Read Twelve Years a Slave - Enhanced Edition Online

Authors: Solomon Northup,Dr. Sue Eakin

Tags: #Best 2013 Nonfiction, #Biography & Autobiography, #Civil War, #Historical, #Nonfiction, #Personal Memori

Twelve Years a Slave - Enhanced Edition (31 page)

BOOK: Twelve Years a Slave - Enhanced Edition
3.04Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Acknowledgements

Since my discovery of the original 1853 edition of
Twelve Years a Slave
as a young girl on Bayou Boeuf, a host of people have contributed in so many ways in the over seven decades of work in documenting his story. I could not have done this work without them, and without their help this project could never have been completed. I want to express my deepest appreciation.

It was my father, a fifth-generation Louisiana planter, Sam Lyles, who told me much about Boeuf plantation history, while my mother, Myrtle Guy Lyles, encouraged my writing efforts. Sonia Taub, a retired research librarian of Saratoga Springs, New York, visited the Boeuf country some years ago and returned to research the story of Northup, generously enriching my own research.

Other people, such as my sister, Betty McGowen, helped me in many small but important ways, such as providing her hospitality at her Walnut Grove Plantation by inviting visitors wanting to learn about Solomon. Kenneth Perry, who lived out his life near Indian Creek, gave me a log from the Ford sawmill and set the record straight on the exact location of the mill.

Many genealogists have enhanced my understanding of the years Solomon Northup spent in the Boeuf country. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ford of Redding, California, assisted with the genealogies of William Prince Ford and the Prince families, while Rene Pernoud, a descendant of William C.C.C. Martin, shared her information of the Martins. Field Horne and Dr. Clifton Brown of Schenectady, New York, both sent me information on the black and white Northup families. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Epps drove from Texas on July 4, 1982, to bring me the genealogy of the Edwin Epps family. Mrs. Edith Wyckoff, of Long Island, New York, a descendant of attorney Henry Northup, mailed me, a stranger, a framed picture of her ancestor, who figures so large in the Solomon Northup story. She also sent a lengthy history of her research on her family and the writings of Henry Northup.

It was the interest of Chancellor Robert Cavanaugh who helped in my work to get the Edwin Epps house moved to the campus of LSU-Alexandria. A committee of local people, blacks and whites, at Bunkie, Louisiana, where I live, added their efforts with mine to preserve the Epps house despite undeserved harassment from our community, some of whom thought the entire story foolish. In the end it was M.D. Descant and his son, Don Pat, of M.D. Descant Contractors, Inc., who restored the old house on the LSUA campus in faithful detail. It is available for all visitors to see a typical plantation “Big House”—in this case the very one from which Edwin Epps operated his plantation.

While the South takes considerable pride in its reputation for hospitality, it could hardly be more so than that extended to me from a number of New Yorkers who graciously contributed information they gleaned over the years. Members of the Whitehall Free Library—all volunteers—shared the considerable work they completed, while David Fiske of Saratoga Lake, Dr. Edward Knoblauch of Albany, and Paul Loding of Hudson Falls, were all especially helpful.

Always helping in this effort in every way they could were my colleagues: Dr. Patsy Barber at LSU-Alexandria; Dr. John Tarver of the Louisiana Agricultural Extension; Dr. Rouse Caffey, Chancellor of the Extension; and Raymond Laborde, Lieutenant Governor. My heartfelt appreciation is extended to these individuals, as well as to President W.C. Jenkins of Louisiana State University. One of my students, Elizabeth Brazelton, allowed me to use the valuable documents of her great-grandfather, attorney John Waddill, which were vitally important in my documentation. The late Dr. Edwin Adams Davis, historian at LSU, helped me gain recognition for my research on Northup. Rufus Smith at the Rapides Parish Courthouse shared his wisdom with me over the years, while nobody could have done more than Avoyelles Clerk of Court Sammy Couvillion and his father, Gradni, who was Clerk of Court preceding him. Both went beyond the call of duty many times over the years in securing essential documents relating to Solomon Northup’s experience in Avoyelles Parish.

In 1968, I published the first modern edition of
Twelve Years a Slave
and continued to build my Northup archive throughout my teaching career. After retiring as professor of History at LSU-Alexandria in 1987, with my five children grown and about their business in far away places, I literally lived and breathed the story of Solomon Northup. After years of such dedication, and in my mid-80’s, I realized I had reached my breaking point and could not get the manuscript for my final definitive edition checked and polished for publication. I telephoned my daughter, Dr. Sara Kuhn, a professor of English at Chattanooga State Community Technical College, and told her, “Sara, I can’t do anything more. If you can’t finish what needs to be done, I guess it just won’t get done.” I’ll never forget the cheerful voice that came back to me. “That’s all right, Mom. I’ll take care of it. Get it in the mail and get some rest!” There are no words for the countless hours, e-mails exchanged, and complete dedication of Sara Eakin Kuhn in editing the book and converting my documentation into the proper Chicago Style Manual essential for publication. I also appreciate the valuable assistance of my sister, Manie Culbertson, another English teacher, who performed the final proof reading.

Finally, it is complete. Solomon’s story, one of the most important in American history, has been authenticated and placed in the context of the times. I have given my fullest effort. Now Solomon, and I, can rest.

Bibliography

Albany Evening Journal
(NY). “From
The Union Gasette.
Northup’s Kidnappers.” July 12, 1854.

Albany Evening Journal
(NY). “Literary News.” June 6, 1856.

Albany Evening Journal
(Albany, NY). “The Northrop Kidnapping Case.” July 13, 1854.

Albany People’s Journal (NY). “The Northup Kidnapping Case” from
Saratoga Whig
. July 13, 1854.

Allen, R. L. “Letters from the South.-No. 12.”
American Agriculturist
, November 1847, 336-38.

Armstead, Myra B. Young, Field Horne, and Gretchen Sorin.
A Heritage Uncovered: The Black Experience in Upstate New York, 1800-1825
. Elmira, NY: Chemung Historical Society, 1988.

Bacon, Edward.
Among the Cotton Thieves
. Bossier City, LA: Everett Publishing, 1989.

Ballston Democratic Whig Journal
(Ballston, NY). “The Kidnappers of Northup.” July 17, 1855.

Ballston Journal
(Ballston, NY). “Court Proceedings.” May 26, 1857.

Ballston Spa v. Solomon Northup (Oyer and Terminer May 1, 1839).

Bancroft, Frederic.
Slave Trading in the Old South
. New York, NY: Ungar Publishing, 1959, quoted in Harry M. Ward,
Richmond: An Illustrated History
(Northridge, CA: Windsor Publishing, 1985), 106.

Bank of Kentucky v. Conner, et al., 4 1849 317 (Louisiana State Supreme Court 1849).

Bascom, Robert O.
The Fort Edward Book Containing Some Historical Sketches with Illustrations and Family Records
. Fort Edwards, NY: n.p., 1903.

Beecher, Harris H.
Record of the 114th Regiment, New York State Volunteers
. Norwich, NY: J.F. Hubbard, Jr., 1866.

Benjamin Carlle, Jr. v. Solomon Northup (Supreme Courts, State of New York, Wayne County Oct. 9, 1854).

Benjamin P. Burham v. Anne Northup (Supreme Court Warren County Judgments Mar. 1 to Apr. 25, 1859).

Bennett, Ezra. “Day Book of Bennett Store.” Unpublished raw data, 1838. Sue Eakin Papers, LSUAlexandria Archives, Alexandria, LA.

Bennett, Charles D. Charles D. Bennett to Virginia, 1894. Ezra Bennett Papers. Louisiana State University Alexandria, Alexandria.

Bennett, Ezra. “Bennett Papers.” Sue Eakin Papers. Louisiana State University Alexandria, Alexandria, LA.

———. Ezra Bennett to C. Toledano, September 8, 1840. Sue Eakin Papers. Louisiana State University Alexandria, Alexandria, LA.

———. Ezra Bennett to Dear Brother Charles, August 26, 1847. Sue Eakin Papers. Louisiana State University Alexandria, Alexandria, LA.

———. Ezra Bennett to George Turrell and Calhoun, August 1841. Ezra Bennett Papers. Louisiana State University Alexandria, Alexandria.

———. Ezra Bennett to Loflin and Stephens, March 5, 1842. Sue Eakin Papers. Lousiana State University Alexandria, Alexandria, LA.

———. Ezra Bennett to Samuel A. Belden, September 8, 1840. Sue Eakin Papers. Louisiana State University Alexandria, Alexandria, LA.

Bennett, S. P. B. Letter, “to My Dear Son,” March 13, 1852.

Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Northwest Louisiana
. Nashville, TN: Southern Publishing, 1890.

Boyd, Esther Wright. Interview by James Fleming. Baton Rouge, LA. 1903.

———. Interview by Walter Fleming. Baton Rouge, LA. 1904.

Brooksher, William Riley.
War Along the Bayous: The 1864 Red River Campaign in Louisiana
. Washington, DC: Brassey’s, 1998.

Brown, John.
Slave Life in Georgia-A Narrative of the Life, Sufferings and Escape of John Brown, a Fugitive Slave Now in England
. Edited by L. A. Chawerovzow. London: W.M. Watts, 1855.

Bureau of the Census, U.S. Census, 1850, Rep. (1850).

Bureau of the Census, U.S. Census 1850, Rep. (1850).

Bureau of the Census, U.S. Census 1840, Rep. (1840).

“Charity Hospital Admissions Records 1841.” Unpublished raw data, New Orleans Public Library, n.d.

Census Committee, U.S. Census of 1840, Doc. (1840).

Champomier, P. A.
Statement of Sugar Made in Louisiana 1849-1850
. New Orleans, LA: Cook, Young, and Co., 1800s.

Cheney, Rosa. “Diary.” Unpublished manuscript, Sue Eakin Papers, Louisiana State University Alexandria, Alexandria, LA, n.d.

“Conveyance Record Q.” Legal Record, Rapides Parish Courthouse, Alexandria, LA, September 18, 1892.

“Conveyance Record Q.” Document 5754, John M. Tibaut to Edwin Epps, Avoyelles Parish Courthouse, Marksville, LA, May 3, 1843.

“Culture of the Sugar-Cane.”
American Agriculturist
, August 1847, 241-43.

Daily Saratogian
(Saratoga, NY). “The Soloman Northrop Case.” July 11, 1856.

Davidson, Marshall B.
Three Centuries of American Antiques: American Heritage
. New York, NY: Bonanza, 1980.

DeBow’s Review
, 2 - 3 ser., nos. 2 & 3 (1847-48).

DeForest, John William.
A Volunteer’s Adventures: A Union Captain’s Record of the Civil War
. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1946.

Dickens, Charles.
The Oxford Illustrated Dickens: American Notes
. N.p.: Oxford University Press, 1991.

Dowdy, Clifford.
The Great Plantation: A Profile of Berkley Hundred and Plantation Virginia from Jamestown to Appomattox
. New York, NY: Bonanza Books, 1957.

Dunbar v. Conner et al., No. 2496 (Fifth District Court of New Orleans 1850, 1851).

Durkee, Cornelius E. “Reminiscences of Saratoga.” In
The Saratogian
, compiled by Cornelius E. Durkee, 148-48. N.p.: n.p., 1927. Previously published in
The Saratogian
, 1927-28.

Eakin, Sue, ed.
The Centennial Album, Alexandria Daily Town Talk
. Alexandria, LA: McCormick, 1983.

———. “Ezra Bennett and the World He Lived In.” Sue Eakin Papers. Louisiana State University Alexandria, Alexandria.

———. “Negro Folk Songs from Bayou Boeuf Plantations.”
Louisiana Heritage Magazine
, Summer 1969.

———. “The Plantation System in the Lower Red River Valley.” Speech, Louisiana State University- Shreveport, Shreveport, LA, 1983.

———. “The Plantation System in the Lower Red River Valley.”
Proceedings of the 1985 Red River Symposium
, 1986.

———.
Rapides Parish: An Illustrated History
. Northridge, CA: Windsor Publications, 1987.

———.
A Source Book: Rapides Parish History
. Alexandria, LA: Central Louisiana Historical Association, 1976.

———.
Washington, Louisiana
. Shreveport, LA: Everett Press, 1988.

Eakin, Sue, and Manie Culbertson.
Louisiana: The Land and Its People
. 3rd ed. Gretna, LA: Pelican Press, 1992.

Edmonds, David C., ed.
The Conduct of Federal Troops in Louisiana During the Invasions of 1863 and 1864
. Lafayette, LA: Acadiana Press, 1988. Originally published as
Official Report Relative to the Conduct of Federal Troops in Western Louisiana During the Invasions of 1863 and 1864
(Shreveport, LA: News Printing Establishment, 1865).

Ellis, David M., James A. Frost, Harold C. Syrett, and Harry J. Carman.
A History of New York State
. Rev. ed. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1967.

Fisher, Caldwell. Telephone interview by Sue Eakin. Evergreen and Bunkie, LA. June 2003.

Fiske, David.
Solomon Northup: His Life Before and After Slavery
. N.p.: n.p., 2012.

Fogleman, Fred. Interview by Sue Eakin. Bunkie, LA. September 25, 2003.

Ford, William Prince. William Prince Ford to Elder Jesse D. Wright, December 25, 1844.

———. William Prince Ford to William Tecumseh Sherman, September 10, 1859. David Boyd Collection. Louisiana State University Archives, Baton Rouge.

Forest. “Diary.” Walter Prichard, editor. Unpublished manuscript, 1864.

Frederick Douglass Paper
(Rochester, NY). “The Northrup Case.” August 1855.

Frederick Douglass Paper
(Rochester, NY). “The Northrup Case.” August 24, 1855.

Gaeinne, Patty. “Aunt Emmie.” Unpublished manuscript, 1966.

Gasquet v. Keary, No. 4154 (District Court, Avoyelles Parish Sept. 7, 1865).

Gibb, Carson. “Captain Berry’s Will: Debauchery, Miscegenation & Family Strife Among 18th Century Gentry.” 2000. Maryland State Archives.

Glens Falls Free Press
(Glen Falls, NY), June 13, 1857.

Goins, Charles Robert, and John Michael Caldwell.
Historical Atlas of Louisiana
. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, n.d.

Goode, James.
Capital Losses
. Washington, DC: Smithsonian, 1979.

Gray, Lewis Cecil.
History of Agriculture in the Southern United States to 1860
. Vol. I. Gloucester, MA: Peter Smith, 1958.

Greenaugh, Carol. Carol Greenaugh to Sue Eakin, fax, January 1, 2000. In “Local History Sketches,” unpublished manuscript. Sue Eakin Papers. Louisiana State University Alexandria, Alexandria, LA.

Greenaugh, Carol. Carol Greenaugh to Sue Eakin, “fax concerning manuscript,” January 1, 2000. “Local History Sketches.” Mrs. John T. Morton. Whitehall, NY.

Haskins, James.
One Nation Under a Groove: Rap Music and Its Roots
. New York, NY: Hyperion Books for Children, 2000.

Headrick, Joan D.
Harriet Beecher Stowe: A Life
. New York, NY: Oxford Univeristy Press, 1994.

Hepworth, George W.
Whip, Hoe, and Sword or, the Gulf Department in ‘63
. Boston, MA: Walker, Wise and Company, 1864.

Historical Sketches of the Old Fort House Museum
. N.p.: New York State Division for Youth and Fort Edward Historical Association, 1988.

Holland, Alice. Alice Holland to Sue Eakin, memorandum, March 2003. Sue Eakin Papers. Louisiana State University Alexandria, Alexandria, LA.

Johnson, Jerah. “The ‘Picayune:’ From Colonial Coin to Current Expression.”
Louisiana History
3 (Summer 1962).

Johnson, Ludwell H.
Red River Campaign: Politics & Cotton in the Civil War
. Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 1993.

John T. B. Traphagan and Charles R. Bennett v. Solomon Northup (Justice Courts June 10, 1854).

Jordan, Terry G.
Trails to Texas, Southern Roots of Western Cattle Ranches
. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska, 1981.

Judy Jacobs v. William O’Neal, No. 4142, Term 1893 (10th Judicial District Court, Rapides Parish, State of Louisiana ).

“Keary Papers.” Unpublished manuscript, Mississippi Department of Archives, Jackson, MS, n.d.

Knoblauch, Edward. Edward Knoblauch to Sue Eakin, February 26, 2003.

Knoll, J. L. Interview. Bunkie, LA. 1965.

Kollner, Augustus.
Views of American Cities
. New York, NY: Goupsil, Vibert, 1848.

Kramer, Ethel Elizabeth. “Slavery Legislation in Ante-Bellum Louisiana, 1803-1860.” Master’s thesis, Louisiana State University, 1942.

Lambeth, William.
U.S. Census of Avoyelles Parish
. N.p., 1850.

Lewis, L. R. L. R. Lewis to Librarian Doris Morton, November 8, 1961. Whitehall.

———. L. R. Lewis to Mrs. John T. Morton, March 29, 1962.

Lockett, Samuel H.
Louisiana as It Is: A Geographical and Topological Description of the State
. Edited by Lauren C. Post. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press, 1969.

Loding, Village Historian Paul. Telephone interview by Sue Eakin. Hudson Falls, NY. February 2003.

Lyles, Sam. Interview by Sue Eakin. Cheneyville, LA. 1970?

Mabee, Carleton.
Black Education in New York State from Colonial to Modern Times
. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1979.

———. Carleton Mabee to Sue Eakin, June 1, 2002. Sue Eakin Papers. Louisiana State University Alexandria, Alexandria.

Mann, E. R.
The Bench and Bar of Saratoga County
. Ballston, NY, 1876.

Marksville Weekly News
(Marksville, LA), republished February 7, 1991.

Martinez, Raymond J.
The Story of Spanish Moss: What It Is and How It Grows
. New Orleans: Hope Publications, n.d.

Menn, Joseph Karl.
The Large Slaveholders of Louisiana
. Gretna, LA: Pelican Publishing, 1998.

“Minutes.” Unpublished manuscript, Avoyelles Parish Police Jury Meeting, December 1842.

Morgan, LaGrande F. LaGrande F. Morgan to Sue Eakin, March 9, 1996. Containing information from Donald J. Hebert,
Southwest Louisiana Records.
Sue Eakin Papers. Louisiana State University Alexandria, Alexandria, LA.

Morrow, Mary H. “Diaries.” Unpublished manuscript, Sue Eakin Papers, Louisiana State University Alexandria Archives, Alexandria, LA, n.d.

“The Narrative of Solomon Northup.” In
The National Era
. Previously published in
Detroit Tribune
(Detroit, MI), August 25, 1853.

New Orleans Bee
(New Orleans). “A Striking Contrast.” January 22, 1853.

The New Southwest Devoted to the Great Southwest
, March 1904?

New York Daily Times
(New York, NY), January 1853.

The New York Daily Times
(NY). “The Kidnapping Case.” January 20, 1853.

New York Times
. “The Kidnapping Case.” January 21, 1853.

New York Times
(New York, NY). “The Kidnapping Case. Narrative of the Seizure and Recovery of...” January 20, 1853.

New York Times
(New York). “Trial of the Suspected Kidnappers of Solomon Northrup.” July 12, 1853.

Niles Register
, Volume 53, October 28, 1837, 129, as quoted in G.P. Whittington,
Rapides Parish, Louisiana
(Baton Rouge: Franklin Press, reprint from the
Louisiana Historical Quarterly,
1932, 1933, 1934, 1935), 89-90.

Northup, Solomon.
Twelve Years A Slave
. Lafayette, LA: Center for Louisiana Studies, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, 2007.

———.
Twelve Years a Slave
. Edited by Sue Eakin and Joseph Logsden. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press, 1996.

Olmstead, Franklin Law.
The Cotton Kingdom
. Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs, 1971.

Omans, Donald James, and Nancy West Omans, eds.
Montgomery County Marriages, 1798-1875
. Athens, GA: Iberian Publishing, 1987.

BOOK: Twelve Years a Slave - Enhanced Edition
3.04Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Sea of Time by P C Hodgell
The Soldier's Art by Anthony Powell
Elyse Mady by The White Swan Affair
None of the Above by I. W. Gregorio
The Red Hills by James Marvin
2 Death Rejoices by A.J. Aalto
Last Call by Allen Dusk
Playing in Shadow by Lesley Davis
The Death of Dulgath by Michael J. Sullivan