<h2 id='t974'>ESCAPE FROM SLAVERY.</h2>
<p class='pindent'>On the following Saturday night, after hearing this news,
I hired a horse from an old colored man, Jim Willmer,
for a bushel of oats. These were waste oats that I had
saved from time to time from the horse’s feed. That night
I rode to George Town Cross Oats, the place of my nativity.
I went in search of a colored man by the name of Joe
Brown, arriving at his house about eleven o’clock that night.
He had not gone to bed but was smoking his pipe; his wife
had retired for the night, so everything was favorable as the
business was highly important and only required two to
discuss it at this time. I had known him ever since I was a
boy, and he appeared kindly disposed toward me, so there
was no feeling of scrupulousness in telling him what I
intended and wanted. I related all my troubles to him, and
finally told him that I wanted to get away and that he must
assist me. He listened attentively to my statement and
wishes, then he asked how many there were of us. I told
him I thought I could bring two more with me. He
arranged that I was to come to his house a week from that
night, and if there were three to bring along with us nine
dollars, and if we stood by him he would stand by us,
landing us safely in Philadelphia. The coming Thursday
from this night would be Christmas day, consequently the
day of meeting would be in Christmas week during the
holidays, when slaves are generally allowed to visit their
friends for one or two days. Our business being over I left
Joe Brown to enjoy his pipe a little longer and then retire to
take his rest, while I joined the company of Jim Willmer’s
horse. There was not much time to linger on the road to
meditate on the future. My faithful horse, moved by instinctiveness,
made light of his burden and soon covered
the distance between the two places. About two o’clock
Sunday morning the horse was in the barn and I on my
master’s premises. Nobody knew that I had been from
home, much less out of the city.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Mr. Mansfield had secured from his father’s estate a
young fellow by the name of Joshua. He had been with
him about two years this Christmas. We were very intimate
and I had placed the utmost confidence in him.
Feeling he would not betray my secret, I ventured to inform
him where I had been and what I had done. He felt much
elated over the project and said he would go with me. We
had a little money saved up that was earned by sawing
wood and doing odd jobs at night for some of the neighbors,
but that was not sufficient, therefore we had to enter into
ways and means to secure the balance. We solicited work
and were fortunate enough to find it, and by Saturday night
our treasury showed the sum of $12. At last Christmas
day had come—the bright and hopeful day of all Christendom
when master and mistress with their friends were to make
merry, and the poor slave to hope that he might be happy
for a few hours at least. Mrs. Mary Mansfield attempted to
make her slaves feel cheerful by giving them a Christmas
breakfast, consisting of one quart of molasses, being one and
one-third of a gill for each servant as there were six of us,
about six pounds of sausage meat, which was the scrapings
of the meat-block, and, after we had extracted the wood of
the suffering block from it, we had, approximately, three
pounds of meat, allowing each one-half of a pound. Along
with this her bountiful heart permitted her to give a pan of
middlings. This constituted our Christmas breakfast.
While we were eating this festive meal Mr. Mansfield made
his appearance and gave us each fifty cents, and at the same
time told me I could go and see my father and mother on
Saturday morning, but be sure and get back by Monday
night without fail. If I had known that by casting decayed
meat to the dog would have cost me so much trouble I
would not have attempted it; and if he had known of my
plans for making my escape he would not have given me
money nor permission to visit the very place at the very
time I wanted to go.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The young man George that I made mention of as
coming to take my place, came to Chestertown on Friday,
as he thought, to spend Christmas. I informed him that he
was sold to Mansfield to take my place, and that the plot
was to send me to New Orleans; that Joshua and myself
had made arrangements to run away, and if he wanted to
go with us he could do so. It did not take him long to
decide to make one of the number. There was one difficulty
in the way with him—he had no money. In order to obviate
that difficulty Joshua and myself agreed to furnish it. I
told George to return home and meet us at a certain place
about nine o’clock with a boat to take us across the creek.
Instead of my going away in the morning as permitted I
remained until Saturday night, in order that we might be
together, as Joshua was not acquainted with the route.</p>
<p class='pindent'>When night came we bade farewell to the Mansfield
house with its cares and lashes, and started for the land
of liberty and a city where we could breathe the refreshing
air of freedom. When we reached our place of meeting,
according to previous arrangement, about nine o’clock
George was there with the boat waiting for us. The creek
was soon crossed and our course was shaped for George
Town Cross Oats, a distance of about twenty miles. We
reached the town about two o’clock in the morning. The
most interesting place to be found by us was the house of
our guide, Joe Brown. To the horror of all we found Joe
lying on the floor dead drunk. Joshua and George did not
know Brown’s failings; they became alarmed at the situation
and talked strongly about going back home. This
increased my anxiety considerably, for if they went back
my plans would be destroyed and I returned into the hands
of my enemies, or else hunted down and killed. I at
last prevailed on them to go with me to my mother’s and
stay a few hours. This was Sunday morning, the distance
was but half a mile, and we were soon sheltered and out of
sight of Joe Brown. We stayed there all day concealed
away up in the attic. This was a day of great suspense.
No one could advise what would be the next best step to
take. We were three helpless beings fleeing from the cruel
chains of bondage.</p>
<p class='pindent'>To my happy surprise that afternoon Joe Brown put
in his appearance. He did not remain long nor have much
to say, but told us to meet him that night at Price’s Woods
at seven o’clock. As a signal of our meeting in safety he
would give the sign by crying out, “yea! yo!” and we were
to answer “Friend to the guard!” The place was well
known to me and could be easily found. At seven o’clock,
as near as we could judge, we were on the spot. The sign
and countersign were exchanged, and we met. Brown was
master of ceremonies. The first business to be done was the
invocation and pledge. We all four knelt down and prayed
and then took an oath that we would fight for each other till
we died. This done, the next was to pay over the liberation
money, nine dollars. Next came the hasty-eaten but
substantial meal of bread and meat that was provided for us
by our guide. We remained there half an hour. The ground
was well covered with snow, making good sleighing.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The night of march had come, and with our anxious
faces directed northward we started for Wilmington,
Delaware, it being about thirty-five miles away. When
we had arrived within eight miles of Wilmington, Brown
took us to the house of an old colored man who was an
acquaintance of his. I did not understand why he went
there, but I judged it was to seek for information; and we
did receive some very important news. The old man told
him not to go any further on that road as there was a gang
of body-snatchers waiting by the bridge to mob every
colored person that came that way. He directed him to
return about eight miles and take the first left hand road he
came to, and that would bring him into Wilmington another
way where he would not meet with any trouble. The old
man’s advice was heeded. We accordingly went back, and
by the time we got there the grey dawn of morning began to
appear. Day was breaking, and travelers like the three of
this band had to seek a hiding-place while the glorious rays
of the king of light prevailed, and men were abroad upon
the face of the earth.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Fortune, thus far, had bountifully smiled on our path,
and nature had lent us her aid, bidding us good-speed on
our journey. As daylight lifted the sable curtain of night
we saw but a short distance from us a dense wood, and we
made for it in haste. On entering this forest we found a
very large white oak tree that could not endure the mighty
winds of the early fall, and it had been ruthlessly torn up
by the roots before its leaves had fallen. There it lay, forming
a complete arbor and place of safety. When the full
light of day came, under it we crept, not knowing how long
we were to remain, nor what might be the result. Joe
Brown left us with strict orders to remain where we were
until his return, that he was going to Wilmington. We had
voluntarily placed ourselves under his care and direction
for the safety of our escape, consequently it was no more
than just that we should submit to his judgment and obey
orders for the time being. We stayed all day—or as long
as daylight lasted. This was the greatest and most memorable
day in this undertaking for liberty. Fugitives from
slavery.</p>
<p class='pindent'>While lying on the cold ground under this tree, our
“city of refuge,” we were greatly surprised at seeing a
number of fox hounds, numbering, I suppose, from twenty
to fifty, running about the forest near to us. They were
accompanied by about fifty men on horseback, who were all
white. The reader may judge the terrible anxiety we had to
endure. We were slaves fleeing from bondage, they were
freemen, and to have fallen into their hands would have
been so much added to their gain, and to us, perhaps, a
more sorrowful condition than the one we were fleeing from.
They rode and hunted after a fox throughout the whole day.
Several times the fleeing fox made his unwelcome appearance
under the tree that secreted us from the horsemen’s
view, and to my great astonishment I discovered we were
lying over the hole that led to reynard’s den. He made two
or three attempts to get into the hole but we succeeded in
beating him off, and the result was he did not return any
more that day. Our anxiety became more and more intense
as we recognized among the band of hunters some well-known
faces, who, it cannot be claimed, were “a terror to all
evil doers,” but to all honest, trustworthy slaves. Had
Mister Fox succeeded in entering the hole we would have
been caught, and our jig would have been up sure. It was
in this large, dense forest, in the State of Delaware, that I
was led to see my own fate compared with that of the wild
beast of the forest. True, there was some difference; the
fox was free, and I was seeking for freedom; its pursuers
were near by, but mine were, for all I knew, afar off. Our
much-dreaded visitors remained in the neighborhood all day.
It was almost dark before they relieved us of their presence.
This was a day of “foes without and fears within,” for
while I wondered how this day’s events would end from
outward appearances, my two companions became so badly
frightened that my words failed to comfort them. Their
fears were so great that they determined to go back—not to
the “flesh pots of Egypt,” but to the stinted fare and cowhide
of slavery. I determined differently. I longed for the
home of the free. Finally, to quiet their fears, I promised
if they would only keep silent I would take them back
home.</p>
<p class='pindent'>After it got dark, I waited until the north star had
risen, for I determined, as Joe Brown had not returned, that
the journey should be continued. One day in a place like
those woods, with two tired, discontented companions, was
long enough to remain there. As my star of hope, the
guide of the night, came fully in view, we started on our
tramp, as the boys thought for our former home; but not so
with me. I had gained some early knowledge of the north
star for the express purpose for which I was now about to
use it. An old man by the name of Charley Miller had
told me where that star was, and if “I could follow it it
would guide me north, that the Lord had placed it there to
lead people out of slavery.” I used it that night, believing
what he told me was true. I followed it for about five miles,
when, to my great astonishment, I met Joe Brown, our
leader. He had with him another man who proved, afterwards,
to be our guide for the remainder of the journey.
Joe had with him something to appease our hunger and to
cheer us on, in the substance of a boiled hog’s head and a
loaf of corn bread. He fed us, and we were truly glad to
receive it, for we had been without food the whole day.
The fear of being captured and returned to our masters, or
else sold to new ones, had, no doubt, kept under the desire
to eat. But now the evil threatenings of the day were over,
and in the presence of help we could do justice to the
nourishment our pilot had brought us. We stopped and
talked for awhile, and Brown placed us under the care of
this new comer, and he continued his journey homeward.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Having taken leave of our former friend and guide we
continued to the goal of our ambition under the care of our
new leader. There are a great many venturesome things a
man will do, when determined to escape from danger or an
evil, that he would not do when otherwise situated. To
think that we had placed our fate in the hands of a man who
was, to us, an utter stranger. The confidence that had been
reposed in the integrity of Brown concerning our welfare
was, simply, a transferable one. His deep interestedness in
rescuing his race from the cruel chains of slavery, had
established the faith that he would not permit us to be
betrayed into the hands of a friend or advocate of the
cruel institution. The experience of the past had taught us
the lesson to trust and go forward, and forward we went.
About midnight of that same day we passed by Wilmington
unmolested by any one, and, as near as I can judge, it
was three o’clock that morning when the dividing line that
runs between the States of Delaware and Pennsylvania were
crossed. No words can depict the joy and gratitude that
filled the bosom of one who had, as it were—not rather as it
actually was—stepped from bondage into liberty, from darkness
into light.</p>
<p class='pindent'>I had no means of keeping the days of the month, but
was fortunate enough to remember the day of the week. So
it was on a Tuesday morning that our eyes rested on a State
where liberty for the negro slave could be enjoyed. Perry
Augustus, our guide, with much seeming satisfaction and
delight, informed us that we had crossed out of slavery into
freedom. We had had our faithful guides, and they had
discharged their obligations to us to the letter; but I had
not forgotten my early impressions of the existence of an
ever kind Providence, for which gratitude should be shown,
consequently I suggested that we should have a season of
prayer and return thanks to God for this safe deliverance.
The old man readily consented to the proposal, and we all
knelt down on the snow-covered ground and offered up
humble thanksgiving, and petitions for future protection
and guidance, to the Great Supreme Ruler of heaven and
earth. Those who have been under some heavy burden,
weighing them down by continued torture and misery, when
to their relief has come some happy event, or some sympathising
friend who has removed the torturing evil, may form
some idea of the felicity enjoyed by us on that memorable
morning.</p>
<p class='pindent'>When the other two boys learned that we had been successful
in crossing into the land of freedom, they became
reconciled, and expressed themselves as being sorry for the
unnecessary trouble they had caused me, especially while
concealed in the forest. We journeyed on for a distance of
about ten miles when we came to a place called New Garden.
At this place we were made acquainted with an old man by
the name of Nelson Wiggins. This we found also to be the
resting place of Perry Augustus. Further developments
showed that it was more than a resting place, it was a temporal
home, a little heaven on earth for a fugitive. The old
man had two daughters, who had charge of the house, as his
wife was dead; one of these tender-hearted and benevolent
ladies, with her father, bid us welcome and make ourselves at
home. The invitation was readily accepted and we were comfortably
housed and seated. Her agile step and busy hands
were soon employed in preparing a breakfast for the weary
travelers. When it had been prepared we were bid to partake
of it. Breakfast over we were directed to go up stairs where
we would find beds upon which to rest ourselves. The directions
were soon followed, and we laid us down to rest and
sleep, to dream of the past and plan for the future. We
remained there all day.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The next night a great number of persons called to see us
and congratulate us on our successful venture. Some of
them we had known in by-gone days. This was delight
added to pleasure. Companions in slavery once, now
companions in freedom. Two days were spent in this state
of ease and comfort, and on the third day it was deemed best
that we should start out in search of employment. It being
winter time, work, as a general thing, was very scarce;
there did not seem to be anything to do in New Garden, so
we concluded to make our way to Philadelphia.</p>
<hr class='pbk'/>
<h1 id='t1308'><span class='it'>CHAPTER IV.</span></h1>
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