Rev. Theodore Edson, D.D. (1793 - 1883) was the minister at Lowell’s St. Anne’s Church from 1825 until his death in 1883. Edson served on the city’s school committee and was a prominent advocate for public education. He was also a supporter of the antislavery movement and wrote in his diary about helping self-emancipated people who came to, or through, Lowell. Below, he recounts the story of a self-emancipated man named Robert and his journey from slavery to freedom through Lowell.
Bond Servant: A person who is held in slavery
Legal gentleman: Lawyer
Chastise: To discipline, especially by physical punishment
Hands: A person employed in any manual or unskilled work; a laborer or workman
Thence: From that place
Advertisements: In this case, Edson is referring to the runaway ads that alerted people to Bob’s flight
Irons: Shackles
Pleurisy: An inflammation of the lungs, characterized by a dry cough and pain in the affected side
“Made himself strange”: Pretended not to know someone
Frye Village: Part of Andover, MA
Likely: Attractive
March
... Tues. 19. A person called by name of John Taylor alias Robert - bred in Kentucky - as a bond servant in the family of a man by the name of Schulz who gave Robert to his daughter on her marriage to a lawyer. The legal gentleman undertook to chastise Bob for not catching a horse. It would seem that the lady thought the correction undeserved for says she to her slave who was probably something of a favorite "Bob don't you let him whip you." Accordingly Bob who was very strong as often as the man offered to strike him jerked the whip out of his hand repeating the process in a quiet and determined way till the Lawyer tired. For this offense Robert was sold to a slave dealer and carried with 50 others to New Orleans where he was exposed to public sale and purchased for 800 dollars as a house servant cook and coachman as he was bred. But the man having in mind to swap him away for another the slave took the opportunity to go on board a steamboat where the hands were free colored persons (captain white) and went up the river to Cincinnati thence to Marietta Ohio. But the advertisements went before him. And in Ohio he was apprehended and condemned as a slave put in irons, sent off in a wagon ironed in care of four men In a woods they had to pass about 30 men came upon them rescued Bob and sent him on from town to town toward the North to Pittsburgh thence to Philadelphia was sent to Gerrit Smith Esq. and to Birney who knew the old master well. Thru N. York he came to Boston where he was very sick of pleurisy from exposure in traveling lying out in the woods day and night in northern climate. Mr. Garrison befriended him But one day in Boston Cornhill he met an unexpected Kentuckian slave holder whom he knew James Coburn and who recognized him at once saying "Aye Bob what are you doing here" He made himself strange. But felt that he must leave Boston. A Mr. Leonard from Ludlow Vt. had seen him in Boston and had said to him that if he wod [sic] come to him he would take care of him and he gave him some directions. Mr. G. sent him to Salem to a Mr. Wm. A. Dodge But his story getting wind he was afraid to stay there and came on to Andover where he was directed to Smith's the (illegible) at Frye Village. Smith directed him to come to me-which he did by the rail road. He seemed to be what the dealers would call a very likely negro.
Why was Robert taken to New Orleans and sold?
What happened to Robert after he left New Orleans?
What acts of resistance does Robert display in this narrative?
Because he believed in the moral cause of abolition, Rev. Edson risked arrest and punishment for helping Robert, as it was illegal to aid freedom seekers. Robert sought to escape slavery because he believed in his own right to freedom. For what moral cause would you break the law? How can you tell when a law is morally wrong?