The planter from Baton Rouge, with his new purchases,
was ready to depart.</p>
          <p>“Don't cry, mama. I will be a good boy.
Don't cry,” said Randall, looking back, as they passed out
of the door.</p>
          <p>What has become of the lad, God knows. It was
a mournful scene indeed. I would have cried myself
if I had dared.</p>
          <p>That night, nearly all who came in on the brig Orleans,
were taken ill. They complained of violent
pain in the head and back. Little Emily—a thing
unusual with her—cried constantly. In the morning,
a physician was called in, but was unable to determine
the nature of our complaint. While examining
me, and asking questions touching my symptoms,
I gave it as my opinion that it was an attack of
smallpox—mentioning the fact of Robert's death as the
reason of my belief. It might be so indeed, he thought,
and he would send for the head physician of the hospital.
Shortly, the head physician came—a small,
light-haired man, whom they called Dr. Carr. He
<pb id="northup83" n="83"/>
pronounced it small-pox, whereupon there was much
alarm throughout the yard. Soon after Dr. Carr left,
Eliza, Emmy, Harry and myself were put into a hack
and driven to the hospital a large white marble
building, standing on the outskirts of the city. Harry 
and I were placed in a room in one of the upper
stories. I became very sick. For three days I was
entirely blind. While lying in this state one day,
Bob came in, saying to Dr. Carr that Freeman had
sent him over to inquire how we were getting on.
Tell him, said the doctor, that Platt is very bad, but
that if he survives until nine o'clock, he may recover.</p>
          <p>I expected to die. Though there was little in the
prospect before me worth living for, the near approach
of death appalled me. I thought I could have been
resigned to yield up my life in the bosom of my family,
but to expire in the midst of strangers, under such
circumstances, was a bitter reflection. </p>
          <p>There were a great number in the hospital, of both
sexes, and of all ages. In the rear of the building
coffins were manufactured. When one died, the bell
tolled—a signal to  the undertaker to come and bear
away the body to the potter's field. Many times, each
day and night, the tolling bell sent forth its melancholy
voice, announcing another death. But my time
had not yet come. The crisis having passed, I began to
revive, and at the end of two weeks and two days,
returned with Harry  to the pen, bearing upon my
face the effects of the malady, which to this day continues
to disfigure it. Eliza and Emily were also
<pb id="northup84" n="84"/>
brought back next day in a hack, and again were we
paraded in the sales-room, for the inspection and examination
of purchasers. I still indulged the hope
that the old gentleman in search of a coachman would
call again, as he had promised, and purchase me. In
that event I felt an abiding confidence that I would
soon regain my liberty. Customer after customer
entered, but the old gentleman never made his appearance.</p>
          <p>At length, one day, while we were in the yard,
Freeman came out and ordered us to our places, in
the great room. A gentleman was waiting for us as
we entered, and inasmuch as he will be often mentioned
in the progress of this narrative, a description
of his personal appearance, and my estimation of his
character, at first sight, may not be out of place.</p>
          <p>He was a man above the ordinary height, somewhat
bent and stooping forward. He was a good-looking
man, and appeared to have reached about the
middle age of life. There was nothing repulsive in
his presence; but on the other hand, there was something
cheerful and attractive in his face, and in his
tone of voice. The finer elements were all kindly
mingled in his breast, as any one could see. He
moved about among us, asking many questions, as to
what we could do, and what labor we had been accustomed
to; if we thought we would like to live
with him, and would be good boys if he would buy
us, and other interrogatories of like character.</p>
          <p>After some further inspection, and conversation
<pb id="northup85" n="85"/>
touching prices, he finally offered Freeman one thousand
dollars for me, nine hundred for Harry, and seven
hundred for Eliza. Whether the small-pox had
depreciated our value, or from what cause Freeman
had concluded to fall five hundred dollars from the
price I was before held at, I cannot say. At any rate,
after a little shrewd reflection, he announced his acceptance
of the offer.</p>
          <p>As soon as Eliza heard it, she was in an agony
again. By this time she had become haggard and
hollow-eyed with sickness and with sorrow. It would
be a relief if I could consistently pass over in silence
the scene that now ensued. It recalls memories more
mournful and affecting than any language can portray.
I have seen mothers kissing for the last time
the faces of their dead offspring; I have seen them
looking down into the grave, as the earth fell with a
dull sound upon their coffins, hiding them from their
eyes forever; but never have I seen such an exhibition
of intense, unmeasured, and unbounded grief, as
when Eliza was parted from her child. She broke
from her place in the line of women, and rushing down
where Emily was standing, caught her in her arms.
The child, sensible of some impending danger, instinctively
fastened her hands around her mother's neck,
and nestled her little head upon her bosom. Freeman
sternly ordered her to be quiet, but she did not
heed him. He caught her by the arm and pulled her
rudely, but she only clung the closer to the child.
Then, with a volley of great oaths, he struck her such
<pb id="northup86" n="86"/>
a heartless blow, that she staggered backward, and
was like to fall. Oh! how piteously then did she beseech
and beg and pray that they might not be separated.
Why could they not be purchased together?
Why not let her have one of her dear children?
“Mercy, mercy, master!” she cried, falling on her
knees. “Please, master, buy Emily. I can never
work any if she is taken from me: I will die.”</p>
          <p>Freeman interfered again, but, disregarding him,
she still plead most earnestly, telling how Randall had
been taken from her—how she never him see him
again, and now it was too bad—oh, God! it was too
bad, too cruel, to take her away from Emily—her
pride—her only darling, that could not live, it was
so young, without its mother!</p>
          <p>Finally, after much more of supplication, the purchaser
of Eliza stepped forward, evidently affected,
and said to Freeman he would buy Emily, and asked
him what her price was.</p>
          <p>“What is her <hi rend="italics">price</hi>? <hi rend="italics">Buy</hi> her?” was the responsive
interrogatory of Theophilus Freeman. And instantly
answering his own inquiry, he added, “I won't
sell her. She's not for sale.”</p>
          <p>The man remarked he was not in need of one so
young—that it would be of no profit to him, but
since the mother was so fond of her, rather than see
them separated, he would pay a reasonable price.
But to this humane proposal Freeman was entirely
deaf. He would not sell her then on any account
whatever. There were heaps and piles of money to
<pb id="northup87" n="87"/>
be made of her, he said, when she was a few years
older.