Traveler's Names | James Andy Wilkins and wife Lucinda, with their little boy, Charles |
---|---|
Age | – |
Description | – |
Alias | – |
Origin- Town/City | – |
Origin- County | Cecil Co |
Origin- State | Maryland |
Destination | Canada |
Birthplace | – |
Slaveowner's Name | George Biddle |
Chapter Title | Sundry Arrivals from Maryland, 1859 |
Page Number | 504 |
Other Travelers | James Andy Wilkins and wife Lucinda, with their little boy, Charles, Charle Henry Gross, a woman with her two children--one in her arms--John Brown, John Roach, and wife Lamby and Henry Smallwood |
Other Conductors | – |
Additional Names | – |
Method of Travel | – |
Additional Resources | – |
Items in Possession | – |
Full Narrative | JAMES ANDY WILKINS " gave the slip " to a farmer, by the name of George Biddle, who lived one mile from Cecil, Cecil county, Maryland. While he hated Slavery, he took a favorable view of his master in some respects at least, as he said that he was a " moderate man in talk; "but "sly in action." His master provided him with two pairs of pantaloons in the summer, and one in the winter, also a winter jacket, no vest, no cap, or hat. James thought the sum total for the entire year's clothing would not amount to mote than ten dollars. Sunday clothing he was compelled to procure for himself by working of nights; he made axe handles, mats, etc., of evenings, and caught musk rats on Sunday, and availed himself of their hides to procure means for his most pressing wants. Besides these liberal privileges his master was in the habit of allowing him two whole days every harvest, and at Christmas from twenty-five cents to as high as three dollars and fifty cents, were lavished upon him. His master was a bachelor, a man of considerable means, and " kept tolerable good company," and only owned two other slaves, Rachel Ann Dumbson and John Price. |
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, Enduring Connections: Exploring Delmarva’s Black History, Nabb Research Center, Salisbury University.
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