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| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 04:33:50 -0700 |
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| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 04:33:50 -0700 |
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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/10075-0.txt b/10075-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ad90714 --- /dev/null +++ b/10075-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,911 @@ +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10075 *** + +E-text produced by Martin Schub + + + +A NARRATIVE OF THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES + +OF VENTURE, A NATIVE OF AFRICA, + +But resident above sixty years in the United States of America. + +RELATED BY HIMSELF. + +VENTURE SMITH + +New London, 1798 + + + + + + + +PREFACE + +The following account of the life of VENTURE, is a relation of simple +facts, in which nothing is in substance to what he relates himself. +Many other interesting and curious passages of his life might have +been inserted, but on account of the bulk to which they must +necessarily have swelled this narrative, they were omitted. If any +should suspect the truth of what is here related, they are referred to +people now living who are acquainted with most of the facts mentioned +in this narrative. + +The reader is here presented with an account, not of a renowned +politician or warrior, but of an untutored African slave, brought into +this Christian country at eight years of age, wholly destitute of all +education but what he received in common with other domesticated +animals, enjoying no advantages that could lead him to suppose himself +superior to the beasts, his fellow servants. And if he shall enjoy no +other advantage from perusing this narrative, he may experience those +sensations of shame and indignation, that will prove him to be not +wholly destitute of every noble and generous feeling. + +The subject of the following pages, had he received only a common +education, might have been a man of high respectability and +usefulness; and had his education been suited to his genius, he might +have been an ornament and an honor to human nature. It may perhaps, +not be unpleasing to see the efforts of a great mind wholly +uncultivated, enfeebled and depressed by slavery, and struggling under +every disadvantage. The reader may here see a Franklin and a +Washington, in a state of nature, or rather, in a state of slavery. +Destitute as he is of all education, he still exhibits striking traces +of native ingenuity and good sense. + +This narrative exhibits a pattern of honesty, prudence, and industry, +to people of his own colour; and perhaps some white people would not +find themselves degraded by imitating such an example. + +The following account is published in compliance with the earnest +desire of the subject of it, and likewise a number of respectable +persons who are acquainted with him. + + +CHAPTER I. + +_Containing an account of his life, from his birth to the time of his + leaving his native country._ + +I was born at Dukandarra, in Guinea, about the year 1729. My father's +name was Saungm Furro, Prince of the Tribe of Dukandarra. My father +had three wives. Polygamy was not uncommon in that country, +especially among the rich, as every man was allowed to keep as many +wives as he could maintain. By his first wife he had three children. +The eldest of them was myself, named by my father Broteer. The other +two were named Cundazo and Soozaduka. My father had two children by +his second wife, and one by his third. I descended from a very large, +tall and stout race of beings, much larger than the generality of +people in other parts of the globe, being commonly considerably above +six feet in height, and in every way well proportioned. + +The first thing worthy of notice which I remember was, a contention +between my father and mother, on account of my father's marrying his +third wife without the consent of his first and eldest, which was +contrary to the custom generally observed among my countrymen. In +consequence of this rupture, my mother left her husband and country, +and travelled away with her three children to the eastward. I was +then five years old. She took not the least sustenance along with +her, to support either herself or children. I was able to travel +along by her side; the other two of her offspring she carried one on +her back, and the other being a sucking child, in her arms. When we +became hungry, my mother used to set us down on the ground, and gather +some of the fruits which grew spontaneously in that climate. These +served us for food on the way. At night we all lay down together in +the most secure place we could find, and reposed ourselves until +morning. Though there were many noxious animals there; yet so kind +was our Almighty protector, that none of them were ever permitted to +hurt or molest us. Thus we went on our journey until the second day +after our departure from Dukandarra, when we came to the entrance of a +great desert. During our travel in that we were often affrighted with +the doleful howlings and yellings of wolves, lions, and other animals. +After five days travel we came to the end of this desert, and +immediately entered into a beautiful and extensive interval country. +Here my mother was pleased to stop and seek a refuge for me. She left +me at the house of a very rich farmer. I was then, I should judge, +not less than one hundred forty miles from my native place, separated +from all my relations and acquaintance. At this place my mother took +her farewell of me, and set out for her own country. My new guardian, +as I shall call the man with whom I was left, put me into the business +of tending sheep, immediately after I was left with him. The flock +which I kept with the assistance of a boy, consisted of about forty. +We drove them every morning between two and three miles to pasture, +into the wide and delightful plains. When night drew on, we drove +them home and secured them in the cote. In this round I continued +during my stay there. One incident that befel me when I was driving +my flock from pasture, was so dreadful to me at that age, and is to +this time fresh in my memory, that I cannot help noticing it in this +place. Two large dogs sallied out of a certain house and set upon me. +One of them took me by the arm, and the other by the thigh, and before +their master could come and relieve me, they lacerated my flesh to +such a degree, that the scars are very visible to the present day. My +master was immediately sent for. He came and carried me home, as I +was unable to go myself on account of my wounds. Nothing remarkable +happened afterwards until my father sent for me to return home. + +Before I dismiss this country, I must just inform my reader what I +remember concerning this place. A large river runs through this +country in a westerly course. The land for a great way on each side +is flat and level, hedged in by a considerable rise of the country at +a great distance from it. It scarce ever rains there, yet the land is +fertile; great dews fall in the night which refresh the soil. About +the latter end of June or first of July, the river begins to rise, and +gradually increases until it has inundated the country for a great +distance, to a height of seven or eight feet. This brings on a slime +which enriches the land surprisingly. When the river has subsided, +the natives begin to sow and plant, and the vegetation is exceedingly +rapid. Near this rich river my guardian's land lay. He possessed, I +cannot tell exactly how much, yet this I am certain of respecting it, +that he owned an immense tract. He possessed likewise a great many +cattle and goats. During my stay with him I was kindly used, and with +as much tenderness, for what I saw, as his only son, although I was an +entire stranger to him, remote from friends and relations. The +principal occupation of the inhabitants there, were the cultivation of +the soil and the care of their flocks. They were a people pretty +similar in every respect to that of mine, except in their persons, +which were not so tall and stout. They appeared to be very kind and +friendly. I will now return to my departure from that place. + +My father sent a man and horse after me. After settling with my +guardian for keeping me, he took me away and went for home. It was +then about one year since my mother brought me here. Nothing +remarkable occured to us on our journey until we arrived safe home. + +I found then that the difference between my parents had been made up +previous to their sending for me. On my return, I was received both +by my father and mother with great joy and affection, and was once +more restored to my paternal dwelling in peace and happiness. I was +then about six years old. + +Not more than six weeks had passed after my return, before a message +was brought by an inhabitant of the place where I lived the preceding +year to my father, that that place had been invaded by a numerous +army, from a nation not far distant, furnished with musical +instruments, and all kinds of arms then in use; that they were +instigated by some white nation who equipped and sent them to subdue +and possess the country, that his nation had made no preparation for +war, having been for a long time in profound peace that they could not +defend themselves against such a formidable train of invaders, and +must therefore necessarily evacuate their lands to the fierce enemy, +and fly to the protection of some chief; and that if he would permit +them they should come under his rule and protection when they had to +retreat from their own possessions. He was a kind and merciful +prince, and therefore consented to these proposals. + +He had scarcely returned to his nation with the message, before the +whole of his people were obliged to retreat from their country, and +come to my fathers dominions. + +He gave them every privilege and all the protection his government +could afford. But they had not been there longer than four days +before news came to them that the invaders had laid waste their +country, and were coming speedily to destroy them in my father's +territories. This affrighted them, and therefore they immediately +pushed off to the southward, into the unknown countries there, and +were never more heard of. + +Two days after their retreat, the report turned out to be but too +true. A detachment of the enemy came to my father and informed him, +that the whole army was encamped not far out of his dominions, and +would invade the territory and deprive his people of their liberties +and rights, if he did not comply with the following terms. These were +to pay them a large sum of money, three hundred fat cattle, and a +great number of goats, sheep, asses, &c. + +My father told the messenger that he would comply rather than that his +subjects should be deprived of their rights and privileges, which he +was not then in circumstances to defend from so sudden an invasion. +Upon turning out those articles, the enemy pledged their faith and +honor that they would not attack him. On these he relied and +therefore thought it unnecessary to be on his guard against the enemy. +But their pledges of faith and honor proved no better than those of +other unprincipled hostile nations; for a few days after a certain +relation of the king came and informed him, that the enemy who sent +terms of accommodation to him, and received tribute to their +satisfaction, yet meditated an attack on his subjects by surprise, and +that probably they would commence their attack in less than one day, +and concluded with advising him, as he was not prepared for war, to +order a speedy retreat of his family and subjects. He complied with +this advice. + +The same night which was fixed upon to retreat, my father and his +family set off about break of day. The king and his two younger wives +went in one company, and my mother and her children in another. We +left our dwellings in succession, and my father's company went on +first. We directed our course for a large shrub plain, some distance +off, where we intended to conceal ourselves from the approaching +enemy, until we could refresh and rest ourselves a little. But we +presently found that our retreat was not secure. For having struck up +a little fire for purposes of cooking victuals, the enemy who happened +to be encamped a little distance off, had sent out a scouting party +which discovered us by the smoke of the fire, just as we were +extinguishing it and about to eat. As soon as we had finished eating, +my father discovered the party, and immediately began to discharge +arrows at them. This was what I first saw, and it alarmed both me and +the women, who being unable to make any resistance, immediately betook +ourselves to the tall thick reeds not far off, and left the old king +to fight alone. For some time, I beheld him from the reeds defending +himself with great courage and firmness, till at last he was obliged +to surrender himself into their hands. + +Then they came to us in the reeds, and the very first salute I had +from them was a violent blow on the head with the fore part of a gun, +and at the same time a grasp round the neck. I then had a rope put +about my neck, as had all the women in the thicket with me, and were +immediately led to my father, who was likewise pinioned and haltered +for leading. In this condition we were all led to the camp. The +women and myself being pretty submissive, had tolerable treatment from +the enemy, while my father was closely interrogated respecting his +money which they knew he must have. But as he gave them no account of +it, he was instantly cut and pounded on his body with great +inhumanity, that he might be induced by the torture he suffered to +make the discovery. All this availed not the least to make him give +up his money, but he despised all the tortures which they inflicted, +until the continued exercise and increase of torment, obliged him to +sink and expire. He thus died without informing his enemies of the +place where his money lay. I saw him while he was thus tortured to +death. The shocking scene is to this day fresh in my mind, and I have +often been overcome while thinking on it. He was a man of remarkable +stature. I should judge as much as six feet and six or seven inches +high, two feet across his shoulders, and every way well proportioned. +He as a man of remarkable strength and resolution, affable, kind and +gentle, ruling with equity and moderation. + +The army of the enemy was large, I should suppose consisting of about +six thousand men. Their leader was called Baukurre. After destroying +the old prince, they decamped and immediately marched towards the sea, +lying to the west, taking with them myself and the women prisoners. +In the march a scouting party was detached from the main army. To the +leader of this party I was made waiter, having to carry his gun, &c. +As we were a scouting we came across a herd of fat cattle, consisting +of about thirty in number. These we set upon, and immediately wrested +from their keepers, and afterwards converted them into food for the +army. The enemy had remarkable success in destroying the country +wherever they went. For as far as they had penetrated, they laid the +habitations waste and captured the people. The distance they had now +brought me was about four hundred miles. All the march I had very +hard tasks imposed on me, which I must perform on pain of punishment. +I was obliged to carry on my head a large flat stone used for grinding +our corn, weighing as I should suppose, as much as 25 pounds; besides +victuals, mat and cooking utensils. Though I was pretty large and +stout of my age, yet these burthens were very grievous to me, being +only about six years and a half old. + +We were then come to a place called Malagafco. When we entered the +place we could not see the least appearance of either houses or +inhabitants, but upon stricter search found, that instead of houses +above ground they had dens in the sides of hillocks, contiguous to +ponds and streams of water. In these we perceived they had all hid +themselves, as I suppose they usually did upon such occasions. In +order to compel them to surrender, the enemy contrived to smoke them +out with faggots. These they put to the entrance of the caves and set +them on fire. While they were engaged in this business, to their +great surprise some of them were desperately wounded with arrows which +fell from above on them. This mystery they soon found out. They +perceived that the enemy discharged these arrows through holes on the +top of the dens directly in to the air. Their weight brought them +back, point downwards on their enemies heads, whilst they were smoking +the inhabitants out. The points of the arrows were poisoned, but +their enemy had an antidote for it, which they instantly applied to +the wounded part. The smoke at last obliged the people to give +themselves up. They came out of their caves, first spatting the palms +of their hands together, then and immediately after extended their +arms, crossed at their wrists, ready to be bound and pinioned. I +should judge that the dens above mentioned were extended about eight +feet horizontally into the earth, five feet in height and as many +wide. They were arched over head and lined with earth, which was of +the clay kind, and made the surface of their walls firm and smooth. + +The invaders then pinioned the prisoners of all ages and sexes +indiscriminately, took their flocks and all their effects, and moved +on their way towards the sea. On the march the prisoners were treated +with clemency, on account of their being submissive and humble. +Having come to the next tribe, the enemy laid siege and immediately +took men, women, children, flocks, and all their valuable effects. +They then went on to the next district which was contiguous with the +sea, called in Africa, Anamaboo. The enemies provisions were then +almost spent, as well as their strength. The inhabitants knowing what +kind of conduct they had pursued, and what were their present +intentions, improved the favorable opportunity, attacked them, and +took enemy, prisoners, flocks and all their effects. I was then taken +a second time. All of us were then put into the castle, and kept for +market. On a certain time I and other prisoners were put on board a +canoe, under our master, and rowed away to a vessel belonging to Rhode +Island, commanded by capt. Collingwood, and the mate Thomas Mumford. +While we were going to the vessel, our master told us all to appear to +the best possible advantage for sale. I was bought on board by one +Robertson Mumford, steward of said vessel, for four gallons of rum, +and a piece of calico, and called VENTURE, on account of his having +purchased me with his own private venture. Thus I came by my name. +All the slaves that were bought for that vessel's cargo, were two +hundred and sixty. + + + +CHAPTER II. + + _Containing an account of his life, from the time of his leaving + Africa, to that of his becoming free._ + +After all the business was ended on the coast of Africa, the ship +sailed from thence to Barbadoes. After an ordinary passage, except +great mortality from small pox, which broke out on board, we arrived +at the island of Barbadoes: but when we reached it, there were found +out of the two hundred and sixty that sailed from Africa, not more +than two hundred alive. These were all sold, except for myself and +three more, to the planters there. + +The vessel then sailed for Rhode Island, and arrived there after a +comfortable passage. Here my master sent me to live with one of his +sisters, until he could carry me to Fisher's Island, the place of his +residence. I had then competed my eighth year. After staying with +his sister some time I was taken to my master's place to live. + +When we arrived at Narragansett, my master went ashore in order to +return a part of the way by land, and gave me the charge of the keys +of his trunks on board the vessel, and charged me not to deliver them +up to any body, not even to his father without his orders. To his +directions I promised faithfully to conform. When I arrived with my +master's articles at his house, my master's father asked me for his +son's keys, as he wanted to see what his trunks contained. I told him +that my master intrusted me with the care of them until he should +return, and that I had given him my word to be faithful to the trust, +and could not therefore give him or any other person the keys without +my master's directions. He insisted that I should deliver him the +keys, threatening to punish me if I did not. But I let him know that +he should not have them say what he would. He then laid aside trying +to get them. But notwithstanding he appeared to give up trying to +obtain them from me, yet I mistrusted that he would take some time +when I was off my guard, either in the day time or at night to get +them, therefore I slung them around my neck, and in the day concealed +them in my bosom, and at night I always lay with them under me, that +no person might take them from me without being apprized of it. Thus +I kept the keys from every body until my master came home. When he +returned he asked where VENTURE was. As I was then within hearing, I +came, said, here sir, at your service. He asked me for his keys, and +I immediately took them off my neck and reached them out to him. He +took them, stroked my hair, and commended me, saying in presence of +his father that his young VENTURE was so faithful that he would never +have been able to have taken the keys from him but by violence; that +he should not fear to trust him with his whole fortune, for that he +had been in his native place so habituated to keeping his word, that +he would sacrifice even his life to maintain it. + +The first of the time of living at my master's own place, I was pretty +much employed in the house at carding wool and other household +business. In this situation I continued for some years, after which +my master put me to work out of doors. After many proofs of my +faithfulness and honesty, my master began to put great confidence in +me. My behavior to him had as yet been submissive and obedient. I +then began to have hard tasks imposed on me. Some of these were to +pound four bushels of ears of corn every night in a barrel for the +poultry, or be rigorously punished. At other seasons of the year I +had to card wool until a very late hour. These tasks I had to perform +when I was about nine years old. Some time after I had another +difficulty and oppression which was greater than any I had ever +experienced since I came into this country. This was to serve two +masters. James Mumford, my master's son, when his father had gone +from home in the morning, and given me a stint to perform that day, +would order me to do _this_ and _that_ business different from what my +master directed me. One day in particular, the authority which my +master's son had set up, had like to have produce melancholy effects. +For my master having set me off my business to perform that day and +then left me to perform it, his son came up to me in the course of the +day, big with authority, and and commanded me very arrogantly to quit +my present business and go directly about what he should order me. I +replied to him that my master had given me so much to perform that +day, and that I must therefore faithfully complete it in that time. +He then broke out in a great rage, snatched a pitchfork and went to +lay me over the head therewith; but I as soon got another and defended +myself with it, or otherwise he might have murdered me in his outrage. +He immediately called some people who were hearing at work for him, +and ordered them to take his hair rope and and come and bind me with +it. They all tried to bind me but in vain, tho' there were three +assistants in number. My upstart master than desisted, put his pocket +handkerchief before his eyes and went home with a design to tell his +mother of the struggle with young VENTURE. He told her that their +young VENTURE had become so stubborn that he could not controul him, +and asked her what he should do with him. In the mean time I +recovered my temper, voluntarily caused myself to be bound by the same +men who tried in vain before, and carried before my young master, that +he might do what he pleased with me. He took me to a gallows made for +the purpose of hanging cattle on, and suspended me on it. Afterwards +he ordered one of his hands to go to the peach orchard and cut him +three dozens of whips to punish me with. These were brought to him, +and that was all that was done with them, as I was released and went +to work after hanging on the gallows about an hour. + +After I lived with my master thirteen years, being then about twenty +two years old, I married Meg, a slave of his who was about my age. My +master owned a certain Irishman, named Heddy, who about that time +formed a plan of secretly leaving his master. After he had long had +this plan in meditation he suggested it to me. At first I cast a deaf +ear on it, and rebuked Heddy for harboring in his mind such a rash +undertaking. But after he had persuaded and much enchanted me with +the prospect of gaining my freedom with such a method, I at length +agreed to accompany him. Heddy next inveigled two of his fellow +servants to accompany us. The place to which we designed to go was +the Mississippi. Our next business was to lay in a sufficient store +of provisions for our voyage. We privately collected out of our +master's store, six great old cheeses, two firkins of butter, and one +whole batch of new bread. When we had gathered all our own clothes +and some more, we took them all about midnight, and went to the water +side. We stole our master's boat, embarked, then directed our course +for the Mississippi river. + +We mutually confederated not to betray or desert one another on pain +of death. We first steered our course for Montauk point, the east end +of Long-Island. After our arrival there we landed, and Heddy and I +made an incursion into the island after fresh water, while our two +comrades were left at a little distance from the boat, employed at +cooking. When Heddy and I had sought some time for water, he returned +to our companions, and I continued on looking for my object. When +Heddy had performed his business with our companions, who were engaged +in cooking, he went directly to the boat, stole all the clothes in it, +and then travelled away for East-Hampton, as I was informed. I +returned to my fellows not long after. They informed me that our +clothes were stolen, but could not determine who was the thief, yet +they suspected Heddy as he was missing. After reproving my two +comrades for not taking care of our things which were in the boat, I +advertised Heddy and sent two men in search of him. They pursued and +overtook him at Southampton and returned him to the boat. I then +thought it might afford some chance for my freedom, or at least a +palliation for my running away, to return Heddy immediately to his +master, and inform him that I was induced to go away by Heddy's +address. Accordingly I set off with him and the rest of my companions +for our master's, and arrived there without any difficulty. I +informed my master that Heddy was the ringleader of our revolt, and +that he had used us ill. He immediately put Heddy into custody, and +myself and companions were well received and went to work as usual. + +Not a long time passed after that, before Heddy was sent by my master +to New-London gaol. At the close of that year I was sold to a Thomas +Stanton, and had to be separated from my wife and one daughter, who +was about one month old. He resided at Stonington-point. To this +place I brought with me from my last master's, two johannes, three old +Spanish dollars, and two thousand of coppers, besides five pounds of +my wife's money. This money I got by cleaning gentlemen's shoes and +drawing boots, by catching musk-rats and minks, raising potatoes and +carrots, &c. and by fishing in the night, and at odd spells. + +All this money amounting to near twenty-one pounds York currency, my +master's brother, Robert Stanton, hired of me, for which he gave me +his note. About one year and a half after that time, my master +purchased my wife and and her child, for severn hundred pounds old +tenor. One time my master sent me two miles after a barrel of +molasses, and ordered me to carry it on my shoulders. I made out to +carry it all the way to my master's house. When I lived with Captain +George Mumford, only to try my strength, I took up on my knees a +tierce of salt containing seven bushels, and carried it two or three +rods. Of this fact there are several eye witnesses now living. + +Towards the close of the time that I resided with this master, I had a +falling out with my mistress. This happened one time when my master +was gone to Long-Island a gunning. At first the quarrel began between +my wife and her mistress. I was then at work in the barn, and hearing +a racket in the house, induced me to run there and see what had broken +out. When I entered the house, I found my mistress in a violent +passion with my wife, for what she informed me was a mere trifle; such +a small affair that I forbear to put my mistress to the shame of +having it known. I earnestly requested my wife to beg pardon of her +mistress for the sake of peace even if she had given no just occasion +for offence. But whilst I was thus saying my mistress turned the +blows which she was repeating on my wife to me. She took down her +horse-whip, and while she was glutting her fury with it, I reached out +my great black hand, raised it up and received the blows of the whip +on it which were designed for my head. Then I immediately committed +the whip to the devouring fire. + +When my master returned from the island, his wife told him of the +affair, but for the present he seemed to take no notice of it, and +mentioned not a word of it to me. Some days after his return, in the +morning as I was putting on a log in the fire-place, not suspecting +harm from any one, I received a most violent stroke on the crown of my +head with a club two feet long and and as large around as a chair- +post. This blow very badly wounded my head, and the scar of it +remains to this day. The first blow made me have my wits about me as +you may suppose, for as soon as he went to renew it, I snatched the +club out of his hands and dragged him out of the door. He then sent +for his brother to come and assist him, but I presently left my +master, took the club he wounded me with, carried it to a neighboring +Justice of the Peace, and complained of my master. He finally advised +me to return to my master, and live contented with him until he abused +me again, and then complain. I consented to do accordingly. But +before I set out for my master's, up he come and his brother Robert +after me. The Justice improved this convenient opportunity to caution +my master. He asked him for what he treated his slave thus hastily +and unjustly, and told him what would be the consequence if he +continued the same treatment towards me. After the Justice had ended +his discourse with my master, he and his brother set out with me for +home, one before and the other behind me. When they had come to a bye +place, they both dismounted their respective horses, and fell to +beating me with great violence. I became enraged at this and +immediately turned them both under me, laid one of them across the +other, and stamped both with my feet what I would. + +This occasioned my master's brother to advise him to put me off. A +short time after this I was taken by a constable and two men. They +carried me to a black-smith's shop and had me hand-cuffed. When I +returned home my mistress enquired much of her waiters, whether +VENTURE was hand-cuffed. When she was informed that I was, she +appeared to be very contented and was much transported with the news. +In the midst of all this content and joy, I presented myself before my +mistress, shewed her my hand-cuffs, and gave her thanks for my gold +rings. For this my master commanded a negro of his to fetch him a +large ox chain. This my master locked on my legs with two padlocks. +I continued to wear the chain peaceably for two or three days, when my +master asked me with contemptuous hard names whether I had not better +be freed from my chains and go to work. I answered him, No. Well +then, said he, I will send you to the West-Indies or banish you, for I +am resolved not to keep you. I answered him I crossed the waters to +come here, and I am willing to cross them to return. + +For a day or two after this not any one said much to me, until one +Hempsted Miner, of Stonington, asked me if I would live with him. I +answered him that I would. He then requested me to make myself +discontented and to appear as unreconciled to my master as I could +before that he bargained with him for me; and that in return he would +give me a good chance to gain my freedom when I came to live with him. +I did as he requested me. Not long after Hempsted Miner purchased me +of my master for fifty-six pounds lawful. He took the chain and +padlocks off me immediately after. + +It may here be remembered, that I related a few pages back, that I +hired out a sum of money to Mr. Robert Stanton, and took his note for +it. In the fray between my master Stanton and myself, he broke open +my chest containing his brother's note to me, and destroyed it. +Immediately after my present master bought me, he determined to sell +me at Hartford. As soon as I became apprized of it, I bethought +myself that I would secure a certain sum of money which lay by me, +safer than to hire it out to Stanton. Accordingly I buried it in the +earth, a little distance from Thomas Stanton's, in the road over which +he passed daily. A short time after my master carried me to Hartford, +and first proposed to sell me to one William Hooker of that place. +Hooker asked whether I would go to the German Flats with him. I +answered, No. He said I should, if not by fair means I should by +foul. If you will go by no other measures, I will tie you down in my +sleigh. I replied to him, that if he carried me in that manner, no +person would purchase me, for it would be thought that he had a +murderer for sale. After this he tried no more, and said he would not +have me as a gift. + +My master next offered me to Daniel Edwards, Esq. of Hartford, for +sale. But not purchasing me, my master pawned me to him for ten +pounds, and returned to Stonington. After some trial of my honesty, +Mr. Edwards placed considerable trust and confidence in me. He put me +to serve as his cup-bearer and waiter. When there was company at his +house, he would send me into his cellar and other parts of his house +to fetch wine and other articles occasionally for them. When I had +been with him for some time, he asked me why my master wished to part +with such an honest negro, and why he did not keep me himself. I +replied that I could not give him the reason, unless it was to convert +me into cash, and speculate with me as with other commodities. I hope +he can never justly say it was on account of my ill conduct that he +did no keep me himself. Mr Edwards told me that he should be very +willing to keep me himself, and that he would never let me go from him +to live, if it was not unreasonable and inconvenient for me to be +parted from my wife and children; therefore he would furnish me with a +horse to return to Stonington, if I had a mind for it. As Miner did +not appear to redeem me I went, at called at my old master Stanton's +first to see my wife, who was then owned by him. As my old master +appeared much ruffled at my being there, I left my wife before I had +spent considerable time with her, and went to Colonel O. Smith's. +Miner had not as yet wholly settled with Stanton for me, and had +before my return from Hartford given Col. Smith a bill of sale for me. +These men once met to determine which of them should hold me, and upon +my expressing a desire to be owned by Col. Smith, and upon my master's +settling the remainder of the money which was due Stanton for me, it +was agreed that I should live with Col. Smith. This was the third +time of my being sold, and I was then thirty-one years old. As I +never had an opportunity of redeeming myself whilst I was owned by +Miner, though he promised to give me a chance, I was then very +ambitious of obtaining it. I asked my master one time if he would +consent to have me purchase my freedom. He replied that he would. I +was then very happy, knowing that I was at that time able to pay part +of the purchase money, by means of the money which I some time since +buried. This I took out of the earth and tendered to my master, +having previously engaged a free negro man to take take his security +for it, as I was the property of my master, and therefore could not +safely take his obligation myself. What was wanted in redeeming +myself, my master agreed to wait on me for, until I could procure it +for him. I still continued to work for Col. Smith. Ther was +continually some interest accruing on my master's note to my friend +the free negro man above named, which I received, and with some +besides which I got by fishing, I laid out in land adjoining my old +master Stanton's. By cultivating this land with the greatest +diligence and economy, at times when my master did not require my +labor, in two years I laid up ten pounds. This my friend tendered to +my master for myself, and received his note for it. + +Being encouraged by the success which I had met in redeeming myself, I +again solicited my master for a further chance of completing it. The +chance for which I solicited him was that of going out to work the +ensuing winter. He agreed to this on condition that I would give him +one quarter of my earnings. On these terms I worked the following +winter, and earned four pounds sixteen shillings, one quarter of which +went to my master for the privilege, and the rest was paid him on my +own account. This added to the other payments made up forty four +pounds, eight shillings, which I had paid on my own account. I was +then about thirty five years old. + +The next summer I again desired he would give me a chance of going out +to work. But he refused and answered that he must have my labor this +summer, as he did not have it the past winter. I replied that I +considered it as hard that I could not have a chance to work out when +the season became advantageous, and that I must only be permitted to +hire myself out in the poorest season of the year. He asked me after +this what I would give for the privilege per month. I replied that I +would leave it wholly with his own generosity to determine what I +should return him a month. Well then, said he, if so two pounds a +month. I answered him that if that was the least he would take I +would be contented. + +Accordingly, I hired myself out at Fisher's Island, and earned twenty +pounds; thirteen pounds six shillings of which my master drew for the +privilege, and the remainder I paid him for my freedom. This made +fifty-one pounds two shillings which I paid him. In October following +I went and wrought six months at Long Island. In that six months' +time I cut and corded four hundred cords of wood, besides threshing +out seventy-five bushels of grain, and received of my wages down only +twenty pounds, which left remaining a larger sum. Whilst I was out +that time, I took upon my wages only one pair of shoes. At night I +lay upon the hearth, with one coverlet over and another under me. I +returned to my master and gave him what I received on my six months +labor. This left only thirteen pounds eighteen shillings to make up +the full sum for my redemption. My master liberated me, saying I +might pay what was behind if I could ever make it convenient, +otherwise it would be well. The amount of the money which I had paid +my master towards redeeming my time, was seventy-one pounds two +shillings. The reason of my master for asking such an unreasonable +price, was he said, to secure himself in case I should ever come to +want. Being thirty-six years old, I left Col. Smith once for all. I +had already been sold three different times, made considerable money +with seemingly nothing to derive it from, been cheated out of a large +sum of money, lost much by misfortunes, and paid an enormous sum for +my freedom. + + + +CHAPTER III. + +_Containing an account of his life, from the time of his purchasing his + freedom to the present day._ + +My wife and children were yet in bondage to Mr. Thomas Stanton. About +this time I lost a chest, containing besides clothing, about thirty- +eight pounds in paper money. It was burnt by accident. A short time +after I sold all my possessions at Stonington, consisting of a pretty +piece of land and one dwelling house thereon, and went to reside at +Long-Island. For the first four years of my residence there, I spent +my time in working for various people on that and at the neighboring +islands. I the space of six months I cut and corded upwards of four +hundred cords of wood. Many other singular and wonderful labors I +performed in cutting wood there, which would not be inferior to those +just recited, but for brevity sake I must omit them. In the +aforementioned four years what wood I cut at Long-Island amounted to +several thousand cords, and the money which I earned thereby amounted +to two hundred and seven pounds ten shillings. This money I laid up +carefully by me. Perhaps some may enquire what maintained me all the +time I was laying up money. I would inform them that I bought nothing +which I did not absolutely want. All fine clothes I despised in +comparison with my interest, and never kept but just what clothes were +comfortable for common days, and perhaps I would have a garment or two +which I did not have on at all times, but as for superfluous finery I +never thought it to be compared with a decent homespun dress, a good +supply of money and prudence. Expensive gatherings of my mates I +commonly shunned, and all kinds of luxuries I was perfectly a stranger +to; and during the time I was employed in cutting the aforementioned +quantity of wood, I never was at the expense of six-pence worth of +spirits. Being after this labor forty years of age, I worked at +various places, and in particular on Ram-Island, which I purchased +Solomon and Cuff, two sons of mine, for two hundred dollars each. + +It will here be remembered how much money I earned by cutting wood in +four years. Besides this I had considerable money, amounting in all +to near three hundred pounds. After this I purchased a negro man, for +no other reason than to oblige him, and gave him sixty pounds. But in +a short time after he run away from me, and I thereby lost all that I +gave for him, except twenty pounds which he paid me previous to his +absconding. The rest of my money I laid out in land, in addition to a +farm which I owned before, and a dwelling house thereon. Forty four +years had then completed their revolution since my entrance in to this +existence of servitude and misfortune. Solomon my eldest son, being +then in his seventeenth year, and all my hope and dependence for help, +I hired him out to one Charles Church, of Rhode Island, for one year, +on consideration of his giving him twelve pounds and an opportunity of +acquiring some learning. In the course of the year, Church fitted out +a vessel for a whaling voyage, and being in want of hands to man her, +he induced my son to go, with the promise of giving him, on his +return, a pair of silver buckles, besides his wages. As soon as I +heard of his going to sea, I immediately set out to go and prevent it +if possible. But on my arrival at Church's, to my great grief, I +could only see the vessel my son was on almost out of sight going to +sea. My son died of the scurvy on this voyage, and Church has never +yet paid me the least of his wages. In my son, besides the loss of +his life, I lost equal to seventy-five pounds. + +My other son being but a youth, still lived with me. About this time +I chartered a sloop of about thirty tons burthen, and hired men to +assist me in navigating her. I employed her mostly in the wood trade +to Rhode-Island, and made clear of all expenses above one hundred +dollars with her in better than one year. I had then become something +forehanded, and being in my forty-fourth year, I purchased my wife +Meg, and thereby prevented having another child to buy, as she was +then pregnant. I gave forty pounds for her. + +During my residence at Long-Island, I raised one year with another, +ten cart loads of water-melons, and lost a great many every year +besides by the thievishness of the sailors. What I made by the water- +melons I sold there, amounted to nearly five hundred dollars. Various +other methods I in order to enable me to redeem my family. In the +night-time I fished with set-nets and pots for eels and lobsters, and +shortly after went a whaling voyage in the service of Col. Smith. +After being seven months, the vessel returned, laden with four hundred +barrels of oil. About this time, I became possessed of another +dwelling-house, and my temporal affairs were in a pretty prosperous +condition. This and my industry was what alone saved me from being +expelled that part of the island in which I resided, as an act was +passed by the select-men of the place, that all negroes residing there +should be expelled. + +Next after my wife, I purchased a negro man for four hundred dollars. +But he having an inclination to return to his old master, I therefore +let him go. Shortly after I purchased another negro man for twenty- +five pounds, who I parted with shortly after. + +Being about forty-six years old, I bought my oldest child Hannah, of +Ray Mumford, for forty-four pounds, and she still resided with him. I +had already redeemed from slavery, myself, my wife and three children, +besides three negro men. + +About the forty-seventh year of my life, I disposed all my property at +Long-Island, and came from thence into East-Haddam. I hired myself +out at first to Timothy Chapman, for five weeks, the earnings of which +time I put carefully by me. After this I wrought for Abel Bingham +about six weeks. I then put my money together and purchased of said +Bingham ten acres of land, lying at Haddam neck, where I now reside. +On this land I labored with great diligence for two years, and shortly +after purchased six acres more of land contiguous to my other. One +year from that time I purchased seventy acres more of the same man, +and paid for it mostly with the produce of my other land. Soon after +I bought this lot of land, I set up a comfortable dwelling house on my +farm, and built it from the produce thereof. Shortly after I had much +trouble and expense with my daughter Hannah, whose name has before +been mentioned in this account. She was married soon after I redeemed +her, to one Isaac, a free negro, and shortly after her marriage fell +sick of a mortal disease; her husband a dissolute and abandoned +wretch, paid but little attention to her in her illness. I therefore +thought it best to bring her to my house and nurse her there. I +procured her all the aid mortals could afford, but notwithstanding +this she fell a prey to her disease, after a lingering and painful +endurance of it. + +The physician's bills for attending her during her illness amounted to +forty pounds. Having reached my fifty-fourth year, I hired two negro +men, one named William Jacklin, and the other Mingo. Mingo lived with +me one year, and having received his wages, run in debt to me eight +dollars, for which he gave me his note. I procured a warrant, took +him, and requested him to go to Justice Throop's of his own accord, +but he refusing, I took him on my shoulders, and carried him there, +distant about two miles. The justice asking me if I had my prisoner's +note with me, and replying that I had not, he told me that I must +return with him and get it. Accordingly I carried Mingo back on my +shoulders, but before we arrived at my dwelling, he complained of +being hurt, and asked me if this was not a hard way of treating our +fellow creatures. I answered him that it would be hard thus to treat +our honest fellow creatures. He then told me that if I would let him +off my shoulders, he had a pair of silver shoe-buckles, one shirt and +a pocket handkerchief, which he would turn out to me. I agreed, and +let him return home with me on foot; but the very following night, he +slipped from me, stole my horse and has never paid me even his note. +The other negro man, Jacklin, being a comb-maker by trade, he +requested me to set him up, and promised to reward me well with his +labor. Accordingly I bought him a set of tools for making combs, and +procured him stock. He worked at my house about one year, and then +run away from me with all his combs, and owed me for all his board. + +Since my residence at Haddam neck, I have owned of boats, canoes and +sail vessels, not less than twenty. These I mostly employed in the +fishing and trafficking business, and in these occupations I have been +cheated out of considerable money by people whom I traded with taking +advantage of my ignorance of numbers. + +About twelve years ago, I hired a whale-boat and four black men, and +proceeded to Long-Island after a load of round clams. Having arrived +there, I first purchased of James Webb, son of Orange Webb, six +hundred and sixty clams, and afterwards, with the help of my men, +finished loading my boat. The same evening, however, this Webb stole +my boat, and went in her to Connecticut river, and sold her cargo for +his own benefit. I thereupon pursued him, and at length, after an +additional expence of nine crowns, recovered the boat; but for the +proceeds of her cargo I never could obtain any compensation. + +Four years after, I met with another loss, far superior to this in +value, and I think by no less wicked means. Being going to New-London +with a grand-child, I took passage on an Indian's boat, and went there +with him. On our return, the Indian took on board two hogsheads of +molasses, one of which belonged to Capt. Elisha Hart, of Saybrook, to +be delivered to his wharf. When we arrived there, and while I was +gone, at the request of the Indian, to inform Captain Hart of his +arrival, and receive the freight for him, one hogshead of the molasses +had been lost overboard by the people in attempting to land it on the +wharf. Although I was absent at the time, and had no concern whatever +in the business, and was known to a number of respectable witnesses, I +was nevertheless persecuted by this conscientious gentleman, (the +Indian not being able to pay for it) and obliged to pay upwards of ten +pounds lawful money, with all the costs of court. I applied to +several gentlemen for counsel in this affair, and they advised me, as +my adversary was rich, and threatened to carry the matter from court +to court till it would cost me more than the first damages would be, +to pay the sum and submit to the injury; which I accordingly did, and +he has often since insultingly taunted me with my unmerited +misfortune. Such a proceeding as this, committed on a defenseless +stranger, almost worn out in the hard service of the world, without +any foundation in reason or justice, whatever it may be called in a +christian land, would in my native country be branded a crime equal to +highway robbery. But Captain Hart was a _white gentleman_, and I a +_poor African,_ and therefore it was _all right, and good enough for +the black dog._ + +I am now sixty nine years old. Though once straight and tall, +measuring without shoes six feet one inch and an half, and every way +well proportioned, I am now bowed down with age and hardship. My +strength which was once equal if not superior to any man whom I have +ever seen, is now enfeebled so that life is a burden, and it is with +fatigue that I can walk a couple of miles, stooping over my staff. +Other griefs are still behind; on account of which some aged people, +at least, will pity me. My eye-sight has gradually failed, till I am +almost blind, and whenever I go abroad one of my grand-children must +direct my way; besides for many years I have been much pained and +troubled with an ulcer on one of my legs. But amidst all my griefs and +pains, I have many consolations; Meg, the wife of my youth, whom I +married for love, and bought with my money, is still alive. My +freedom is a privilege which nothing else can equal. Notwithstanding +all the losses I have suffered by fire, by the injustice of knaves, by +the cruelty and oppression of false-hearted friends, and the perfidy +of my own countrymen whom I have assisted and redeemed from bondage, I +am no possessed of more than two hundred acres of land, and three +habitable dwelling houses. I gives me joy to think that I _have_ and +that I _deserve_ so good a character, especially for _truth_ and +_integrity._ While I am now looking to the grave as my home, my joy +for this world would be full--IF my children, Cuff for whom I paid two +hundred dollars when a boy, and Solomon who was born soon after I +purchased his mother--If Cuff and Solomon--O! that they had walked the +way of their father. But a father's lips are closed in silence and +grief! Vanity of vanities, all is vanity! + + F I N I S. + + + +CERTIFICATE. + +Stonington, November 3, 1798. + +These certify that VENTURE, a free negro man, aged about 69 years, and +was, as we have ever understood, a native of Africa, and formerly a +slave to Mr. James Mumford, of Fisher's-Island, in the state of New- +York, who sold him to Mr. Robert Stanton, 2d, of Stonington, in the +state of Connecticut, and said Stanton sold said VENTURE to Col. +Oliver Smith, of the aforesaid place. That said VENTURE hath +sustained the character of a faithful servant, and that of a +temperate, honest and industrious man, and being ever intent on +obtaining his freedom, he was indulged by his masters after the +ordinary labour on the days of his servitude, to improve the nights in +fishing and other employments of his own emolument, in which time he +procured so much money as to purchase his freedom from his late master +Col. Smith; after which he took upon himself the name of VENTURE +SMITH, and has since his freedom purchased a negro woman, called Meg, +to whom he was previously married, and also his children who were +slaves, and said VENTURE has since removed himself and family to the +town of East-Haddam, in this state, where he has purchased lands on +which he hath built a house, and there taken up his abode. + + NATHAN MINOR, Esq. + ELIJAH PALMER, Esq. + Capt. AMOS PALMER, + ACORS SHEFFIELD, + EDWARD SMITH. + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10075 *** diff --git a/10075-h/10075-h.htm b/10075-h/10075-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c03e9cb --- /dev/null +++ b/10075-h/10075-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,1095 @@ +<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> +<html> +<head> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8"> +<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Venture, a Native of Africa, But Resident above Sixty Years in the United States of America, Related by Himself, by Venture Smith</title> +<style type="text/css"> +body {text-align: left} + a:link {color:blue; + text-decoration:none} + link {color:blue; + text-decoration:none} + a:visited {color:blue; + text-decoration:none} + a:hover {color:red} + +</style> +</head> +<body> +<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10075 ***</div> +<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Narrative of the Life and Adventures of +Venture, a Native of Africa, But Resident above Sixty Years in the United +States of America, Related by Himself, by Venture Smith</h1> +<br> +<br> +<center><h3>E-text produced by Martin Schub</h3></center> +<br> +<br> +<hr> + +<a href="#preface">Click Here to go to Preface</a><br> +<a href="#Chapter1">Click Here to go to Chapter 1</a><br> +<a href="#Chapter2">Click Here to go to Chapter 2</a><br> +<a href="#Chapter3">Click Here to go to Chapter 3</a><br> +<a href="#certificate">Clich Here to go to Certificate</a> + + +<h4 align="center"> + + A +<br> + NARRATIVE +<br> +</h4> +<h5 align="center"> + OF THE +<br> +</h5> +<h4 align="center"> + LIFE AND ADVENTURES +<br> +</h4> +<h5 align="center"> + OF +<br> +</h5> +<h3 align="center"> + VENTURE, +</h3> +<h4 align="center"> +<br> + <i>A NATIVE OF AFRICA,</i> +<br> +<br> +<i> But resident above sixty years in the United States of America.</i> +<br> + RELATED BY HIMSELF. +<br> +<br> + <i>New London: </i> +</h4> +<h3 align="center"> + 1798. +<br> +<br> +</h3> + + +<a name="preface"></a> +<h3>PREFACE</h3> +<p> +The following account of the life of VENTURE, is a relation of simple +facts, in which nothing is in substance to what he relates himself. +Many other interesting and curious passages of his life might have +been inserted, but on account of the bulk to which they must +necessarily have swelled this narrative, they were omitted. If any +should suspect the truth of what is here related, they are referred to +people now living who are acquainted with most of the facts mentioned +in this narrative. +</p> + +<p> +The reader is here presented with an account, not of a renowned +politician or warrior, but of an untutored African slave, brought into +this Christian country at eight years of age, wholly destitute of all +education but what he received in common with other domesticated +animals, enjoying no advantages that could lead him to suppose himself +superior to the beasts, his fellow servants. And if he shall enjoy no +other advantage from perusing this narrative, he may experience those +sensations of shame and indignation, that will prove him to be not +wholly destitute of every noble and generous feeling. +</p> + +<p> +The subject of the following pages, had he received only a common +education, might have been a man of high respectability and +usefulness; and had his education been suited to his genius, he might +have been an ornament and an honor to human nature. It may perhaps, +not be unpleasing to see the efforts of a great mind wholly +uncultivated, enfeebled and depressed by slavery, and struggling under +every disadvantage. The reader may here see a Franklin and a +Washington, in a state of nature, or rather, in a state of slavery. +Destitute as he is of all education, he still exhibits striking traces +of native ingenuity and good sense. +</p> + +<p> +This narrative exhibits a pattern of honesty, prudence, and industry, +to people of his own colour; and perhaps some white people would not +find themselves degraded by imitating such an example. +</p> + +<p> +The following account is published in compliance with the earnest +desire of the subject of it, and likewise a number of respectable +persons who are acquainted with him. +<br> +<br> +<br> +</p> + +<a name="Chapter1"></a> +<h3 align="center">CHAPTER I.<br></h3> + +<p align="center"> +<i>Containing an account of his life, from his birth to the time of his + leaving his native country.</i> +</p> + +<p> +I was born at Dukandarra, in Guinea, about the year 1729. My father's +name was Saungm Furro, Prince of the Tribe of Dukandarra. My father +had three wives. Polygamy was not uncommon in that country, +especially among the rich, as every man was allowed to keep as many +wives as he could maintain. By his first wife he had three children. +The eldest of them was myself, named by my father Broteer. The other +two were named Cundazo and Soozaduka. My father had two children by +his second wife, and one by his third. I descended from a very large, +tall and stout race of beings, much larger than the generality of +people in other parts of the globe, being commonly considerably above +six feet in height, and in every way well proportioned. +</p> + +<p> +The first thing worthy of notice which I remember was, a contention +between my father and mother, on account of my father's marrying his +third wife without the consent of his first and eldest, which was +contrary to the custom generally observed among my countrymen. In +consequence of this rupture, my mother left her husband and country, +and travelled away with her three children to the eastward. I was +then five years old. She took not the least sustenance along with +her, to support either herself or children. I was able to travel +along by her side; the other two of her offspring she carried one on +her back, and the other being a sucking child, in her arms. When we +became hungry, my mother used to set us down on the ground, and gather +some of the fruits which grew spontaneously in that climate. These +served us for food on the way. At night we all lay down together in +the most secure place we could find, and reposed ourselves until +morning. Though there were many noxious animals there; yet so kind +was our Almighty protector, that none of them were ever permitted to +hurt or molest us. Thus we went on our journey until the second day +after our departure from Dukandarra, when we came to the entrance of a +great desert. During our travel in that we were often affrighted with +the doleful howlings and yellings of wolves, lions, and other animals. +After five days travel we came to the end of this desert, and +immediately entered into a beautiful and extensive interval country. +Here my mother was pleased to stop and seek a refuge for me. She left +me at the house of a very rich farmer. I was then, I should judge, +not less than one hundred forty miles from my native place, separated +from all my relations and acquaintance. At this place my mother took +her farewell of me, and set out for her own country. My new guardian, +as I shall call the man with whom I was left, put me into the business +of tending sheep, immediately after I was left with him. The flock +which I kept with the assistance of a boy, consisted of about forty. +We drove them every morning between two and three miles to pasture, +into the wide and delightful plains. When night drew on, we drove +them home and secured them in the cote. In this round I continued +during my stay there. One incident that befel me when I was driving +my flock from pasture, was so dreadful to me at that age, and is to +this time fresh in my memory, that I cannot help noticing it in this +place. Two large dogs sallied out of a certain house and set upon me. +One of them took me by the arm, and the other by the thigh, and before +their master could come and relieve me, they lacerated my flesh to +such a degree, that the scars are very visible to the present day. My +master was immediately sent for. He came and carried me home, as I +was unable to go myself on account of my wounds. Nothing remarkable +happened afterwards until my father sent for me to return home. +</p> + +<p> +Before I dismiss this country, I must just inform my reader what I +remember concerning this place. A large river runs through this +country in a westerly course. The land for a great way on each side +is flat and level, hedged in by a considerable rise of the country at +a great distance from it. It scarce ever rains there, yet the land is +fertile; great dews fall in the night which refresh the soil. About +the latter end of June or first of July, the river begins to rise, and +gradually increases until it has inundated the country for a great +distance, to a height of seven or eight feet. This brings on a slime +which enriches the land surprisingly. When the river has subsided, +the natives begin to sow and plant, and the vegetation is exceedingly +rapid. Near this rich river my guardian's land lay. He possessed, I +cannot tell exactly how much, yet this I am certain of respecting it, +that he owned an immense tract. He possessed likewise a great many +cattle and goats. During my stay with him I was kindly used, and with +as much tenderness, for what I saw, as his only son, although I was an +entire stranger to him, remote from friends and relations. The +principal occupation of the inhabitants there, were the cultivation of +the soil and the care of their flocks. They were a people pretty +similar in every respect to that of mine, except in their persons, +which were not so tall and stout. They appeared to be very kind and +friendly. I will now return to my departure from that place. +</p> + +<p> +My father sent a man and horse after me. After settling with my +guardian for keeping me, he took me away and went for home. It was +then about one year since my mother brought me here. Nothing +remarkable occured to us on our journey until we arrived safe home. +</p> + +<p> +I found then that the difference between my parents had been made up +previous to their sending for me. On my return, I was received both +by my father and mother with great joy and affection, and was once +more restored to my paternal dwelling in peace and happiness. I was +then about six years old. +</p> + +<p> +Not more than six weeks had passed after my return, before a message +was brought by an inhabitant of the place where I lived the preceding +year to my father, that that place had been invaded by a numerous +army, from a nation not far distant, furnished with musical +instruments, and all kinds of arms then in use; that they were +instigated by some white nation who equipped and sent them to subdue +and possess the country, that his nation had made no preparation for +war, having been for a long time in profound peace that they could not +defend themselves against such a formidable train of invaders, and +must therefore necessarily evacuate their lands to the fierce enemy, +and fly to the protection of some chief; and that if he would permit +them they should come under his rule and protection when they had to +retreat from their own possessions. He was a kind and merciful +prince, and therefore consented to these proposals. +</p> + +<p> +He had scarcely returned to his nation with the message, before the +whole of his people were obliged to retreat from their country, and +come to my fathers dominions. +</p> + +<p> +He gave them every privilege and all the protection his government +could afford. But they had not been there longer than four days +before news came to them that the invaders had laid waste their +country, and were coming speedily to destroy them in my father's +territories. This affrighted them, and therefore they immediately +pushed off to the southward, into the unknown countries there, and +were never more heard of. +</p> + +<p> +Two days after their retreat, the report turned out to be but too +true. A detachment of the enemy came to my father and informed him, +that the whole army was encamped not far out of his dominions, and +would invade the territory and deprive his people of their liberties +and rights, if he did not comply with the following terms. These were +to pay them a large sum of money, three hundred fat cattle, and a +great number of goats, sheep, asses, &c. +</p> + +<p> +My father told the messenger that he would comply rather than that his +subjects should be deprived of their rights and privileges, which he +was not then in circumstances to defend from so sudden an invasion. +Upon turning out those articles, the enemy pledged their faith and +honor that they would not attack him. On these he relied and +therefore thought it unnecessary to be on his guard against the enemy. +But their pledges of faith and honor proved no better than those of +other unprincipled hostile nations; for a few days after a certain +relation of the king came and informed him, that the enemy who sent +terms of accommodation to him, and received tribute to their +satisfaction, yet meditated an attack on his subjects by surprise, and +that probably they would commence their attack in less than one day, +and concluded with advising him, as he was not prepared for war, to +order a speedy retreat of his family and subjects. He complied with +this advice. +</p> + +<p> +The same night which was fixed upon to retreat, my father and his +family set off about break of day. The king and his two younger wives +went in one company, and my mother and her children in another. We +left our dwellings in succession, and my father's company went on +first. We directed our course for a large shrub plain, some distance +off, where we intended to conceal ourselves from the approaching +enemy, until we could refresh and rest ourselves a little. But we +presently found that our retreat was not secure. For having struck up +a little fire for purposes of cooking victuals, the enemy who happened +to be encamped a little distance off, had sent out a scouting party +which discovered us by the smoke of the fire, just as we were +extinguishing it and about to eat. As soon as we had finished eating, +my father discovered the party, and immediately began to discharge +arrows at them. This was what I first saw, and it alarmed both me and +the women, who being unable to make any resistance, immediately betook +ourselves to the tall thick reeds not far off, and left the old king +to fight alone. For some time, I beheld him from the reeds defending +himself with great courage and firmness, till at last he was obliged +to surrender himself into their hands. +</p> + +<p> +Then they came to us in the reeds, and the very first salute I had +from them was a violent blow on the head with the fore part of a gun, +and at the same time a grasp round the neck. I then had a rope put +about my neck, as had all the women in the thicket with me, and were +immediately led to my father, who was likewise pinioned and haltered +for leading. In this condition we were all led to the camp. The +women and myself being pretty submissive, had tolerable treatment from +the enemy, while my father was closely interrogated respecting his +money which they knew he must have. But as he gave them no account of +it, he was instantly cut and pounded on his body with great +inhumanity, that he might be induced by the torture he suffered to +make the discovery. All this availed not the least to make him give +up his money, but he despised all the tortures which they inflicted, +until the continued exercise and increase of torment, obliged him to +sink and expire. He thus died without informing his enemies of the +place where his money lay. I saw him while he was thus tortured to +death. The shocking scene is to this day fresh in my mind, and I have +often been overcome while thinking on it. He was a man of remarkable +stature. I should judge as much as six feet and six or seven inches +high, two feet across his shoulders, and every way well proportioned. +He as a man of remarkable strength and resolution, affable, kind and +gentle, ruling with equity and moderation. +</p> + +<p> +The army of the enemy was large, I should suppose consisting of about +six thousand men. Their leader was called Baukurre. After destroying +the old prince, they decamped and immediately marched towards the sea, +lying to the west, taking with them myself and the women prisoners. +In the march a scouting party was detached from the main army. To the +leader of this party I was made waiter, having to carry his gun, &c. +As we were a scouting we came across a herd of fat cattle, consisting +of about thirty in number. These we set upon, and immediately wrested +from their keepers, and afterwards converted them into food for the +army. The enemy had remarkable success in destroying the country +wherever they went. For as far as they had penetrated, they laid the +habitations waste and captured the people. The distance they had now +brought me was about four hundred miles. All the march I had very +hard tasks imposed on me, which I must perform on pain of punishment. +I was obliged to carry on my head a large flat stone used for grinding +our corn, weighing as I should suppose, as much as 25 pounds; besides +victuals, mat and cooking utensils. Though I was pretty large and +stout of my age, yet these burthens were very grievous to me, being +only about six years and a half old. +</p> + +<p> +We were then come to a place called Malagafco. When we entered the +place we could not see the least appearance of either houses or +inhabitants, but upon stricter search found, that instead of houses +above ground they had dens in the sides of hillocks, contiguous to +ponds and streams of water. In these we perceived they had all hid +themselves, as I suppose they usually did upon such occasions. In +order to compel them to surrender, the enemy contrived to smoke them +out with faggots. These they put to the entrance of the caves and set +them on fire. While they were engaged in this business, to their +great surprise some of them were desperately wounded with arrows which +fell from above on them. This mystery they soon found out. They +perceived that the enemy discharged these arrows through holes on the +top of the dens directly in to the air. Their weight brought them +back, point downwards on their enemies heads, whilst they were smoking +the inhabitants out. The points of the arrows were poisoned, but +their enemy had an antidote for it, which they instantly applied to +the wounded part. The smoke at last obliged the people to give +themselves up. They came out of their caves, first spatting the palms +of their hands together, then and immediately after extended their +arms, crossed at their wrists, ready to be bound and pinioned. I +should judge that the dens above mentioned were extended about eight +feet horizontally into the earth, five feet in height and as many +wide. They were arched over head and lined with earth, which was of +the clay kind, and made the surface of their walls firm and smooth. +</p> + +<p> +The invaders then pinioned the prisoners of all ages and sexes +indiscriminately, took their flocks and all their effects, and moved +on their way towards the sea. On the march the prisoners were treated +with clemency, on account of their being submissive and humble. +Having come to the next tribe, the enemy laid siege and immediately +took men, women, children, flocks, and all their valuable effects. +They then went on to the next district which was contiguous with the +sea, called in Africa, Anamaboo. The enemies provisions were then +almost spent, as well as their strength. The inhabitants knowing what +kind of conduct they had pursued, and what were their present +intentions, improved the favorable opportunity, attacked them, and +took enemy, prisoners, flocks and all their effects. I was then taken +a second time. All of us were then put into the castle, and kept for +market. On a certain time I and other prisoners were put on board a +canoe, under our master, and rowed away to a vessel belonging to Rhode +Island, commanded by capt. Collingwood, and the mate Thomas Mumford. +While we were going to the vessel, our master told us all to appear to +the best possible advantage for sale. I was bought on board by one +Robertson Mumford, steward of said vessel, for four gallons of rum, +and a piece of calico, and called VENTURE, on account of his having +purchased me with his own private venture. Thus I came by my name. +All the slaves that were bought for that vessel's cargo, were two +hundred and sixty. +<br> +<br> +<br> +</p> + + +<a name="Chapter2"></a> +<h3 align="center">CHAPTER II.<br></h3> + +<p align="center"> +<i>Containing an account of his life, from the time of his leaving + Africa, to that of his becoming free.</i> +</p> + +<p> +After all the business was ended on the coast of Africa, the ship +sailed from thence to Barbadoes. After an ordinary passage, except +great mortality from small pox, which broke out on board, we arrived +at the island of Barbadoes: but when we reached it, there were found +out of the two hundred and sixty that sailed from Africa, not more +than two hundred alive. These were all sold, except for myself and +three more, to the planters there. +</p> + +<p> +The vessel then sailed for Rhode Island, and arrived there after a +comfortable passage. Here my master sent me to live with one of his +sisters, until he could carry me to Fisher's Island, the place of his +residence. I had then competed my eighth year. After staying with +his sister some time I was taken to my master's place to live. +</p> + +<p> +When we arrived at Narragansett, my master went ashore in order to +return a part of the way by land, and gave me the charge of the keys +of his trunks on board the vessel, and charged me not to deliver them +up to any body, not even to his father without his orders. To his +directions I promised faithfully to conform. When I arrived with my +master's articles at his house, my master's father asked me for his +son's keys, as he wanted to see what his trunks contained. I told him +that my master intrusted me with the care of them until he should +return, and that I had given him my word to be faithful to the trust, +and could not therefore give him or any other person the keys without +my master's directions. He insisted that I should deliver him the +keys, threatening to punish me if I did not. But I let him know that +he should not have them say what he would. He then laid aside trying +to get them. But notwithstanding he appeared to give up trying to +obtain them from me, yet I mistrusted that he would take some time +when I was off my guard, either in the day time or at night to get +them, therefore I slung them around my neck, and in the day concealed +them in my bosom, and at night I always lay with them under me, that +no person might take them from me without being apprized of it. Thus +I kept the keys from every body until my master came home. When he +returned he asked where VENTURE was. As I was then within hearing, I +came, said, here sir, at your service. He asked me for his keys, and +I immediately took them off my neck and reached them out to him. He +took them, stroked my hair, and commended me, saying in presence of +his father that his young VENTURE was so faithful that he would never +have been able to have taken the keys from him but by violence; that +he should not fear to trust him with his whole fortune, for that he +had been in his native place so habituated to keeping his word, that +he would sacrifice even his life to maintain it. +</p> + +<p> +The first of the time of living at my master's own place, I was pretty +much employed in the house at carding wool and other household +business. In this situation I continued for some years, after which +my master put me to work out of doors. After many proofs of my +faithfulness and honesty, my master began to put great confidence in +me. My behavior to him had as yet been submissive and obedient. I +then began to have hard tasks imposed on me. Some of these were to +pound four bushels of ears of corn every night in a barrel for the +poultry, or be rigorously punished. At other seasons of the year I +had to card wool until a very late hour. These tasks I had to perform +when I was about nine years old. Some time after I had another +difficulty and oppression which was greater than any I had ever +experienced since I came into this country. This was to serve two +masters. James Mumford, my master's son, when his father had gone +from home in the morning, and given me a stint to perform that day, +would order me to do <i>this</i> and <i>that</i> business different from what my +master directed me. One day in particular, the authority which my +master's son had set up, had like to have produce melancholy effects. +For my master having set me off my business to perform that day and +then left me to perform it, his son came up to me in the course of the +day, big with authority, and and commanded me very arrogantly to quit +my present business and go directly about what he should order me. I +replied to him that my master had given me so much to perform that +day, and that I must therefore faithfully complete it in that time. +He then broke out in a great rage, snatched a pitchfork and went to +lay me over the head therewith; but I as soon got another and defended +myself with it, or otherwise he might have murdered me in his outrage. +He immediately called some people who were hearing at work for him, +and ordered them to take his hair rope and and come and bind me with +it. They all tried to bind me but in vain, tho' there were three +assistants in number. My upstart master than desisted, put his pocket +handkerchief before his eyes and went home with a design to tell his +mother of the struggle with young VENTURE. He told her that their +young VENTURE had become so stubborn that he could not controul him, +and asked her what he should do with him. In the mean time I +recovered my temper, voluntarily caused myself to be bound by the same +men who tried in vain before, and carried before my young master, that +he might do what he pleased with me. He took me to a gallows made for +the purpose of hanging cattle on, and suspended me on it. Afterwards +he ordered one of his hands to go to the peach orchard and cut him +three dozens of whips to punish me with. These were brought to him, +and that was all that was done with them, as I was released and went +to work after hanging on the gallows about an hour. +</p> + +<p> +After I lived with my master thirteen years, being then about twenty +two years old, I married Meg, a slave of his who was about my age. My +master owned a certain Irishman, named Heddy, who about that time +formed a plan of secretly leaving his master. After he had long had +this plan in meditation he suggested it to me. At first I cast a deaf +ear on it, and rebuked Heddy for harboring in his mind such a rash +undertaking. But after he had persuaded and much enchanted me with +the prospect of gaining my freedom with such a method, I at length +agreed to accompany him. Heddy next inveigled two of his fellow +servants to accompany us. The place to which we designed to go was +the Mississippi. Our next business was to lay in a sufficient store +of provisions for our voyage. We privately collected out of our +master's store, six great old cheeses, two firkins of butter, and one +whole batch of new bread. When we had gathered all our own clothes +and some more, we took them all about midnight, and went to the water +side. We stole our master's boat, embarked, then directed our course +for the Mississippi river. +</p> + +<p> +We mutually confederated not to betray or desert one another on pain +of death. We first steered our course for Montauk point, the east end +of Long-Island. After our arrival there we landed, and Heddy and I +made an incursion into the island after fresh water, while our two +comrades were left at a little distance from the boat, employed at +cooking. When Heddy and I had sought some time for water, he returned +to our companions, and I continued on looking for my object. When +Heddy had performed his business with our companions, who were engaged +in cooking, he went directly to the boat, stole all the clothes in it, +and then travelled away for East-Hampton, as I was informed. I +returned to my fellows not long after. They informed me that our +clothes were stolen, but could not determine who was the thief, yet +they suspected Heddy as he was missing. After reproving my two +comrades for not taking care of our things which were in the boat, I +advertised Heddy and sent two men in search of him. They pursued and +overtook him at Southampton and returned him to the boat. I then +thought it might afford some chance for my freedom, or at least a +palliation for my running away, to return Heddy immediately to his +master, and inform him that I was induced to go away by Heddy's +address. Accordingly I set off with him and the rest of my companions +for our master's, and arrived there without any difficulty. I +informed my master that Heddy was the ringleader of our revolt, and +that he had used us ill. He immediately put Heddy into custody, and +myself and companions were well received and went to work as usual. +</p> + +<p> +Not a long time passed after that, before Heddy was sent by my master +to New-London gaol. At the close of that year I was sold to a Thomas +Stanton, and had to be separated from my wife and one daughter, who +was about one month old. He resided at Stonington-point. To this +place I brought with me from my last master's, two johannes, three old +Spanish dollars, and two thousand of coppers, besides five pounds of +my wife's money. This money I got by cleaning gentlemen's shoes and +drawing boots, by catching musk-rats and minks, raising potatoes and +carrots, &c. and by fishing in the night, and at odd spells. +</p> + +<p> +All this money amounting to near twenty-one pounds York currency, my +master's brother, Robert Stanton, hired of me, for which he gave me +his note. About one year and a half after that time, my master +purchased my wife and and her child, for severn hundred pounds old +tenor. One time my master sent me two miles after a barrel of +molasses, and ordered me to carry it on my shoulders. I made out to +carry it all the way to my master's house. When I lived with Captain +George Mumford, only to try my strength, I took up on my knees a +tierce of salt containing seven bushels, and carried it two or three +rods. Of this fact there are several eye witnesses now living. +</p> + +<p> +Towards the close of the time that I resided with this master, I had a +falling out with my mistress. This happened one time when my master +was gone to Long-Island a gunning. At first the quarrel began between +my wife and her mistress. I was then at work in the barn, and hearing +a racket in the house, induced me to run there and see what had broken +out. When I entered the house, I found my mistress in a violent +passion with my wife, for what she informed me was a mere trifle; such +a small affair that I forbear to put my mistress to the shame of +having it known. I earnestly requested my wife to beg pardon of her +mistress for the sake of peace even if she had given no just occasion +for offence. But whilst I was thus saying my mistress turned the +blows which she was repeating on my wife to me. She took down her +horse-whip, and while she was glutting her fury with it, I reached out +my great black hand, raised it up and received the blows of the whip +on it which were designed for my head. Then I immediately committed +the whip to the devouring fire. +</p> + +<p> +When my master returned from the island, his wife told him of the +affair, but for the present he seemed to take no notice of it, and +mentioned not a word of it to me. Some days after his return, in the +morning as I was putting on a log in the fire-place, not suspecting +harm from any one, I received a most violent stroke on the crown of my +head with a club two feet long and and as large around as a +chair-post. This blow very badly wounded my head, and the scar of it +remains to this day. The first blow made me have my wits about me as +you may suppose, for as soon as he went to renew it, I snatched the +club out of his hands and dragged him out of the door. He then sent +for his brother to come and assist him, but I presently left my +master, took the club he wounded me with, carried it to a neighboring +Justice of the Peace, and complained of my master. He finally advised +me to return to my master, and live contented with him until he abused +me again, and then complain. I consented to do accordingly. But +before I set out for my master's, up he come and his brother Robert +after me. The Justice improved this convenient opportunity to caution +my master. He asked him for what he treated his slave thus hastily +and unjustly, and told him what would be the consequence if he +continued the same treatment towards me. After the Justice had ended +his discourse with my master, he and his brother set out with me for +home, one before and the other behind me. When they had come to a bye +place, they both dismounted their respective horses, and fell to +beating me with great violence. I became enraged at this and +immediately turned them both under me, laid one of them across the +other, and stamped both with my feet what I would. +</p> + +<p> +This occasioned my master's brother to advise him to put me off. A +short time after this I was taken by a constable and two men. They +carried me to a black-smith's shop and had me hand-cuffed. When I +returned home my mistress enquired much of her waiters, whether +VENTURE was hand-cuffed. When she was informed that I was, she +appeared to be very contented and was much transported with the news. +In the midst of all this content and joy, I presented myself before my +mistress, shewed her my hand-cuffs, and gave her thanks for my gold +rings. For this my master commanded a negro of his to fetch him a +large ox chain. This my master locked on my legs with two padlocks. +I continued to wear the chain peaceably for two or three days, when my +master asked me with contemptuous hard names whether I had not better +be freed from my chains and go to work. I answered him, No. Well +then, said he, I will send you to the West-Indies or banish you, for I +am resolved not to keep you. I answered him I crossed the waters to +come here, and I am willing to cross them to return. +</p> + +<p> +For a day or two after this not any one said much to me, until one +Hempsted Miner, of Stonington, asked me if I would live with him. I +answered him that I would. He then requested me to make myself +discontented and to appear as unreconciled to my master as I could +before that he bargained with him for me; and that in return he would +give me a good chance to gain my freedom when I came to live with him. +I did as he requested me. Not long after Hempsted Miner purchased me +of my master for fifty-six pounds lawful. He took the chain and +padlocks off me immediately after. +</p> + +<p> +It may here be remembered, that I related a few pages back, that I +hired out a sum of money to Mr. Robert Stanton, and took his note for +it. In the fray between my master Stanton and myself, he broke open +my chest containing his brother's note to me, and destroyed it. +Immediately after my present master bought me, he determined to sell +me at Hartford. As soon as I became apprized of it, I bethought +myself that I would secure a certain sum of money which lay by me, +safer than to hire it out to Stanton. Accordingly I buried it in the +earth, a little distance from Thomas Stanton's, in the road over which +he passed daily. A short time after my master carried me to Hartford, +and first proposed to sell me to one William Hooker of that place. +Hooker asked whether I would go to the German Flats with him. I +answered, No. He said I should, if not by fair means I should by +foul. If you will go by no other measures, I will tie you down in my +sleigh. I replied to him, that if he carried me in that manner, no +person would purchase me, for it would be thought that he had a +murderer for sale. After this he tried no more, and said he would not +have me as a gift. +</p> + +<p> +My master next offered me to Daniel Edwards, Esq. of Hartford, for +sale. But not purchasing me, my master pawned me to him for ten +pounds, and returned to Stonington. After some trial of my honesty, +Mr. Edwards placed considerable trust and confidence in me. He put me +to serve as his cup-bearer and waiter. When there was company at his +house, he would send me into his cellar and other parts of his house +to fetch wine and other articles occasionally for them. When I had +been with him for some time, he asked me why my master wished to part +with such an honest negro, and why he did not keep me himself. I +replied that I could not give him the reason, unless it was to convert +me into cash, and speculate with me as with other commodities. I hope +he can never justly say it was on account of my ill conduct that he +did no keep me himself. Mr Edwards told me that he should be very +willing to keep me himself, and that he would never let me go from him +to live, if it was not unreasonable and inconvenient for me to be +parted from my wife and children; therefore he would furnish me with a +horse to return to Stonington, if I had a mind for it. As Miner did +not appear to redeem me I went, at called at my old master Stanton's +first to see my wife, who was then owned by him. As my old master +appeared much ruffled at my being there, I left my wife before I had +spent considerable time with her, and went to Colonel O. Smith's. +Miner had not as yet wholly settled with Stanton for me, and had +before my return from Hartford given Col. Smith a bill of sale for me. +These men once met to determine which of them should hold me, and upon +my expressing a desire to be owned by Col. Smith, and upon my master's +settling the remainder of the money which was due Stanton for me, it +was agreed that I should live with Col. Smith. This was the third +time of my being sold, and I was then thirty-one years old. As I +never had an opportunity of redeeming myself whilst I was owned by +Miner, though he promised to give me a chance, I was then very +ambitious of obtaining it. I asked my master one time if he would +consent to have me purchase my freedom. He replied that he would. I +was then very happy, knowing that I was at that time able to pay part +of the purchase money, by means of the money which I some time since +buried. This I took out of the earth and tendered to my master, +having previously engaged a free negro man to take take his security +for it, as I was the property of my master, and therefore could not +safely take his obligation myself. What was wanted in redeeming +myself, my master agreed to wait on me for, until I could procure it +for him. I still continued to work for Col. Smith. Ther was +continually some interest accruing on my master's note to my friend +the free negro man above named, which I received, and with some +besides which I got by fishing, I laid out in land adjoining my old +master Stanton's. By cultivating this land with the greatest +diligence and economy, at times when my master did not require my +labor, in two years I laid up ten pounds. This my friend tendered to +my master for myself, and received his note for it. +</p> + +<p> +Being encouraged by the success which I had met in redeeming myself, I +again solicited my master for a further chance of completing it. The +chance for which I solicited him was that of going out to work the +ensuing winter. He agreed to this on condition that I would give him +one quarter of my earnings. On these terms I worked the following +winter, and earned four pounds sixteen shillings, one quarter of which +went to my master for the privilege, and the rest was paid him on my +own account. This added to the other payments made up forty four +pounds, eight shillings, which I had paid on my own account. I was +then about thirty five years old. +</p> + +<p> +The next summer I again desired he would give me a chance of going out +to work. But he refused and answered that he must have my labor this +summer, as he did not have it the past winter. I replied that I +considered it as hard that I could not have a chance to work out when +the season became advantageous, and that I must only be permitted to +hire myself out in the poorest season of the year. He asked me after +this what I would give for the privilege per month. I replied that I +would leave it wholly with his own generosity to determine what I +should return him a month. Well then, said he, if so two pounds a +month. I answered him that if that was the least he would take I +would be contented. +</p> + +<p> +Accordingly, I hired myself out at Fisher's Island, and earned twenty +pounds; thirteen pounds six shillings of which my master drew for the +privilege, and the remainder I paid him for my freedom. This made +fifty-one pounds two shillings which I paid him. In October following +I went and wrought six months at Long Island. In that six months' +time I cut and corded four hundred cords of wood, besides threshing +out seventy-five bushels of grain, and received of my wages down only +twenty pounds, which left remaining a larger sum. Whilst I was out +that time, I took upon my wages only one pair of shoes. At night I +lay upon the hearth, with one coverlet over and another under me. I +returned to my master and gave him what I received on my six months +labor. This left only thirteen pounds eighteen shillings to make up +the full sum for my redemption. My master liberated me, saying I +might pay what was behind if I could ever make it convenient, +otherwise it would be well. The amount of the money which I had paid +my master towards redeeming my time, was seventy-one pounds two +shillings. The reason of my master for asking such an unreasonable +price, was he said, to secure himself in case I should ever come to +want. Being thirty-six years old, I left Col. Smith once for all. I +had already been sold three different times, made considerable money +with seemingly nothing to derive it from, been cheated out of a large +sum of money, lost much by misfortunes, and paid an enormous sum for +my freedom. +</p> + +<a name="Chapter3"></a> +<h3 align="center">CHAPTER III.<br></h3> + +<p align="center"> +<i>Containing an account of his life, from the time of his purchasing his + freedom to the present day.</i> +</p> + +<p> +My wife and children were yet in bondage to Mr. Thomas Stanton. About +this time I lost a chest, containing besides clothing, about thirty-eight +pounds in paper money. It was burnt by accident. A short time +after I sold all my possessions at Stonington, consisting of a pretty +piece of land and one dwelling house thereon, and went to reside at +Long-Island. For the first four years of my residence there, I spent +my time in working for various people on that and at the neighboring +islands. I the space of six months I cut and corded upwards of four +hundred cords of wood. Many other singular and wonderful labors I +performed in cutting wood there, which would not be inferior to those +just recited, but for brevity sake I must omit them. In the +aforementioned four years what wood I cut at Long-Island amounted to +several thousand cords, and the money which I earned thereby amounted +to two hundred and seven pounds ten shillings. This money I laid up +carefully by me. Perhaps some may enquire what maintained me all the +time I was laying up money. I would inform them that I bought nothing +which I did not absolutely want. All fine clothes I despised in +comparison with my interest, and never kept but just what clothes were +comfortable for common days, and perhaps I would have a garment or two +which I did not have on at all times, but as for superfluous finery I +never thought it to be compared with a decent homespun dress, a good +supply of money and prudence. Expensive gatherings of my mates I +commonly shunned, and all kinds of luxuries I was perfectly a stranger +to; and during the time I was employed in cutting the aforementioned +quantity of wood, I never was at the expense of six-pence worth of +spirits. Being after this labor forty years of age, I worked at +various places, and in particular on Ram-Island, which I purchased +Solomon and Cuff, two sons of mine, for two hundred dollars each. +</p> + +<p> +It will here be remembered how much money I earned by cutting wood in +four years. Besides this I had considerable money, amounting in all +to near three hundred pounds. After this I purchased a negro man, for +no other reason than to oblige him, and gave him sixty pounds. But in +a short time after he run away from me, and I thereby lost all that I +gave for him, except twenty pounds which he paid me previous to his +absconding. The rest of my money I laid out in land, in addition to a +farm which I owned before, and a dwelling house thereon. Forty four +years had then completed their revolution since my entrance in to this +existence of servitude and misfortune. Solomon my eldest son, being +then in his seventeenth year, and all my hope and dependence for help, +I hired him out to one Charles Church, of Rhode Island, for one year, +on consideration of his giving him twelve pounds and an opportunity of +acquiring some learning. In the course of the year, Church fitted out +a vessel for a whaling voyage, and being in want of hands to man her, +he induced my son to go, with the promise of giving him, on his +return, a pair of silver buckles, besides his wages. As soon as I +heard of his going to sea, I immediately set out to go and prevent it +if possible. But on my arrival at Church's, to my great grief, I +could only see the vessel my son was on almost out of sight going to +sea. My son died of the scurvy on this voyage, and Church has never +yet paid me the least of his wages. In my son, besides the loss of +his life, I lost equal to seventy-five pounds. +</p> + +<p> +My other son being but a youth, still lived with me. About this time +I chartered a sloop of about thirty tons burthen, and hired men to +assist me in navigating her. I employed her mostly in the wood trade +to Rhode-Island, and made clear of all expenses above one hundred +dollars with her in better than one year. I had then become something +forehanded, and being in my forty-fourth year, I purchased my wife +Meg, and thereby prevented having another child to buy, as she was +then pregnant. I gave forty pounds for her. +</p> + +<p> +During my residence at Long-Island, I raised one year with another, +ten cart loads of water-melons, and lost a great many every year +besides by the thievishness of the sailors. What I made by the +water-melons I sold there, amounted to nearly five hundred dollars. +Various other methods I in order to enable me to redeem my family. +In the night-time I fished with set-nets and pots for eels and lobsters, +and shortly after went a whaling voyage in the service of Col. Smith. +After being seven months, the vessel returned, laden with four hundred +barrels of oil. About this time, I became possessed of another +dwelling-house, and my temporal affairs were in a pretty prosperous +condition. This and my industry was what alone saved me from being +expelled that part of the island in which I resided, as an act was +passed by the select-men of the place, that all negroes residing there +should be expelled. +</p> + +<p> +Next after my wife, I purchased a negro man for four hundred dollars. +But he having an inclination to return to his old master, I therefore +let him go. Shortly after I purchased another negro man for twenty-five +pounds, who I parted with shortly after. +</p> + +<p> +Being about forty-six years old, I bought my oldest child Hannah, of +Ray Mumford, for forty-four pounds, and she still resided with him. I +had already redeemed from slavery, myself, my wife and three children, +besides three negro men. +</p> + +<p> +About the forty-seventh year of my life, I disposed all my property at +Long-Island, and came from thence into East-Haddam. I hired myself +out at first to Timothy Chapman, for five weeks, the earnings of which +time I put carefully by me. After this I wrought for Abel Bingham +about six weeks. I then put my money together and purchased of said +Bingham ten acres of land, lying at Haddam neck, where I now reside. +On this land I labored with great diligence for two years, and shortly +after purchased six acres more of land contiguous to my other. One +year from that time I purchased seventy acres more of the same man, +and paid for it mostly with the produce of my other land. Soon after +I bought this lot of land, I set up a comfortable dwelling house on my +farm, and built it from the produce thereof. Shortly after I had much +trouble and expense with my daughter Hannah, whose name has before +been mentioned in this account. She was married soon after I redeemed +her, to one Isaac, a free negro, and shortly after her marriage fell +sick of a mortal disease; her husband a dissolute and abandoned +wretch, paid but little attention to her in her illness. I therefore +thought it best to bring her to my house and nurse her there. I +procured her all the aid mortals could afford, but notwithstanding +this she fell a prey to her disease, after a lingering and painful +endurance of it. +</p> + +<p> +The physician's bills for attending her during her illness amounted to +forty pounds. Having reached my fifty-fourth year, I hired two negro +men, one named William Jacklin, and the other Mingo. Mingo lived with +me one year, and having received his wages, run in debt to me eight +dollars, for which he gave me his note. I procured a warrant, took +him, and requested him to go to Justice Throop's of his own accord, +but he refusing, I took him on my shoulders, and carried him there, +distant about two miles. The justice asking me if I had my prisoner's +note with me, and replying that I had not, he told me that I must +return with him and get it. Accordingly I carried Mingo back on my +shoulders, but before we arrived at my dwelling, he complained of +being hurt, and asked me if this was not a hard way of treating our +fellow creatures. I answered him that it would be hard thus to treat +our honest fellow creatures. He then told me that if I would let him +off my shoulders, he had a pair of silver shoe-buckles, one shirt and +a pocket handkerchief, which he would turn out to me. I agreed, and +let him return home with me on foot; but the very following night, he +slipped from me, stole my horse and has never paid me even his note. +The other negro man, Jacklin, being a comb-maker by trade, he +requested me to set him up, and promised to reward me well with his +labor. Accordingly I bought him a set of tools for making combs, and +procured him stock. He worked at my house about one year, and then +run away from me with all his combs, and owed me for all his board. +</p> + +<p> +Since my residence at Haddam neck, I have owned of boats, canoes and +sail vessels, not less than twenty. These I mostly employed in the +fishing and trafficking business, and in these occupations I have been +cheated out of considerable money by people whom I traded with taking +advantage of my ignorance of numbers. +</p> + +<p> +About twelve years ago, I hired a whale-boat and four black men, and +proceeded to Long-Island after a load of round clams. Having arrived +there, I first purchased of James Webb, son of Orange Webb, six +hundred and sixty clams, and afterwards, with the help of my men, +finished loading my boat. The same evening, however, this Webb stole +my boat, and went in her to Connecticut river, and sold her cargo for +his own benefit. I thereupon pursued him, and at length, after an +additional expence of nine crowns, recovered the boat; but for the +proceeds of her cargo I never could obtain any compensation. +</p> + +<p> +Four years after, I met with another loss, far superior to this in +value, and I think by no less wicked means. Being going to New-London +with a grand-child, I took passage on an Indian's boat, and went there +with him. On our return, the Indian took on board two hogsheads of +molasses, one of which belonged to Capt. Elisha Hart, of Saybrook, to +be delivered to his wharf. When we arrived there, and while I was +gone, at the request of the Indian, to inform Captain Hart of his +arrival, and receive the freight for him, one hogshead of the molasses +had been lost overboard by the people in attempting to land it on the +wharf. Although I was absent at the time, and had no concern whatever +in the business, and was known to a number of respectable witnesses, I +was nevertheless persecuted by this conscientious gentleman, (the +Indian not being able to pay for it) and obliged to pay upwards of ten +pounds lawful money, with all the costs of court. I applied to +several gentlemen for counsel in this affair, and they advised me, as +my adversary was rich, and threatened to carry the matter from court +to court till it would cost me more than the first damages would be, +to pay the sum and submit to the injury; which I accordingly did, and +he has often since insultingly taunted me with my unmerited +misfortune. Such a proceeding as this, committed on a defenseless +stranger, almost worn out in the hard service of the world, without +any foundation in reason or justice, whatever it may be called in a +christian land, would in my native country be branded a crime equal to +highway robbery. But Captain Hart was a <i>white gentleman</i>, and I a +<i>poor African,</i> and therefore it was <i>all right, and good enough for +the black dog.</i> +</p> + +<p> +I am now sixty nine years old. Though once straight and tall, +measuring without shoes six feet one inch and an half, and every way +well proportioned, I am now bowed down with age and hardship. My +strength which was once equal if not superior to any man whom I have +ever seen, is now enfeebled so that life is a burden, and it is with +fatigue that I can walk a couple of miles, stooping over my staff. +Other griefs are still behind; on account of which some aged people, +at least, will pity me. My eye-sight has gradually failed, till I am +almost blind, and whenever I go abroad one of my grand-children must +direct my way; besides for many years I have been much pained and +troubled with an ulcer on one of my legs. But amidst all my griefs and +pains, I have many consolations; Meg, the wife of my youth, whom I +married for love, and bought with my money, is still alive. My +freedom is a privilege which nothing else can equal. Notwithstanding +all the losses I have suffered by fire, by the injustice of knaves, by +the cruelty and oppression of false-hearted friends, and the perfidy +of my own countrymen whom I have assisted and redeemed from bondage, I +am no possessed of more than two hundred acres of land, and three +habitable dwelling houses. I gives me joy to think that I <i>have</i> and +that I <i>deserve</i> so good a character, especially for <i>truth</i> and +<i>integrity.</i> While I am now looking to the grave as my home, my joy +for this world would be full&mdash;IF my children, Cuff for whom I paid two +hundred dollars when a boy, and Solomon who was born soon after I +purchased his mother&mdash;If Cuff and Solomon&mdash;O! that they had walked the +way of their father. But a father's lips are closed in silence and +grief! Vanity of vanities, all is vanity! +</p> + +<p align="center"> + F I N I S. +<br> +<br> +<br> +<br> +<br> +</p> + + +<a name="certificate"></a> +<h3 align="center"> +CERTIFICATE. +<br> +</h3> + +<p align="center"> +Stonington, November 3, 1798. +</p> + +<p> +These certify that VENTURE, a free negro man, aged about 69 years, and +was, as we have ever understood, a native of Africa, and formerly a +slave to Mr. James Mumford, of Fisher's-Island, in the state of New-York, +who sold him to Mr. Robert Stanton, 2d, of Stonington, in the +state of Connecticut, and said Stanton sold said VENTURE to Col. +Oliver Smith, of the aforesaid place. That said VENTURE hath +sustained the character of a faithful servant, and that of a +temperate, honest and industrious man, and being ever intent on +obtaining his freedom, he was indulged by his masters after the +ordinary labour on the days of his servitude, to improve the nights in +fishing and other employments of his own emolument, in which time he +procured so much money as to purchase his freedom from his late master +Col. Smith; after which he took upon himself the name of VENTURE +SMITH, and has since his freedom purchased a negro woman, called Meg, +to whom he was previously married, and also his children who were +slaves, and said VENTURE has since removed himself and family to the +town of East-Haddam, in this state, where he has purchased lands on +which he hath built a house, and there taken up his abode. +</p> + +<p align="right"> + NATHAN MINOR, Esq.<br> + ELIJAH PALMER, Esq.<br> + Capt. AMOS PALMER,<br> + ACORS SHEFFIELD,<br> + EDWARD SMITH. +</p> +<br> +<br> +<hr> +<br> +<br> +<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10075 ***</div> +</body> +</html> diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at <a href = "https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre> +<p>Title: A Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Venture, a Native of Africa, But Resident above Sixty Years in the United States of America, Related by Himself</p> +<p>Author: Venture Smith</p> +<p>Release Date: November 13, 2003 [eBook #10075]</p> +<p>Language: English</p> +<p>Chatacter set encoding: iso-8859-1</p> +<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A NARRATIVE OF THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF VENTURE, A NATIVE OF AFRICA, BUT RESIDENT ABOVE SIXTY YEARS IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, RELATED BY HIMSELF***</p> +<br> +<br> +<center><h3>E-text produced by Martin Schub</h3></center> +<br> +<br> +<hr> + +<a href="#preface">Click Here to go to Preface</a><br> +<a href="#Chapter1">Click Here to go to Chapter 1</a><br> +<a href="#Chapter2">Click Here to go to Chapter 2</a><br> +<a href="#Chapter3">Click Here to go to Chapter 3</a><br> +<a href="#certificate">Clich Here to go to Certificate</a> + + +<h4 align="center"> + + A +<br> + NARRATIVE +<br> +</h4> +<h5 align="center"> + OF THE +<br> +</h5> +<h4 align="center"> + LIFE AND ADVENTURES +<br> +</h4> +<h5 align="center"> + OF +<br> +</h5> +<h3 align="center"> + VENTURE, +</h3> +<h4 align="center"> +<br> + <i>A NATIVE OF AFRICA,</i> +<br> +<br> +<i> But resident above sixty years in the United States of America.</i> +<br> + RELATED BY HIMSELF. +<br> +<br> + <i>New London: </i> +</h4> +<h3 align="center"> + 1798. +<br> +<br> +</h3> + + +<a name="preface"></a> +<h3>PREFACE</h3> +<p> +The following account of the life of VENTURE, is a relation of simple +facts, in which nothing is in substance to what he relates himself. +Many other interesting and curious passages of his life might have +been inserted, but on account of the bulk to which they must +necessarily have swelled this narrative, they were omitted. If any +should suspect the truth of what is here related, they are referred to +people now living who are acquainted with most of the facts mentioned +in this narrative. +</p> + +<p> +The reader is here presented with an account, not of a renowned +politician or warrior, but of an untutored African slave, brought into +this Christian country at eight years of age, wholly destitute of all +education but what he received in common with other domesticated +animals, enjoying no advantages that could lead him to suppose himself +superior to the beasts, his fellow servants. And if he shall enjoy no +other advantage from perusing this narrative, he may experience those +sensations of shame and indignation, that will prove him to be not +wholly destitute of every noble and generous feeling. +</p> + +<p> +The subject of the following pages, had he received only a common +education, might have been a man of high respectability and +usefulness; and had his education been suited to his genius, he might +have been an ornament and an honor to human nature. It may perhaps, +not be unpleasing to see the efforts of a great mind wholly +uncultivated, enfeebled and depressed by slavery, and struggling under +every disadvantage. The reader may here see a Franklin and a +Washington, in a state of nature, or rather, in a state of slavery. +Destitute as he is of all education, he still exhibits striking traces +of native ingenuity and good sense. +</p> + +<p> +This narrative exhibits a pattern of honesty, prudence, and industry, +to people of his own colour; and perhaps some white people would not +find themselves degraded by imitating such an example. +</p> + +<p> +The following account is published in compliance with the earnest +desire of the subject of it, and likewise a number of respectable +persons who are acquainted with him. +<br> +<br> +<br> +</p> + +<a name="Chapter1"></a> +<h3 align="center">CHAPTER I.<br></h3> + +<p align="center"> +<i>Containing an account of his life, from his birth to the time of his + leaving his native country.</i> +</p> + +<p> +I was born at Dukandarra, in Guinea, about the year 1729. My father's +name was Saungm Furro, Prince of the Tribe of Dukandarra. My father +had three wives. Polygamy was not uncommon in that country, +especially among the rich, as every man was allowed to keep as many +wives as he could maintain. By his first wife he had three children. +The eldest of them was myself, named by my father Broteer. The other +two were named Cundazo and Soozaduka. My father had two children by +his second wife, and one by his third. I descended from a very large, +tall and stout race of beings, much larger than the generality of +people in other parts of the globe, being commonly considerably above +six feet in height, and in every way well proportioned. +</p> + +<p> +The first thing worthy of notice which I remember was, a contention +between my father and mother, on account of my father's marrying his +third wife without the consent of his first and eldest, which was +contrary to the custom generally observed among my countrymen. In +consequence of this rupture, my mother left her husband and country, +and travelled away with her three children to the eastward. I was +then five years old. She took not the least sustenance along with +her, to support either herself or children. I was able to travel +along by her side; the other two of her offspring she carried one on +her back, and the other being a sucking child, in her arms. When we +became hungry, my mother used to set us down on the ground, and gather +some of the fruits which grew spontaneously in that climate. These +served us for food on the way. At night we all lay down together in +the most secure place we could find, and reposed ourselves until +morning. Though there were many noxious animals there; yet so kind +was our Almighty protector, that none of them were ever permitted to +hurt or molest us. Thus we went on our journey until the second day +after our departure from Dukandarra, when we came to the entrance of a +great desert. During our travel in that we were often affrighted with +the doleful howlings and yellings of wolves, lions, and other animals. +After five days travel we came to the end of this desert, and +immediately entered into a beautiful and extensive interval country. +Here my mother was pleased to stop and seek a refuge for me. She left +me at the house of a very rich farmer. I was then, I should judge, +not less than one hundred forty miles from my native place, separated +from all my relations and acquaintance. At this place my mother took +her farewell of me, and set out for her own country. My new guardian, +as I shall call the man with whom I was left, put me into the business +of tending sheep, immediately after I was left with him. The flock +which I kept with the assistance of a boy, consisted of about forty. +We drove them every morning between two and three miles to pasture, +into the wide and delightful plains. When night drew on, we drove +them home and secured them in the cote. In this round I continued +during my stay there. One incident that befel me when I was driving +my flock from pasture, was so dreadful to me at that age, and is to +this time fresh in my memory, that I cannot help noticing it in this +place. Two large dogs sallied out of a certain house and set upon me. +One of them took me by the arm, and the other by the thigh, and before +their master could come and relieve me, they lacerated my flesh to +such a degree, that the scars are very visible to the present day. My +master was immediately sent for. He came and carried me home, as I +was unable to go myself on account of my wounds. Nothing remarkable +happened afterwards until my father sent for me to return home. +</p> + +<p> +Before I dismiss this country, I must just inform my reader what I +remember concerning this place. A large river runs through this +country in a westerly course. The land for a great way on each side +is flat and level, hedged in by a considerable rise of the country at +a great distance from it. It scarce ever rains there, yet the land is +fertile; great dews fall in the night which refresh the soil. About +the latter end of June or first of July, the river begins to rise, and +gradually increases until it has inundated the country for a great +distance, to a height of seven or eight feet. This brings on a slime +which enriches the land surprisingly. When the river has subsided, +the natives begin to sow and plant, and the vegetation is exceedingly +rapid. Near this rich river my guardian's land lay. He possessed, I +cannot tell exactly how much, yet this I am certain of respecting it, +that he owned an immense tract. He possessed likewise a great many +cattle and goats. During my stay with him I was kindly used, and with +as much tenderness, for what I saw, as his only son, although I was an +entire stranger to him, remote from friends and relations. The +principal occupation of the inhabitants there, were the cultivation of +the soil and the care of their flocks. They were a people pretty +similar in every respect to that of mine, except in their persons, +which were not so tall and stout. They appeared to be very kind and +friendly. I will now return to my departure from that place. +</p> + +<p> +My father sent a man and horse after me. After settling with my +guardian for keeping me, he took me away and went for home. It was +then about one year since my mother brought me here. Nothing +remarkable occured to us on our journey until we arrived safe home. +</p> + +<p> +I found then that the difference between my parents had been made up +previous to their sending for me. On my return, I was received both +by my father and mother with great joy and affection, and was once +more restored to my paternal dwelling in peace and happiness. I was +then about six years old. +</p> + +<p> +Not more than six weeks had passed after my return, before a message +was brought by an inhabitant of the place where I lived the preceding +year to my father, that that place had been invaded by a numerous +army, from a nation not far distant, furnished with musical +instruments, and all kinds of arms then in use; that they were +instigated by some white nation who equipped and sent them to subdue +and possess the country, that his nation had made no preparation for +war, having been for a long time in profound peace that they could not +defend themselves against such a formidable train of invaders, and +must therefore necessarily evacuate their lands to the fierce enemy, +and fly to the protection of some chief; and that if he would permit +them they should come under his rule and protection when they had to +retreat from their own possessions. He was a kind and merciful +prince, and therefore consented to these proposals. +</p> + +<p> +He had scarcely returned to his nation with the message, before the +whole of his people were obliged to retreat from their country, and +come to my fathers dominions. +</p> + +<p> +He gave them every privilege and all the protection his government +could afford. But they had not been there longer than four days +before news came to them that the invaders had laid waste their +country, and were coming speedily to destroy them in my father's +territories. This affrighted them, and therefore they immediately +pushed off to the southward, into the unknown countries there, and +were never more heard of. +</p> + +<p> +Two days after their retreat, the report turned out to be but too +true. A detachment of the enemy came to my father and informed him, +that the whole army was encamped not far out of his dominions, and +would invade the territory and deprive his people of their liberties +and rights, if he did not comply with the following terms. These were +to pay them a large sum of money, three hundred fat cattle, and a +great number of goats, sheep, asses, &c. +</p> + +<p> +My father told the messenger that he would comply rather than that his +subjects should be deprived of their rights and privileges, which he +was not then in circumstances to defend from so sudden an invasion. +Upon turning out those articles, the enemy pledged their faith and +honor that they would not attack him. On these he relied and +therefore thought it unnecessary to be on his guard against the enemy. +But their pledges of faith and honor proved no better than those of +other unprincipled hostile nations; for a few days after a certain +relation of the king came and informed him, that the enemy who sent +terms of accommodation to him, and received tribute to their +satisfaction, yet meditated an attack on his subjects by surprise, and +that probably they would commence their attack in less than one day, +and concluded with advising him, as he was not prepared for war, to +order a speedy retreat of his family and subjects. He complied with +this advice. +</p> + +<p> +The same night which was fixed upon to retreat, my father and his +family set off about break of day. The king and his two younger wives +went in one company, and my mother and her children in another. We +left our dwellings in succession, and my father's company went on +first. We directed our course for a large shrub plain, some distance +off, where we intended to conceal ourselves from the approaching +enemy, until we could refresh and rest ourselves a little. But we +presently found that our retreat was not secure. For having struck up +a little fire for purposes of cooking victuals, the enemy who happened +to be encamped a little distance off, had sent out a scouting party +which discovered us by the smoke of the fire, just as we were +extinguishing it and about to eat. As soon as we had finished eating, +my father discovered the party, and immediately began to discharge +arrows at them. This was what I first saw, and it alarmed both me and +the women, who being unable to make any resistance, immediately betook +ourselves to the tall thick reeds not far off, and left the old king +to fight alone. For some time, I beheld him from the reeds defending +himself with great courage and firmness, till at last he was obliged +to surrender himself into their hands. +</p> + +<p> +Then they came to us in the reeds, and the very first salute I had +from them was a violent blow on the head with the fore part of a gun, +and at the same time a grasp round the neck. I then had a rope put +about my neck, as had all the women in the thicket with me, and were +immediately led to my father, who was likewise pinioned and haltered +for leading. In this condition we were all led to the camp. The +women and myself being pretty submissive, had tolerable treatment from +the enemy, while my father was closely interrogated respecting his +money which they knew he must have. But as he gave them no account of +it, he was instantly cut and pounded on his body with great +inhumanity, that he might be induced by the torture he suffered to +make the discovery. All this availed not the least to make him give +up his money, but he despised all the tortures which they inflicted, +until the continued exercise and increase of torment, obliged him to +sink and expire. He thus died without informing his enemies of the +place where his money lay. I saw him while he was thus tortured to +death. The shocking scene is to this day fresh in my mind, and I have +often been overcome while thinking on it. He was a man of remarkable +stature. I should judge as much as six feet and six or seven inches +high, two feet across his shoulders, and every way well proportioned. +He as a man of remarkable strength and resolution, affable, kind and +gentle, ruling with equity and moderation. +</p> + +<p> +The army of the enemy was large, I should suppose consisting of about +six thousand men. Their leader was called Baukurre. After destroying +the old prince, they decamped and immediately marched towards the sea, +lying to the west, taking with them myself and the women prisoners. +In the march a scouting party was detached from the main army. To the +leader of this party I was made waiter, having to carry his gun, &c. +As we were a scouting we came across a herd of fat cattle, consisting +of about thirty in number. These we set upon, and immediately wrested +from their keepers, and afterwards converted them into food for the +army. The enemy had remarkable success in destroying the country +wherever they went. For as far as they had penetrated, they laid the +habitations waste and captured the people. The distance they had now +brought me was about four hundred miles. All the march I had very +hard tasks imposed on me, which I must perform on pain of punishment. +I was obliged to carry on my head a large flat stone used for grinding +our corn, weighing as I should suppose, as much as 25 pounds; besides +victuals, mat and cooking utensils. Though I was pretty large and +stout of my age, yet these burthens were very grievous to me, being +only about six years and a half old. +</p> + +<p> +We were then come to a place called Malagafco. When we entered the +place we could not see the least appearance of either houses or +inhabitants, but upon stricter search found, that instead of houses +above ground they had dens in the sides of hillocks, contiguous to +ponds and streams of water. In these we perceived they had all hid +themselves, as I suppose they usually did upon such occasions. In +order to compel them to surrender, the enemy contrived to smoke them +out with faggots. These they put to the entrance of the caves and set +them on fire. While they were engaged in this business, to their +great surprise some of them were desperately wounded with arrows which +fell from above on them. This mystery they soon found out. They +perceived that the enemy discharged these arrows through holes on the +top of the dens directly in to the air. Their weight brought them +back, point downwards on their enemies heads, whilst they were smoking +the inhabitants out. The points of the arrows were poisoned, but +their enemy had an antidote for it, which they instantly applied to +the wounded part. The smoke at last obliged the people to give +themselves up. They came out of their caves, first spatting the palms +of their hands together, then and immediately after extended their +arms, crossed at their wrists, ready to be bound and pinioned. I +should judge that the dens above mentioned were extended about eight +feet horizontally into the earth, five feet in height and as many +wide. They were arched over head and lined with earth, which was of +the clay kind, and made the surface of their walls firm and smooth. +</p> + +<p> +The invaders then pinioned the prisoners of all ages and sexes +indiscriminately, took their flocks and all their effects, and moved +on their way towards the sea. On the march the prisoners were treated +with clemency, on account of their being submissive and humble. +Having come to the next tribe, the enemy laid siege and immediately +took men, women, children, flocks, and all their valuable effects. +They then went on to the next district which was contiguous with the +sea, called in Africa, Anamaboo. The enemies provisions were then +almost spent, as well as their strength. The inhabitants knowing what +kind of conduct they had pursued, and what were their present +intentions, improved the favorable opportunity, attacked them, and +took enemy, prisoners, flocks and all their effects. I was then taken +a second time. All of us were then put into the castle, and kept for +market. On a certain time I and other prisoners were put on board a +canoe, under our master, and rowed away to a vessel belonging to Rhode +Island, commanded by capt. Collingwood, and the mate Thomas Mumford. +While we were going to the vessel, our master told us all to appear to +the best possible advantage for sale. I was bought on board by one +Robertson Mumford, steward of said vessel, for four gallons of rum, +and a piece of calico, and called VENTURE, on account of his having +purchased me with his own private venture. Thus I came by my name. +All the slaves that were bought for that vessel's cargo, were two +hundred and sixty. +<br> +<br> +<br> +</p> + + +<a name="Chapter2"></a> +<h3 align="center">CHAPTER II.<br></h3> + +<p align="center"> +<i>Containing an account of his life, from the time of his leaving + Africa, to that of his becoming free.</i> +</p> + +<p> +After all the business was ended on the coast of Africa, the ship +sailed from thence to Barbadoes. After an ordinary passage, except +great mortality from small pox, which broke out on board, we arrived +at the island of Barbadoes: but when we reached it, there were found +out of the two hundred and sixty that sailed from Africa, not more +than two hundred alive. These were all sold, except for myself and +three more, to the planters there. +</p> + +<p> +The vessel then sailed for Rhode Island, and arrived there after a +comfortable passage. Here my master sent me to live with one of his +sisters, until he could carry me to Fisher's Island, the place of his +residence. I had then competed my eighth year. After staying with +his sister some time I was taken to my master's place to live. +</p> + +<p> +When we arrived at Narragansett, my master went ashore in order to +return a part of the way by land, and gave me the charge of the keys +of his trunks on board the vessel, and charged me not to deliver them +up to any body, not even to his father without his orders. To his +directions I promised faithfully to conform. When I arrived with my +master's articles at his house, my master's father asked me for his +son's keys, as he wanted to see what his trunks contained. I told him +that my master intrusted me with the care of them until he should +return, and that I had given him my word to be faithful to the trust, +and could not therefore give him or any other person the keys without +my master's directions. He insisted that I should deliver him the +keys, threatening to punish me if I did not. But I let him know that +he should not have them say what he would. He then laid aside trying +to get them. But notwithstanding he appeared to give up trying to +obtain them from me, yet I mistrusted that he would take some time +when I was off my guard, either in the day time or at night to get +them, therefore I slung them around my neck, and in the day concealed +them in my bosom, and at night I always lay with them under me, that +no person might take them from me without being apprized of it. Thus +I kept the keys from every body until my master came home. When he +returned he asked where VENTURE was. As I was then within hearing, I +came, said, here sir, at your service. He asked me for his keys, and +I immediately took them off my neck and reached them out to him. He +took them, stroked my hair, and commended me, saying in presence of +his father that his young VENTURE was so faithful that he would never +have been able to have taken the keys from him but by violence; that +he should not fear to trust him with his whole fortune, for that he +had been in his native place so habituated to keeping his word, that +he would sacrifice even his life to maintain it. +</p> + +<p> +The first of the time of living at my master's own place, I was pretty +much employed in the house at carding wool and other household +business. In this situation I continued for some years, after which +my master put me to work out of doors. After many proofs of my +faithfulness and honesty, my master began to put great confidence in +me. My behavior to him had as yet been submissive and obedient. I +then began to have hard tasks imposed on me. Some of these were to +pound four bushels of ears of corn every night in a barrel for the +poultry, or be rigorously punished. At other seasons of the year I +had to card wool until a very late hour. These tasks I had to perform +when I was about nine years old. Some time after I had another +difficulty and oppression which was greater than any I had ever +experienced since I came into this country. This was to serve two +masters. James Mumford, my master's son, when his father had gone +from home in the morning, and given me a stint to perform that day, +would order me to do <i>this</i> and <i>that</i> business different from what my +master directed me. One day in particular, the authority which my +master's son had set up, had like to have produce melancholy effects. +For my master having set me off my business to perform that day and +then left me to perform it, his son came up to me in the course of the +day, big with authority, and and commanded me very arrogantly to quit +my present business and go directly about what he should order me. I +replied to him that my master had given me so much to perform that +day, and that I must therefore faithfully complete it in that time. +He then broke out in a great rage, snatched a pitchfork and went to +lay me over the head therewith; but I as soon got another and defended +myself with it, or otherwise he might have murdered me in his outrage. +He immediately called some people who were hearing at work for him, +and ordered them to take his hair rope and and come and bind me with +it. They all tried to bind me but in vain, tho' there were three +assistants in number. My upstart master than desisted, put his pocket +handkerchief before his eyes and went home with a design to tell his +mother of the struggle with young VENTURE. He told her that their +young VENTURE had become so stubborn that he could not controul him, +and asked her what he should do with him. In the mean time I +recovered my temper, voluntarily caused myself to be bound by the same +men who tried in vain before, and carried before my young master, that +he might do what he pleased with me. He took me to a gallows made for +the purpose of hanging cattle on, and suspended me on it. Afterwards +he ordered one of his hands to go to the peach orchard and cut him +three dozens of whips to punish me with. These were brought to him, +and that was all that was done with them, as I was released and went +to work after hanging on the gallows about an hour. +</p> + +<p> +After I lived with my master thirteen years, being then about twenty +two years old, I married Meg, a slave of his who was about my age. My +master owned a certain Irishman, named Heddy, who about that time +formed a plan of secretly leaving his master. After he had long had +this plan in meditation he suggested it to me. At first I cast a deaf +ear on it, and rebuked Heddy for harboring in his mind such a rash +undertaking. But after he had persuaded and much enchanted me with +the prospect of gaining my freedom with such a method, I at length +agreed to accompany him. Heddy next inveigled two of his fellow +servants to accompany us. The place to which we designed to go was +the Mississippi. Our next business was to lay in a sufficient store +of provisions for our voyage. We privately collected out of our +master's store, six great old cheeses, two firkins of butter, and one +whole batch of new bread. When we had gathered all our own clothes +and some more, we took them all about midnight, and went to the water +side. We stole our master's boat, embarked, then directed our course +for the Mississippi river. +</p> + +<p> +We mutually confederated not to betray or desert one another on pain +of death. We first steered our course for Montauk point, the east end +of Long-Island. After our arrival there we landed, and Heddy and I +made an incursion into the island after fresh water, while our two +comrades were left at a little distance from the boat, employed at +cooking. When Heddy and I had sought some time for water, he returned +to our companions, and I continued on looking for my object. When +Heddy had performed his business with our companions, who were engaged +in cooking, he went directly to the boat, stole all the clothes in it, +and then travelled away for East-Hampton, as I was informed. I +returned to my fellows not long after. They informed me that our +clothes were stolen, but could not determine who was the thief, yet +they suspected Heddy as he was missing. After reproving my two +comrades for not taking care of our things which were in the boat, I +advertised Heddy and sent two men in search of him. They pursued and +overtook him at Southampton and returned him to the boat. I then +thought it might afford some chance for my freedom, or at least a +palliation for my running away, to return Heddy immediately to his +master, and inform him that I was induced to go away by Heddy's +address. Accordingly I set off with him and the rest of my companions +for our master's, and arrived there without any difficulty. I +informed my master that Heddy was the ringleader of our revolt, and +that he had used us ill. He immediately put Heddy into custody, and +myself and companions were well received and went to work as usual. +</p> + +<p> +Not a long time passed after that, before Heddy was sent by my master +to New-London gaol. At the close of that year I was sold to a Thomas +Stanton, and had to be separated from my wife and one daughter, who +was about one month old. He resided at Stonington-point. To this +place I brought with me from my last master's, two johannes, three old +Spanish dollars, and two thousand of coppers, besides five pounds of +my wife's money. This money I got by cleaning gentlemen's shoes and +drawing boots, by catching musk-rats and minks, raising potatoes and +carrots, &c. and by fishing in the night, and at odd spells. +</p> + +<p> +All this money amounting to near twenty-one pounds York currency, my +master's brother, Robert Stanton, hired of me, for which he gave me +his note. About one year and a half after that time, my master +purchased my wife and and her child, for severn hundred pounds old +tenor. One time my master sent me two miles after a barrel of +molasses, and ordered me to carry it on my shoulders. I made out to +carry it all the way to my master's house. When I lived with Captain +George Mumford, only to try my strength, I took up on my knees a +tierce of salt containing seven bushels, and carried it two or three +rods. Of this fact there are several eye witnesses now living. +</p> + +<p> +Towards the close of the time that I resided with this master, I had a +falling out with my mistress. This happened one time when my master +was gone to Long-Island a gunning. At first the quarrel began between +my wife and her mistress. I was then at work in the barn, and hearing +a racket in the house, induced me to run there and see what had broken +out. When I entered the house, I found my mistress in a violent +passion with my wife, for what she informed me was a mere trifle; such +a small affair that I forbear to put my mistress to the shame of +having it known. I earnestly requested my wife to beg pardon of her +mistress for the sake of peace even if she had given no just occasion +for offence. But whilst I was thus saying my mistress turned the +blows which she was repeating on my wife to me. She took down her +horse-whip, and while she was glutting her fury with it, I reached out +my great black hand, raised it up and received the blows of the whip +on it which were designed for my head. Then I immediately committed +the whip to the devouring fire. +</p> + +<p> +When my master returned from the island, his wife told him of the +affair, but for the present he seemed to take no notice of it, and +mentioned not a word of it to me. Some days after his return, in the +morning as I was putting on a log in the fire-place, not suspecting +harm from any one, I received a most violent stroke on the crown of my +head with a club two feet long and and as large around as a +chair-post. This blow very badly wounded my head, and the scar of it +remains to this day. The first blow made me have my wits about me as +you may suppose, for as soon as he went to renew it, I snatched the +club out of his hands and dragged him out of the door. He then sent +for his brother to come and assist him, but I presently left my +master, took the club he wounded me with, carried it to a neighboring +Justice of the Peace, and complained of my master. He finally advised +me to return to my master, and live contented with him until he abused +me again, and then complain. I consented to do accordingly. But +before I set out for my master's, up he come and his brother Robert +after me. The Justice improved this convenient opportunity to caution +my master. He asked him for what he treated his slave thus hastily +and unjustly, and told him what would be the consequence if he +continued the same treatment towards me. After the Justice had ended +his discourse with my master, he and his brother set out with me for +home, one before and the other behind me. When they had come to a bye +place, they both dismounted their respective horses, and fell to +beating me with great violence. I became enraged at this and +immediately turned them both under me, laid one of them across the +other, and stamped both with my feet what I would. +</p> + +<p> +This occasioned my master's brother to advise him to put me off. A +short time after this I was taken by a constable and two men. They +carried me to a black-smith's shop and had me hand-cuffed. When I +returned home my mistress enquired much of her waiters, whether +VENTURE was hand-cuffed. When she was informed that I was, she +appeared to be very contented and was much transported with the news. +In the midst of all this content and joy, I presented myself before my +mistress, shewed her my hand-cuffs, and gave her thanks for my gold +rings. For this my master commanded a negro of his to fetch him a +large ox chain. This my master locked on my legs with two padlocks. +I continued to wear the chain peaceably for two or three days, when my +master asked me with contemptuous hard names whether I had not better +be freed from my chains and go to work. I answered him, No. Well +then, said he, I will send you to the West-Indies or banish you, for I +am resolved not to keep you. I answered him I crossed the waters to +come here, and I am willing to cross them to return. +</p> + +<p> +For a day or two after this not any one said much to me, until one +Hempsted Miner, of Stonington, asked me if I would live with him. I +answered him that I would. He then requested me to make myself +discontented and to appear as unreconciled to my master as I could +before that he bargained with him for me; and that in return he would +give me a good chance to gain my freedom when I came to live with him. +I did as he requested me. Not long after Hempsted Miner purchased me +of my master for fifty-six pounds lawful. He took the chain and +padlocks off me immediately after. +</p> + +<p> +It may here be remembered, that I related a few pages back, that I +hired out a sum of money to Mr. Robert Stanton, and took his note for +it. In the fray between my master Stanton and myself, he broke open +my chest containing his brother's note to me, and destroyed it. +Immediately after my present master bought me, he determined to sell +me at Hartford. As soon as I became apprized of it, I bethought +myself that I would secure a certain sum of money which lay by me, +safer than to hire it out to Stanton. Accordingly I buried it in the +earth, a little distance from Thomas Stanton's, in the road over which +he passed daily. A short time after my master carried me to Hartford, +and first proposed to sell me to one William Hooker of that place. +Hooker asked whether I would go to the German Flats with him. I +answered, No. He said I should, if not by fair means I should by +foul. If you will go by no other measures, I will tie you down in my +sleigh. I replied to him, that if he carried me in that manner, no +person would purchase me, for it would be thought that he had a +murderer for sale. After this he tried no more, and said he would not +have me as a gift. +</p> + +<p> +My master next offered me to Daniel Edwards, Esq. of Hartford, for +sale. But not purchasing me, my master pawned me to him for ten +pounds, and returned to Stonington. After some trial of my honesty, +Mr. Edwards placed considerable trust and confidence in me. He put me +to serve as his cup-bearer and waiter. When there was company at his +house, he would send me into his cellar and other parts of his house +to fetch wine and other articles occasionally for them. When I had +been with him for some time, he asked me why my master wished to part +with such an honest negro, and why he did not keep me himself. I +replied that I could not give him the reason, unless it was to convert +me into cash, and speculate with me as with other commodities. I hope +he can never justly say it was on account of my ill conduct that he +did no keep me himself. Mr Edwards told me that he should be very +willing to keep me himself, and that he would never let me go from him +to live, if it was not unreasonable and inconvenient for me to be +parted from my wife and children; therefore he would furnish me with a +horse to return to Stonington, if I had a mind for it. As Miner did +not appear to redeem me I went, at called at my old master Stanton's +first to see my wife, who was then owned by him. As my old master +appeared much ruffled at my being there, I left my wife before I had +spent considerable time with her, and went to Colonel O. Smith's. +Miner had not as yet wholly settled with Stanton for me, and had +before my return from Hartford given Col. Smith a bill of sale for me. +These men once met to determine which of them should hold me, and upon +my expressing a desire to be owned by Col. Smith, and upon my master's +settling the remainder of the money which was due Stanton for me, it +was agreed that I should live with Col. Smith. This was the third +time of my being sold, and I was then thirty-one years old. As I +never had an opportunity of redeeming myself whilst I was owned by +Miner, though he promised to give me a chance, I was then very +ambitious of obtaining it. I asked my master one time if he would +consent to have me purchase my freedom. He replied that he would. I +was then very happy, knowing that I was at that time able to pay part +of the purchase money, by means of the money which I some time since +buried. This I took out of the earth and tendered to my master, +having previously engaged a free negro man to take take his security +for it, as I was the property of my master, and therefore could not +safely take his obligation myself. What was wanted in redeeming +myself, my master agreed to wait on me for, until I could procure it +for him. I still continued to work for Col. Smith. Ther was +continually some interest accruing on my master's note to my friend +the free negro man above named, which I received, and with some +besides which I got by fishing, I laid out in land adjoining my old +master Stanton's. By cultivating this land with the greatest +diligence and economy, at times when my master did not require my +labor, in two years I laid up ten pounds. This my friend tendered to +my master for myself, and received his note for it. +</p> + +<p> +Being encouraged by the success which I had met in redeeming myself, I +again solicited my master for a further chance of completing it. The +chance for which I solicited him was that of going out to work the +ensuing winter. He agreed to this on condition that I would give him +one quarter of my earnings. On these terms I worked the following +winter, and earned four pounds sixteen shillings, one quarter of which +went to my master for the privilege, and the rest was paid him on my +own account. This added to the other payments made up forty four +pounds, eight shillings, which I had paid on my own account. I was +then about thirty five years old. +</p> + +<p> +The next summer I again desired he would give me a chance of going out +to work. But he refused and answered that he must have my labor this +summer, as he did not have it the past winter. I replied that I +considered it as hard that I could not have a chance to work out when +the season became advantageous, and that I must only be permitted to +hire myself out in the poorest season of the year. He asked me after +this what I would give for the privilege per month. I replied that I +would leave it wholly with his own generosity to determine what I +should return him a month. Well then, said he, if so two pounds a +month. I answered him that if that was the least he would take I +would be contented. +</p> + +<p> +Accordingly, I hired myself out at Fisher's Island, and earned twenty +pounds; thirteen pounds six shillings of which my master drew for the +privilege, and the remainder I paid him for my freedom. This made +fifty-one pounds two shillings which I paid him. In October following +I went and wrought six months at Long Island. In that six months' +time I cut and corded four hundred cords of wood, besides threshing +out seventy-five bushels of grain, and received of my wages down only +twenty pounds, which left remaining a larger sum. Whilst I was out +that time, I took upon my wages only one pair of shoes. At night I +lay upon the hearth, with one coverlet over and another under me. I +returned to my master and gave him what I received on my six months +labor. This left only thirteen pounds eighteen shillings to make up +the full sum for my redemption. My master liberated me, saying I +might pay what was behind if I could ever make it convenient, +otherwise it would be well. The amount of the money which I had paid +my master towards redeeming my time, was seventy-one pounds two +shillings. The reason of my master for asking such an unreasonable +price, was he said, to secure himself in case I should ever come to +want. Being thirty-six years old, I left Col. Smith once for all. I +had already been sold three different times, made considerable money +with seemingly nothing to derive it from, been cheated out of a large +sum of money, lost much by misfortunes, and paid an enormous sum for +my freedom. +</p> + +<a name="Chapter3"></a> +<h3 align="center">CHAPTER III.<br></h3> + +<p align="center"> +<i>Containing an account of his life, from the time of his purchasing his + freedom to the present day.</i> +</p> + +<p> +My wife and children were yet in bondage to Mr. Thomas Stanton. About +this time I lost a chest, containing besides clothing, about thirty-eight +pounds in paper money. It was burnt by accident. A short time +after I sold all my possessions at Stonington, consisting of a pretty +piece of land and one dwelling house thereon, and went to reside at +Long-Island. For the first four years of my residence there, I spent +my time in working for various people on that and at the neighboring +islands. I the space of six months I cut and corded upwards of four +hundred cords of wood. Many other singular and wonderful labors I +performed in cutting wood there, which would not be inferior to those +just recited, but for brevity sake I must omit them. In the +aforementioned four years what wood I cut at Long-Island amounted to +several thousand cords, and the money which I earned thereby amounted +to two hundred and seven pounds ten shillings. This money I laid up +carefully by me. Perhaps some may enquire what maintained me all the +time I was laying up money. I would inform them that I bought nothing +which I did not absolutely want. All fine clothes I despised in +comparison with my interest, and never kept but just what clothes were +comfortable for common days, and perhaps I would have a garment or two +which I did not have on at all times, but as for superfluous finery I +never thought it to be compared with a decent homespun dress, a good +supply of money and prudence. Expensive gatherings of my mates I +commonly shunned, and all kinds of luxuries I was perfectly a stranger +to; and during the time I was employed in cutting the aforementioned +quantity of wood, I never was at the expense of six-pence worth of +spirits. Being after this labor forty years of age, I worked at +various places, and in particular on Ram-Island, which I purchased +Solomon and Cuff, two sons of mine, for two hundred dollars each. +</p> + +<p> +It will here be remembered how much money I earned by cutting wood in +four years. Besides this I had considerable money, amounting in all +to near three hundred pounds. After this I purchased a negro man, for +no other reason than to oblige him, and gave him sixty pounds. But in +a short time after he run away from me, and I thereby lost all that I +gave for him, except twenty pounds which he paid me previous to his +absconding. The rest of my money I laid out in land, in addition to a +farm which I owned before, and a dwelling house thereon. Forty four +years had then completed their revolution since my entrance in to this +existence of servitude and misfortune. Solomon my eldest son, being +then in his seventeenth year, and all my hope and dependence for help, +I hired him out to one Charles Church, of Rhode Island, for one year, +on consideration of his giving him twelve pounds and an opportunity of +acquiring some learning. In the course of the year, Church fitted out +a vessel for a whaling voyage, and being in want of hands to man her, +he induced my son to go, with the promise of giving him, on his +return, a pair of silver buckles, besides his wages. As soon as I +heard of his going to sea, I immediately set out to go and prevent it +if possible. But on my arrival at Church's, to my great grief, I +could only see the vessel my son was on almost out of sight going to +sea. My son died of the scurvy on this voyage, and Church has never +yet paid me the least of his wages. In my son, besides the loss of +his life, I lost equal to seventy-five pounds. +</p> + +<p> +My other son being but a youth, still lived with me. About this time +I chartered a sloop of about thirty tons burthen, and hired men to +assist me in navigating her. I employed her mostly in the wood trade +to Rhode-Island, and made clear of all expenses above one hundred +dollars with her in better than one year. I had then become something +forehanded, and being in my forty-fourth year, I purchased my wife +Meg, and thereby prevented having another child to buy, as she was +then pregnant. I gave forty pounds for her. +</p> + +<p> +During my residence at Long-Island, I raised one year with another, +ten cart loads of water-melons, and lost a great many every year +besides by the thievishness of the sailors. What I made by the +water-melons I sold there, amounted to nearly five hundred dollars. +Various other methods I in order to enable me to redeem my family. +In the night-time I fished with set-nets and pots for eels and lobsters, +and shortly after went a whaling voyage in the service of Col. Smith. +After being seven months, the vessel returned, laden with four hundred +barrels of oil. About this time, I became possessed of another +dwelling-house, and my temporal affairs were in a pretty prosperous +condition. This and my industry was what alone saved me from being +expelled that part of the island in which I resided, as an act was +passed by the select-men of the place, that all negroes residing there +should be expelled. +</p> + +<p> +Next after my wife, I purchased a negro man for four hundred dollars. +But he having an inclination to return to his old master, I therefore +let him go. Shortly after I purchased another negro man for twenty-five +pounds, who I parted with shortly after. +</p> + +<p> +Being about forty-six years old, I bought my oldest child Hannah, of +Ray Mumford, for forty-four pounds, and she still resided with him. I +had already redeemed from slavery, myself, my wife and three children, +besides three negro men. +</p> + +<p> +About the forty-seventh year of my life, I disposed all my property at +Long-Island, and came from thence into East-Haddam. I hired myself +out at first to Timothy Chapman, for five weeks, the earnings of which +time I put carefully by me. After this I wrought for Abel Bingham +about six weeks. I then put my money together and purchased of said +Bingham ten acres of land, lying at Haddam neck, where I now reside. +On this land I labored with great diligence for two years, and shortly +after purchased six acres more of land contiguous to my other. One +year from that time I purchased seventy acres more of the same man, +and paid for it mostly with the produce of my other land. Soon after +I bought this lot of land, I set up a comfortable dwelling house on my +farm, and built it from the produce thereof. Shortly after I had much +trouble and expense with my daughter Hannah, whose name has before +been mentioned in this account. She was married soon after I redeemed +her, to one Isaac, a free negro, and shortly after her marriage fell +sick of a mortal disease; her husband a dissolute and abandoned +wretch, paid but little attention to her in her illness. I therefore +thought it best to bring her to my house and nurse her there. I +procured her all the aid mortals could afford, but notwithstanding +this she fell a prey to her disease, after a lingering and painful +endurance of it. +</p> + +<p> +The physician's bills for attending her during her illness amounted to +forty pounds. Having reached my fifty-fourth year, I hired two negro +men, one named William Jacklin, and the other Mingo. Mingo lived with +me one year, and having received his wages, run in debt to me eight +dollars, for which he gave me his note. I procured a warrant, took +him, and requested him to go to Justice Throop's of his own accord, +but he refusing, I took him on my shoulders, and carried him there, +distant about two miles. The justice asking me if I had my prisoner's +note with me, and replying that I had not, he told me that I must +return with him and get it. Accordingly I carried Mingo back on my +shoulders, but before we arrived at my dwelling, he complained of +being hurt, and asked me if this was not a hard way of treating our +fellow creatures. I answered him that it would be hard thus to treat +our honest fellow creatures. He then told me that if I would let him +off my shoulders, he had a pair of silver shoe-buckles, one shirt and +a pocket handkerchief, which he would turn out to me. I agreed, and +let him return home with me on foot; but the very following night, he +slipped from me, stole my horse and has never paid me even his note. +The other negro man, Jacklin, being a comb-maker by trade, he +requested me to set him up, and promised to reward me well with his +labor. Accordingly I bought him a set of tools for making combs, and +procured him stock. He worked at my house about one year, and then +run away from me with all his combs, and owed me for all his board. +</p> + +<p> +Since my residence at Haddam neck, I have owned of boats, canoes and +sail vessels, not less than twenty. These I mostly employed in the +fishing and trafficking business, and in these occupations I have been +cheated out of considerable money by people whom I traded with taking +advantage of my ignorance of numbers. +</p> + +<p> +About twelve years ago, I hired a whale-boat and four black men, and +proceeded to Long-Island after a load of round clams. Having arrived +there, I first purchased of James Webb, son of Orange Webb, six +hundred and sixty clams, and afterwards, with the help of my men, +finished loading my boat. The same evening, however, this Webb stole +my boat, and went in her to Connecticut river, and sold her cargo for +his own benefit. I thereupon pursued him, and at length, after an +additional expence of nine crowns, recovered the boat; but for the +proceeds of her cargo I never could obtain any compensation. +</p> + +<p> +Four years after, I met with another loss, far superior to this in +value, and I think by no less wicked means. Being going to New-London +with a grand-child, I took passage on an Indian's boat, and went there +with him. On our return, the Indian took on board two hogsheads of +molasses, one of which belonged to Capt. Elisha Hart, of Saybrook, to +be delivered to his wharf. When we arrived there, and while I was +gone, at the request of the Indian, to inform Captain Hart of his +arrival, and receive the freight for him, one hogshead of the molasses +had been lost overboard by the people in attempting to land it on the +wharf. Although I was absent at the time, and had no concern whatever +in the business, and was known to a number of respectable witnesses, I +was nevertheless persecuted by this conscientious gentleman, (the +Indian not being able to pay for it) and obliged to pay upwards of ten +pounds lawful money, with all the costs of court. I applied to +several gentlemen for counsel in this affair, and they advised me, as +my adversary was rich, and threatened to carry the matter from court +to court till it would cost me more than the first damages would be, +to pay the sum and submit to the injury; which I accordingly did, and +he has often since insultingly taunted me with my unmerited +misfortune. Such a proceeding as this, committed on a defenseless +stranger, almost worn out in the hard service of the world, without +any foundation in reason or justice, whatever it may be called in a +christian land, would in my native country be branded a crime equal to +highway robbery. But Captain Hart was a <i>white gentleman</i>, and I a +<i>poor African,</i> and therefore it was <i>all right, and good enough for +the black dog.</i> +</p> + +<p> +I am now sixty nine years old. Though once straight and tall, +measuring without shoes six feet one inch and an half, and every way +well proportioned, I am now bowed down with age and hardship. My +strength which was once equal if not superior to any man whom I have +ever seen, is now enfeebled so that life is a burden, and it is with +fatigue that I can walk a couple of miles, stooping over my staff. +Other griefs are still behind; on account of which some aged people, +at least, will pity me. My eye-sight has gradually failed, till I am +almost blind, and whenever I go abroad one of my grand-children must +direct my way; besides for many years I have been much pained and +troubled with an ulcer on one of my legs. But amidst all my griefs and +pains, I have many consolations; Meg, the wife of my youth, whom I +married for love, and bought with my money, is still alive. My +freedom is a privilege which nothing else can equal. Notwithstanding +all the losses I have suffered by fire, by the injustice of knaves, by +the cruelty and oppression of false-hearted friends, and the perfidy +of my own countrymen whom I have assisted and redeemed from bondage, I +am no possessed of more than two hundred acres of land, and three +habitable dwelling houses. I gives me joy to think that I <i>have</i> and +that I <i>deserve</i> so good a character, especially for <i>truth</i> and +<i>integrity.</i> While I am now looking to the grave as my home, my joy +for this world would be full&mdash;IF my children, Cuff for whom I paid two +hundred dollars when a boy, and Solomon who was born soon after I +purchased his mother&mdash;If Cuff and Solomon&mdash;O! that they had walked the +way of their father. But a father's lips are closed in silence and +grief! Vanity of vanities, all is vanity! +</p> + +<p align="center"> + F I N I S. +<br> +<br> +<br> +<br> +<br> +</p> + + +<a name="certificate"></a> +<h3 align="center"> +CERTIFICATE. +<br> +</h3> + +<p align="center"> +Stonington, November 3, 1798. +</p> + +<p> +These certify that VENTURE, a free negro man, aged about 69 years, and +was, as we have ever understood, a native of Africa, and formerly a +slave to Mr. James Mumford, of Fisher's-Island, in the state of New-York, +who sold him to Mr. Robert Stanton, 2d, of Stonington, in the +state of Connecticut, and said Stanton sold said VENTURE to Col. +Oliver Smith, of the aforesaid place. That said VENTURE hath +sustained the character of a faithful servant, and that of a +temperate, honest and industrious man, and being ever intent on +obtaining his freedom, he was indulged by his masters after the +ordinary labour on the days of his servitude, to improve the nights in +fishing and other employments of his own emolument, in which time he +procured so much money as to purchase his freedom from his late master +Col. Smith; after which he took upon himself the name of VENTURE +SMITH, and has since his freedom purchased a negro woman, called Meg, +to whom he was previously married, and also his children who were +slaves, and said VENTURE has since removed himself and family to the +town of East-Haddam, in this state, where he has purchased lands on +which he hath built a house, and there taken up his abode. +</p> + +<p align="right"> + NATHAN MINOR, Esq.<br> + ELIJAH PALMER, Esq.<br> + Capt. AMOS PALMER,<br> + ACORS SHEFFIELD,<br> + EDWARD SMITH. +</p> +<br> +<br> +<hr> +<br> +<br> +<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A NARRATIVE OF THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF VENTURE, A NATIVE OF AFRICA, BUT RESIDENT ABOVE SIXTY YEARS IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, RELATED BY HIMSELF***</p> +<p>******* This file should be named 10075-h.txt or 10075-h.zip *******</p> +<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br /> +<a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/0/7/10075">https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/0/7/10075</a></p> +<p>Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed.</p> + +<p>Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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For +example an eBook of filename 10234 would be found at: + +https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/2/3/10234 + +or filename 24689 would be found at: +https://www.gutenberg.org/2/4/6/8/24689 + +An alternative method of locating eBooks: +<a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/GUTINDEX.ALL">https://www.gutenberg.org/GUTINDEX.ALL</a> + +*** END: FULL LICENSE *** +</pre> +</body> +</html> diff --git a/old/10075.txt b/old/10075.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..384d97b --- /dev/null +++ b/old/10075.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1339 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Narrative of the Life and Adventures of +Venture, a Native of Africa, But Resident above Sixty Years in the United +States of America, Related by Himself, by Venture Smith + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: A Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Venture, a Native of +Africa, But Resident above Sixty Years in the United States of America, +Related by Himself + +Author: Venture Smith + +Release Date: November 13, 2003 [eBook #10075] + +Language: English + +Chatacter set encoding: US-ASCII + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A NARRATIVE OF THE LIFE AND +ADVENTURES OF VENTURE, A NATIVE OF AFRICA, BUT RESIDENT ABOVE SIXTY YEARS +IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, RELATED BY HIMSELF*** + + +E-text produced by Martin Schub + + + +A NARRATIVE OF THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES + +OF VENTURE, A NATIVE OF AFRICA, + +But resident above sixty years in the United States of America. + +RELATED BY HIMSELF. + +VENTURE SMITH + +New London, 1798 + + + + + + + +PREFACE + +The following account of the life of VENTURE, is a relation of simple +facts, in which nothing is in substance to what he relates himself. +Many other interesting and curious passages of his life might have +been inserted, but on account of the bulk to which they must +necessarily have swelled this narrative, they were omitted. If any +should suspect the truth of what is here related, they are referred to +people now living who are acquainted with most of the facts mentioned +in this narrative. + +The reader is here presented with an account, not of a renowned +politician or warrior, but of an untutored African slave, brought into +this Christian country at eight years of age, wholly destitute of all +education but what he received in common with other domesticated +animals, enjoying no advantages that could lead him to suppose himself +superior to the beasts, his fellow servants. And if he shall enjoy no +other advantage from perusing this narrative, he may experience those +sensations of shame and indignation, that will prove him to be not +wholly destitute of every noble and generous feeling. + +The subject of the following pages, had he received only a common +education, might have been a man of high respectability and +usefulness; and had his education been suited to his genius, he might +have been an ornament and an honor to human nature. It may perhaps, +not be unpleasing to see the efforts of a great mind wholly +uncultivated, enfeebled and depressed by slavery, and struggling under +every disadvantage. The reader may here see a Franklin and a +Washington, in a state of nature, or rather, in a state of slavery. +Destitute as he is of all education, he still exhibits striking traces +of native ingenuity and good sense. + +This narrative exhibits a pattern of honesty, prudence, and industry, +to people of his own colour; and perhaps some white people would not +find themselves degraded by imitating such an example. + +The following account is published in compliance with the earnest +desire of the subject of it, and likewise a number of respectable +persons who are acquainted with him. + + +CHAPTER I. + +_Containing an account of his life, from his birth to the time of his + leaving his native country._ + +I was born at Dukandarra, in Guinea, about the year 1729. My father's +name was Saungm Furro, Prince of the Tribe of Dukandarra. My father +had three wives. Polygamy was not uncommon in that country, +especially among the rich, as every man was allowed to keep as many +wives as he could maintain. By his first wife he had three children. +The eldest of them was myself, named by my father Broteer. The other +two were named Cundazo and Soozaduka. My father had two children by +his second wife, and one by his third. I descended from a very large, +tall and stout race of beings, much larger than the generality of +people in other parts of the globe, being commonly considerably above +six feet in height, and in every way well proportioned. + +The first thing worthy of notice which I remember was, a contention +between my father and mother, on account of my father's marrying his +third wife without the consent of his first and eldest, which was +contrary to the custom generally observed among my countrymen. In +consequence of this rupture, my mother left her husband and country, +and travelled away with her three children to the eastward. I was +then five years old. She took not the least sustenance along with +her, to support either herself or children. I was able to travel +along by her side; the other two of her offspring she carried one on +her back, and the other being a sucking child, in her arms. When we +became hungry, my mother used to set us down on the ground, and gather +some of the fruits which grew spontaneously in that climate. These +served us for food on the way. At night we all lay down together in +the most secure place we could find, and reposed ourselves until +morning. Though there were many noxious animals there; yet so kind +was our Almighty protector, that none of them were ever permitted to +hurt or molest us. Thus we went on our journey until the second day +after our departure from Dukandarra, when we came to the entrance of a +great desert. During our travel in that we were often affrighted with +the doleful howlings and yellings of wolves, lions, and other animals. +After five days travel we came to the end of this desert, and +immediately entered into a beautiful and extensive interval country. +Here my mother was pleased to stop and seek a refuge for me. She left +me at the house of a very rich farmer. I was then, I should judge, +not less than one hundred forty miles from my native place, separated +from all my relations and acquaintance. At this place my mother took +her farewell of me, and set out for her own country. My new guardian, +as I shall call the man with whom I was left, put me into the business +of tending sheep, immediately after I was left with him. The flock +which I kept with the assistance of a boy, consisted of about forty. +We drove them every morning between two and three miles to pasture, +into the wide and delightful plains. When night drew on, we drove +them home and secured them in the cote. In this round I continued +during my stay there. One incident that befel me when I was driving +my flock from pasture, was so dreadful to me at that age, and is to +this time fresh in my memory, that I cannot help noticing it in this +place. Two large dogs sallied out of a certain house and set upon me. +One of them took me by the arm, and the other by the thigh, and before +their master could come and relieve me, they lacerated my flesh to +such a degree, that the scars are very visible to the present day. My +master was immediately sent for. He came and carried me home, as I +was unable to go myself on account of my wounds. Nothing remarkable +happened afterwards until my father sent for me to return home. + +Before I dismiss this country, I must just inform my reader what I +remember concerning this place. A large river runs through this +country in a westerly course. The land for a great way on each side +is flat and level, hedged in by a considerable rise of the country at +a great distance from it. It scarce ever rains there, yet the land is +fertile; great dews fall in the night which refresh the soil. About +the latter end of June or first of July, the river begins to rise, and +gradually increases until it has inundated the country for a great +distance, to a height of seven or eight feet. This brings on a slime +which enriches the land surprisingly. When the river has subsided, +the natives begin to sow and plant, and the vegetation is exceedingly +rapid. Near this rich river my guardian's land lay. He possessed, I +cannot tell exactly how much, yet this I am certain of respecting it, +that he owned an immense tract. He possessed likewise a great many +cattle and goats. During my stay with him I was kindly used, and with +as much tenderness, for what I saw, as his only son, although I was an +entire stranger to him, remote from friends and relations. The +principal occupation of the inhabitants there, were the cultivation of +the soil and the care of their flocks. They were a people pretty +similar in every respect to that of mine, except in their persons, +which were not so tall and stout. They appeared to be very kind and +friendly. I will now return to my departure from that place. + +My father sent a man and horse after me. After settling with my +guardian for keeping me, he took me away and went for home. It was +then about one year since my mother brought me here. Nothing +remarkable occured to us on our journey until we arrived safe home. + +I found then that the difference between my parents had been made up +previous to their sending for me. On my return, I was received both +by my father and mother with great joy and affection, and was once +more restored to my paternal dwelling in peace and happiness. I was +then about six years old. + +Not more than six weeks had passed after my return, before a message +was brought by an inhabitant of the place where I lived the preceding +year to my father, that that place had been invaded by a numerous +army, from a nation not far distant, furnished with musical +instruments, and all kinds of arms then in use; that they were +instigated by some white nation who equipped and sent them to subdue +and possess the country, that his nation had made no preparation for +war, having been for a long time in profound peace that they could not +defend themselves against such a formidable train of invaders, and +must therefore necessarily evacuate their lands to the fierce enemy, +and fly to the protection of some chief; and that if he would permit +them they should come under his rule and protection when they had to +retreat from their own possessions. He was a kind and merciful +prince, and therefore consented to these proposals. + +He had scarcely returned to his nation with the message, before the +whole of his people were obliged to retreat from their country, and +come to my fathers dominions. + +He gave them every privilege and all the protection his government +could afford. But they had not been there longer than four days +before news came to them that the invaders had laid waste their +country, and were coming speedily to destroy them in my father's +territories. This affrighted them, and therefore they immediately +pushed off to the southward, into the unknown countries there, and +were never more heard of. + +Two days after their retreat, the report turned out to be but too +true. A detachment of the enemy came to my father and informed him, +that the whole army was encamped not far out of his dominions, and +would invade the territory and deprive his people of their liberties +and rights, if he did not comply with the following terms. These were +to pay them a large sum of money, three hundred fat cattle, and a +great number of goats, sheep, asses, &c. + +My father told the messenger that he would comply rather than that his +subjects should be deprived of their rights and privileges, which he +was not then in circumstances to defend from so sudden an invasion. +Upon turning out those articles, the enemy pledged their faith and +honor that they would not attack him. On these he relied and +therefore thought it unnecessary to be on his guard against the enemy. +But their pledges of faith and honor proved no better than those of +other unprincipled hostile nations; for a few days after a certain +relation of the king came and informed him, that the enemy who sent +terms of accommodation to him, and received tribute to their +satisfaction, yet meditated an attack on his subjects by surprise, and +that probably they would commence their attack in less than one day, +and concluded with advising him, as he was not prepared for war, to +order a speedy retreat of his family and subjects. He complied with +this advice. + +The same night which was fixed upon to retreat, my father and his +family set off about break of day. The king and his two younger wives +went in one company, and my mother and her children in another. We +left our dwellings in succession, and my father's company went on +first. We directed our course for a large shrub plain, some distance +off, where we intended to conceal ourselves from the approaching +enemy, until we could refresh and rest ourselves a little. But we +presently found that our retreat was not secure. For having struck up +a little fire for purposes of cooking victuals, the enemy who happened +to be encamped a little distance off, had sent out a scouting party +which discovered us by the smoke of the fire, just as we were +extinguishing it and about to eat. As soon as we had finished eating, +my father discovered the party, and immediately began to discharge +arrows at them. This was what I first saw, and it alarmed both me and +the women, who being unable to make any resistance, immediately betook +ourselves to the tall thick reeds not far off, and left the old king +to fight alone. For some time, I beheld him from the reeds defending +himself with great courage and firmness, till at last he was obliged +to surrender himself into their hands. + +Then they came to us in the reeds, and the very first salute I had +from them was a violent blow on the head with the fore part of a gun, +and at the same time a grasp round the neck. I then had a rope put +about my neck, as had all the women in the thicket with me, and were +immediately led to my father, who was likewise pinioned and haltered +for leading. In this condition we were all led to the camp. The +women and myself being pretty submissive, had tolerable treatment from +the enemy, while my father was closely interrogated respecting his +money which they knew he must have. But as he gave them no account of +it, he was instantly cut and pounded on his body with great +inhumanity, that he might be induced by the torture he suffered to +make the discovery. All this availed not the least to make him give +up his money, but he despised all the tortures which they inflicted, +until the continued exercise and increase of torment, obliged him to +sink and expire. He thus died without informing his enemies of the +place where his money lay. I saw him while he was thus tortured to +death. The shocking scene is to this day fresh in my mind, and I have +often been overcome while thinking on it. He was a man of remarkable +stature. I should judge as much as six feet and six or seven inches +high, two feet across his shoulders, and every way well proportioned. +He as a man of remarkable strength and resolution, affable, kind and +gentle, ruling with equity and moderation. + +The army of the enemy was large, I should suppose consisting of about +six thousand men. Their leader was called Baukurre. After destroying +the old prince, they decamped and immediately marched towards the sea, +lying to the west, taking with them myself and the women prisoners. +In the march a scouting party was detached from the main army. To the +leader of this party I was made waiter, having to carry his gun, &c. +As we were a scouting we came across a herd of fat cattle, consisting +of about thirty in number. These we set upon, and immediately wrested +from their keepers, and afterwards converted them into food for the +army. The enemy had remarkable success in destroying the country +wherever they went. For as far as they had penetrated, they laid the +habitations waste and captured the people. The distance they had now +brought me was about four hundred miles. All the march I had very +hard tasks imposed on me, which I must perform on pain of punishment. +I was obliged to carry on my head a large flat stone used for grinding +our corn, weighing as I should suppose, as much as 25 pounds; besides +victuals, mat and cooking utensils. Though I was pretty large and +stout of my age, yet these burthens were very grievous to me, being +only about six years and a half old. + +We were then come to a place called Malagafco. When we entered the +place we could not see the least appearance of either houses or +inhabitants, but upon stricter search found, that instead of houses +above ground they had dens in the sides of hillocks, contiguous to +ponds and streams of water. In these we perceived they had all hid +themselves, as I suppose they usually did upon such occasions. In +order to compel them to surrender, the enemy contrived to smoke them +out with faggots. These they put to the entrance of the caves and set +them on fire. While they were engaged in this business, to their +great surprise some of them were desperately wounded with arrows which +fell from above on them. This mystery they soon found out. They +perceived that the enemy discharged these arrows through holes on the +top of the dens directly in to the air. Their weight brought them +back, point downwards on their enemies heads, whilst they were smoking +the inhabitants out. The points of the arrows were poisoned, but +their enemy had an antidote for it, which they instantly applied to +the wounded part. The smoke at last obliged the people to give +themselves up. They came out of their caves, first spatting the palms +of their hands together, then and immediately after extended their +arms, crossed at their wrists, ready to be bound and pinioned. I +should judge that the dens above mentioned were extended about eight +feet horizontally into the earth, five feet in height and as many +wide. They were arched over head and lined with earth, which was of +the clay kind, and made the surface of their walls firm and smooth. + +The invaders then pinioned the prisoners of all ages and sexes +indiscriminately, took their flocks and all their effects, and moved +on their way towards the sea. On the march the prisoners were treated +with clemency, on account of their being submissive and humble. +Having come to the next tribe, the enemy laid siege and immediately +took men, women, children, flocks, and all their valuable effects. +They then went on to the next district which was contiguous with the +sea, called in Africa, Anamaboo. The enemies provisions were then +almost spent, as well as their strength. The inhabitants knowing what +kind of conduct they had pursued, and what were their present +intentions, improved the favorable opportunity, attacked them, and +took enemy, prisoners, flocks and all their effects. I was then taken +a second time. All of us were then put into the castle, and kept for +market. On a certain time I and other prisoners were put on board a +canoe, under our master, and rowed away to a vessel belonging to Rhode +Island, commanded by capt. Collingwood, and the mate Thomas Mumford. +While we were going to the vessel, our master told us all to appear to +the best possible advantage for sale. I was bought on board by one +Robertson Mumford, steward of said vessel, for four gallons of rum, +and a piece of calico, and called VENTURE, on account of his having +purchased me with his own private venture. Thus I came by my name. +All the slaves that were bought for that vessel's cargo, were two +hundred and sixty. + + + +CHAPTER II. + + _Containing an account of his life, from the time of his leaving + Africa, to that of his becoming free._ + +After all the business was ended on the coast of Africa, the ship +sailed from thence to Barbadoes. After an ordinary passage, except +great mortality from small pox, which broke out on board, we arrived +at the island of Barbadoes: but when we reached it, there were found +out of the two hundred and sixty that sailed from Africa, not more +than two hundred alive. These were all sold, except for myself and +three more, to the planters there. + +The vessel then sailed for Rhode Island, and arrived there after a +comfortable passage. Here my master sent me to live with one of his +sisters, until he could carry me to Fisher's Island, the place of his +residence. I had then competed my eighth year. After staying with +his sister some time I was taken to my master's place to live. + +When we arrived at Narragansett, my master went ashore in order to +return a part of the way by land, and gave me the charge of the keys +of his trunks on board the vessel, and charged me not to deliver them +up to any body, not even to his father without his orders. To his +directions I promised faithfully to conform. When I arrived with my +master's articles at his house, my master's father asked me for his +son's keys, as he wanted to see what his trunks contained. I told him +that my master intrusted me with the care of them until he should +return, and that I had given him my word to be faithful to the trust, +and could not therefore give him or any other person the keys without +my master's directions. He insisted that I should deliver him the +keys, threatening to punish me if I did not. But I let him know that +he should not have them say what he would. He then laid aside trying +to get them. But notwithstanding he appeared to give up trying to +obtain them from me, yet I mistrusted that he would take some time +when I was off my guard, either in the day time or at night to get +them, therefore I slung them around my neck, and in the day concealed +them in my bosom, and at night I always lay with them under me, that +no person might take them from me without being apprized of it. Thus +I kept the keys from every body until my master came home. When he +returned he asked where VENTURE was. As I was then within hearing, I +came, said, here sir, at your service. He asked me for his keys, and +I immediately took them off my neck and reached them out to him. He +took them, stroked my hair, and commended me, saying in presence of +his father that his young VENTURE was so faithful that he would never +have been able to have taken the keys from him but by violence; that +he should not fear to trust him with his whole fortune, for that he +had been in his native place so habituated to keeping his word, that +he would sacrifice even his life to maintain it. + +The first of the time of living at my master's own place, I was pretty +much employed in the house at carding wool and other household +business. In this situation I continued for some years, after which +my master put me to work out of doors. After many proofs of my +faithfulness and honesty, my master began to put great confidence in +me. My behavior to him had as yet been submissive and obedient. I +then began to have hard tasks imposed on me. Some of these were to +pound four bushels of ears of corn every night in a barrel for the +poultry, or be rigorously punished. At other seasons of the year I +had to card wool until a very late hour. These tasks I had to perform +when I was about nine years old. Some time after I had another +difficulty and oppression which was greater than any I had ever +experienced since I came into this country. This was to serve two +masters. James Mumford, my master's son, when his father had gone +from home in the morning, and given me a stint to perform that day, +would order me to do _this_ and _that_ business different from what my +master directed me. One day in particular, the authority which my +master's son had set up, had like to have produce melancholy effects. +For my master having set me off my business to perform that day and +then left me to perform it, his son came up to me in the course of the +day, big with authority, and and commanded me very arrogantly to quit +my present business and go directly about what he should order me. I +replied to him that my master had given me so much to perform that +day, and that I must therefore faithfully complete it in that time. +He then broke out in a great rage, snatched a pitchfork and went to +lay me over the head therewith; but I as soon got another and defended +myself with it, or otherwise he might have murdered me in his outrage. +He immediately called some people who were hearing at work for him, +and ordered them to take his hair rope and and come and bind me with +it. They all tried to bind me but in vain, tho' there were three +assistants in number. My upstart master than desisted, put his pocket +handkerchief before his eyes and went home with a design to tell his +mother of the struggle with young VENTURE. He told her that their +young VENTURE had become so stubborn that he could not controul him, +and asked her what he should do with him. In the mean time I +recovered my temper, voluntarily caused myself to be bound by the same +men who tried in vain before, and carried before my young master, that +he might do what he pleased with me. He took me to a gallows made for +the purpose of hanging cattle on, and suspended me on it. Afterwards +he ordered one of his hands to go to the peach orchard and cut him +three dozens of whips to punish me with. These were brought to him, +and that was all that was done with them, as I was released and went +to work after hanging on the gallows about an hour. + +After I lived with my master thirteen years, being then about twenty +two years old, I married Meg, a slave of his who was about my age. My +master owned a certain Irishman, named Heddy, who about that time +formed a plan of secretly leaving his master. After he had long had +this plan in meditation he suggested it to me. At first I cast a deaf +ear on it, and rebuked Heddy for harboring in his mind such a rash +undertaking. But after he had persuaded and much enchanted me with +the prospect of gaining my freedom with such a method, I at length +agreed to accompany him. Heddy next inveigled two of his fellow +servants to accompany us. The place to which we designed to go was +the Mississippi. Our next business was to lay in a sufficient store +of provisions for our voyage. We privately collected out of our +master's store, six great old cheeses, two firkins of butter, and one +whole batch of new bread. When we had gathered all our own clothes +and some more, we took them all about midnight, and went to the water +side. We stole our master's boat, embarked, then directed our course +for the Mississippi river. + +We mutually confederated not to betray or desert one another on pain +of death. We first steered our course for Montauk point, the east end +of Long-Island. After our arrival there we landed, and Heddy and I +made an incursion into the island after fresh water, while our two +comrades were left at a little distance from the boat, employed at +cooking. When Heddy and I had sought some time for water, he returned +to our companions, and I continued on looking for my object. When +Heddy had performed his business with our companions, who were engaged +in cooking, he went directly to the boat, stole all the clothes in it, +and then travelled away for East-Hampton, as I was informed. I +returned to my fellows not long after. They informed me that our +clothes were stolen, but could not determine who was the thief, yet +they suspected Heddy as he was missing. After reproving my two +comrades for not taking care of our things which were in the boat, I +advertised Heddy and sent two men in search of him. They pursued and +overtook him at Southampton and returned him to the boat. I then +thought it might afford some chance for my freedom, or at least a +palliation for my running away, to return Heddy immediately to his +master, and inform him that I was induced to go away by Heddy's +address. Accordingly I set off with him and the rest of my companions +for our master's, and arrived there without any difficulty. I +informed my master that Heddy was the ringleader of our revolt, and +that he had used us ill. He immediately put Heddy into custody, and +myself and companions were well received and went to work as usual. + +Not a long time passed after that, before Heddy was sent by my master +to New-London gaol. At the close of that year I was sold to a Thomas +Stanton, and had to be separated from my wife and one daughter, who +was about one month old. He resided at Stonington-point. To this +place I brought with me from my last master's, two johannes, three old +Spanish dollars, and two thousand of coppers, besides five pounds of +my wife's money. This money I got by cleaning gentlemen's shoes and +drawing boots, by catching musk-rats and minks, raising potatoes and +carrots, &c. and by fishing in the night, and at odd spells. + +All this money amounting to near twenty-one pounds York currency, my +master's brother, Robert Stanton, hired of me, for which he gave me +his note. About one year and a half after that time, my master +purchased my wife and and her child, for severn hundred pounds old +tenor. One time my master sent me two miles after a barrel of +molasses, and ordered me to carry it on my shoulders. I made out to +carry it all the way to my master's house. When I lived with Captain +George Mumford, only to try my strength, I took up on my knees a +tierce of salt containing seven bushels, and carried it two or three +rods. Of this fact there are several eye witnesses now living. + +Towards the close of the time that I resided with this master, I had a +falling out with my mistress. This happened one time when my master +was gone to Long-Island a gunning. At first the quarrel began between +my wife and her mistress. I was then at work in the barn, and hearing +a racket in the house, induced me to run there and see what had broken +out. When I entered the house, I found my mistress in a violent +passion with my wife, for what she informed me was a mere trifle; such +a small affair that I forbear to put my mistress to the shame of +having it known. I earnestly requested my wife to beg pardon of her +mistress for the sake of peace even if she had given no just occasion +for offence. But whilst I was thus saying my mistress turned the +blows which she was repeating on my wife to me. She took down her +horse-whip, and while she was glutting her fury with it, I reached out +my great black hand, raised it up and received the blows of the whip +on it which were designed for my head. Then I immediately committed +the whip to the devouring fire. + +When my master returned from the island, his wife told him of the +affair, but for the present he seemed to take no notice of it, and +mentioned not a word of it to me. Some days after his return, in the +morning as I was putting on a log in the fire-place, not suspecting +harm from any one, I received a most violent stroke on the crown of my +head with a club two feet long and and as large around as a chair- +post. This blow very badly wounded my head, and the scar of it +remains to this day. The first blow made me have my wits about me as +you may suppose, for as soon as he went to renew it, I snatched the +club out of his hands and dragged him out of the door. He then sent +for his brother to come and assist him, but I presently left my +master, took the club he wounded me with, carried it to a neighboring +Justice of the Peace, and complained of my master. He finally advised +me to return to my master, and live contented with him until he abused +me again, and then complain. I consented to do accordingly. But +before I set out for my master's, up he come and his brother Robert +after me. The Justice improved this convenient opportunity to caution +my master. He asked him for what he treated his slave thus hastily +and unjustly, and told him what would be the consequence if he +continued the same treatment towards me. After the Justice had ended +his discourse with my master, he and his brother set out with me for +home, one before and the other behind me. When they had come to a bye +place, they both dismounted their respective horses, and fell to +beating me with great violence. I became enraged at this and +immediately turned them both under me, laid one of them across the +other, and stamped both with my feet what I would. + +This occasioned my master's brother to advise him to put me off. A +short time after this I was taken by a constable and two men. They +carried me to a black-smith's shop and had me hand-cuffed. When I +returned home my mistress enquired much of her waiters, whether +VENTURE was hand-cuffed. When she was informed that I was, she +appeared to be very contented and was much transported with the news. +In the midst of all this content and joy, I presented myself before my +mistress, shewed her my hand-cuffs, and gave her thanks for my gold +rings. For this my master commanded a negro of his to fetch him a +large ox chain. This my master locked on my legs with two padlocks. +I continued to wear the chain peaceably for two or three days, when my +master asked me with contemptuous hard names whether I had not better +be freed from my chains and go to work. I answered him, No. Well +then, said he, I will send you to the West-Indies or banish you, for I +am resolved not to keep you. I answered him I crossed the waters to +come here, and I am willing to cross them to return. + +For a day or two after this not any one said much to me, until one +Hempsted Miner, of Stonington, asked me if I would live with him. I +answered him that I would. He then requested me to make myself +discontented and to appear as unreconciled to my master as I could +before that he bargained with him for me; and that in return he would +give me a good chance to gain my freedom when I came to live with him. +I did as he requested me. Not long after Hempsted Miner purchased me +of my master for fifty-six pounds lawful. He took the chain and +padlocks off me immediately after. + +It may here be remembered, that I related a few pages back, that I +hired out a sum of money to Mr. Robert Stanton, and took his note for +it. In the fray between my master Stanton and myself, he broke open +my chest containing his brother's note to me, and destroyed it. +Immediately after my present master bought me, he determined to sell +me at Hartford. As soon as I became apprized of it, I bethought +myself that I would secure a certain sum of money which lay by me, +safer than to hire it out to Stanton. Accordingly I buried it in the +earth, a little distance from Thomas Stanton's, in the road over which +he passed daily. A short time after my master carried me to Hartford, +and first proposed to sell me to one William Hooker of that place. +Hooker asked whether I would go to the German Flats with him. I +answered, No. He said I should, if not by fair means I should by +foul. If you will go by no other measures, I will tie you down in my +sleigh. I replied to him, that if he carried me in that manner, no +person would purchase me, for it would be thought that he had a +murderer for sale. After this he tried no more, and said he would not +have me as a gift. + +My master next offered me to Daniel Edwards, Esq. of Hartford, for +sale. But not purchasing me, my master pawned me to him for ten +pounds, and returned to Stonington. After some trial of my honesty, +Mr. Edwards placed considerable trust and confidence in me. He put me +to serve as his cup-bearer and waiter. When there was company at his +house, he would send me into his cellar and other parts of his house +to fetch wine and other articles occasionally for them. When I had +been with him for some time, he asked me why my master wished to part +with such an honest negro, and why he did not keep me himself. I +replied that I could not give him the reason, unless it was to convert +me into cash, and speculate with me as with other commodities. I hope +he can never justly say it was on account of my ill conduct that he +did no keep me himself. Mr Edwards told me that he should be very +willing to keep me himself, and that he would never let me go from him +to live, if it was not unreasonable and inconvenient for me to be +parted from my wife and children; therefore he would furnish me with a +horse to return to Stonington, if I had a mind for it. As Miner did +not appear to redeem me I went, at called at my old master Stanton's +first to see my wife, who was then owned by him. As my old master +appeared much ruffled at my being there, I left my wife before I had +spent considerable time with her, and went to Colonel O. Smith's. +Miner had not as yet wholly settled with Stanton for me, and had +before my return from Hartford given Col. Smith a bill of sale for me. +These men once met to determine which of them should hold me, and upon +my expressing a desire to be owned by Col. Smith, and upon my master's +settling the remainder of the money which was due Stanton for me, it +was agreed that I should live with Col. Smith. This was the third +time of my being sold, and I was then thirty-one years old. As I +never had an opportunity of redeeming myself whilst I was owned by +Miner, though he promised to give me a chance, I was then very +ambitious of obtaining it. I asked my master one time if he would +consent to have me purchase my freedom. He replied that he would. I +was then very happy, knowing that I was at that time able to pay part +of the purchase money, by means of the money which I some time since +buried. This I took out of the earth and tendered to my master, +having previously engaged a free negro man to take take his security +for it, as I was the property of my master, and therefore could not +safely take his obligation myself. What was wanted in redeeming +myself, my master agreed to wait on me for, until I could procure it +for him. I still continued to work for Col. Smith. Ther was +continually some interest accruing on my master's note to my friend +the free negro man above named, which I received, and with some +besides which I got by fishing, I laid out in land adjoining my old +master Stanton's. By cultivating this land with the greatest +diligence and economy, at times when my master did not require my +labor, in two years I laid up ten pounds. This my friend tendered to +my master for myself, and received his note for it. + +Being encouraged by the success which I had met in redeeming myself, I +again solicited my master for a further chance of completing it. The +chance for which I solicited him was that of going out to work the +ensuing winter. He agreed to this on condition that I would give him +one quarter of my earnings. On these terms I worked the following +winter, and earned four pounds sixteen shillings, one quarter of which +went to my master for the privilege, and the rest was paid him on my +own account. This added to the other payments made up forty four +pounds, eight shillings, which I had paid on my own account. I was +then about thirty five years old. + +The next summer I again desired he would give me a chance of going out +to work. But he refused and answered that he must have my labor this +summer, as he did not have it the past winter. I replied that I +considered it as hard that I could not have a chance to work out when +the season became advantageous, and that I must only be permitted to +hire myself out in the poorest season of the year. He asked me after +this what I would give for the privilege per month. I replied that I +would leave it wholly with his own generosity to determine what I +should return him a month. Well then, said he, if so two pounds a +month. I answered him that if that was the least he would take I +would be contented. + +Accordingly, I hired myself out at Fisher's Island, and earned twenty +pounds; thirteen pounds six shillings of which my master drew for the +privilege, and the remainder I paid him for my freedom. This made +fifty-one pounds two shillings which I paid him. In October following +I went and wrought six months at Long Island. In that six months' +time I cut and corded four hundred cords of wood, besides threshing +out seventy-five bushels of grain, and received of my wages down only +twenty pounds, which left remaining a larger sum. Whilst I was out +that time, I took upon my wages only one pair of shoes. At night I +lay upon the hearth, with one coverlet over and another under me. I +returned to my master and gave him what I received on my six months +labor. This left only thirteen pounds eighteen shillings to make up +the full sum for my redemption. My master liberated me, saying I +might pay what was behind if I could ever make it convenient, +otherwise it would be well. The amount of the money which I had paid +my master towards redeeming my time, was seventy-one pounds two +shillings. The reason of my master for asking such an unreasonable +price, was he said, to secure himself in case I should ever come to +want. Being thirty-six years old, I left Col. Smith once for all. I +had already been sold three different times, made considerable money +with seemingly nothing to derive it from, been cheated out of a large +sum of money, lost much by misfortunes, and paid an enormous sum for +my freedom. + + + +CHAPTER III. + +_Containing an account of his life, from the time of his purchasing his + freedom to the present day._ + +My wife and children were yet in bondage to Mr. Thomas Stanton. About +this time I lost a chest, containing besides clothing, about thirty- +eight pounds in paper money. It was burnt by accident. A short time +after I sold all my possessions at Stonington, consisting of a pretty +piece of land and one dwelling house thereon, and went to reside at +Long-Island. For the first four years of my residence there, I spent +my time in working for various people on that and at the neighboring +islands. I the space of six months I cut and corded upwards of four +hundred cords of wood. Many other singular and wonderful labors I +performed in cutting wood there, which would not be inferior to those +just recited, but for brevity sake I must omit them. In the +aforementioned four years what wood I cut at Long-Island amounted to +several thousand cords, and the money which I earned thereby amounted +to two hundred and seven pounds ten shillings. This money I laid up +carefully by me. Perhaps some may enquire what maintained me all the +time I was laying up money. I would inform them that I bought nothing +which I did not absolutely want. All fine clothes I despised in +comparison with my interest, and never kept but just what clothes were +comfortable for common days, and perhaps I would have a garment or two +which I did not have on at all times, but as for superfluous finery I +never thought it to be compared with a decent homespun dress, a good +supply of money and prudence. Expensive gatherings of my mates I +commonly shunned, and all kinds of luxuries I was perfectly a stranger +to; and during the time I was employed in cutting the aforementioned +quantity of wood, I never was at the expense of six-pence worth of +spirits. Being after this labor forty years of age, I worked at +various places, and in particular on Ram-Island, which I purchased +Solomon and Cuff, two sons of mine, for two hundred dollars each. + +It will here be remembered how much money I earned by cutting wood in +four years. Besides this I had considerable money, amounting in all +to near three hundred pounds. After this I purchased a negro man, for +no other reason than to oblige him, and gave him sixty pounds. But in +a short time after he run away from me, and I thereby lost all that I +gave for him, except twenty pounds which he paid me previous to his +absconding. The rest of my money I laid out in land, in addition to a +farm which I owned before, and a dwelling house thereon. Forty four +years had then completed their revolution since my entrance in to this +existence of servitude and misfortune. Solomon my eldest son, being +then in his seventeenth year, and all my hope and dependence for help, +I hired him out to one Charles Church, of Rhode Island, for one year, +on consideration of his giving him twelve pounds and an opportunity of +acquiring some learning. In the course of the year, Church fitted out +a vessel for a whaling voyage, and being in want of hands to man her, +he induced my son to go, with the promise of giving him, on his +return, a pair of silver buckles, besides his wages. As soon as I +heard of his going to sea, I immediately set out to go and prevent it +if possible. But on my arrival at Church's, to my great grief, I +could only see the vessel my son was on almost out of sight going to +sea. My son died of the scurvy on this voyage, and Church has never +yet paid me the least of his wages. In my son, besides the loss of +his life, I lost equal to seventy-five pounds. + +My other son being but a youth, still lived with me. About this time +I chartered a sloop of about thirty tons burthen, and hired men to +assist me in navigating her. I employed her mostly in the wood trade +to Rhode-Island, and made clear of all expenses above one hundred +dollars with her in better than one year. I had then become something +forehanded, and being in my forty-fourth year, I purchased my wife +Meg, and thereby prevented having another child to buy, as she was +then pregnant. I gave forty pounds for her. + +During my residence at Long-Island, I raised one year with another, +ten cart loads of water-melons, and lost a great many every year +besides by the thievishness of the sailors. What I made by the water- +melons I sold there, amounted to nearly five hundred dollars. Various +other methods I in order to enable me to redeem my family. In the +night-time I fished with set-nets and pots for eels and lobsters, and +shortly after went a whaling voyage in the service of Col. Smith. +After being seven months, the vessel returned, laden with four hundred +barrels of oil. About this time, I became possessed of another +dwelling-house, and my temporal affairs were in a pretty prosperous +condition. This and my industry was what alone saved me from being +expelled that part of the island in which I resided, as an act was +passed by the select-men of the place, that all negroes residing there +should be expelled. + +Next after my wife, I purchased a negro man for four hundred dollars. +But he having an inclination to return to his old master, I therefore +let him go. Shortly after I purchased another negro man for twenty- +five pounds, who I parted with shortly after. + +Being about forty-six years old, I bought my oldest child Hannah, of +Ray Mumford, for forty-four pounds, and she still resided with him. I +had already redeemed from slavery, myself, my wife and three children, +besides three negro men. + +About the forty-seventh year of my life, I disposed all my property at +Long-Island, and came from thence into East-Haddam. I hired myself +out at first to Timothy Chapman, for five weeks, the earnings of which +time I put carefully by me. After this I wrought for Abel Bingham +about six weeks. I then put my money together and purchased of said +Bingham ten acres of land, lying at Haddam neck, where I now reside. +On this land I labored with great diligence for two years, and shortly +after purchased six acres more of land contiguous to my other. One +year from that time I purchased seventy acres more of the same man, +and paid for it mostly with the produce of my other land. Soon after +I bought this lot of land, I set up a comfortable dwelling house on my +farm, and built it from the produce thereof. Shortly after I had much +trouble and expense with my daughter Hannah, whose name has before +been mentioned in this account. She was married soon after I redeemed +her, to one Isaac, a free negro, and shortly after her marriage fell +sick of a mortal disease; her husband a dissolute and abandoned +wretch, paid but little attention to her in her illness. I therefore +thought it best to bring her to my house and nurse her there. I +procured her all the aid mortals could afford, but notwithstanding +this she fell a prey to her disease, after a lingering and painful +endurance of it. + +The physician's bills for attending her during her illness amounted to +forty pounds. Having reached my fifty-fourth year, I hired two negro +men, one named William Jacklin, and the other Mingo. Mingo lived with +me one year, and having received his wages, run in debt to me eight +dollars, for which he gave me his note. I procured a warrant, took +him, and requested him to go to Justice Throop's of his own accord, +but he refusing, I took him on my shoulders, and carried him there, +distant about two miles. The justice asking me if I had my prisoner's +note with me, and replying that I had not, he told me that I must +return with him and get it. Accordingly I carried Mingo back on my +shoulders, but before we arrived at my dwelling, he complained of +being hurt, and asked me if this was not a hard way of treating our +fellow creatures. I answered him that it would be hard thus to treat +our honest fellow creatures. He then told me that if I would let him +off my shoulders, he had a pair of silver shoe-buckles, one shirt and +a pocket handkerchief, which he would turn out to me. I agreed, and +let him return home with me on foot; but the very following night, he +slipped from me, stole my horse and has never paid me even his note. +The other negro man, Jacklin, being a comb-maker by trade, he +requested me to set him up, and promised to reward me well with his +labor. Accordingly I bought him a set of tools for making combs, and +procured him stock. He worked at my house about one year, and then +run away from me with all his combs, and owed me for all his board. + +Since my residence at Haddam neck, I have owned of boats, canoes and +sail vessels, not less than twenty. These I mostly employed in the +fishing and trafficking business, and in these occupations I have been +cheated out of considerable money by people whom I traded with taking +advantage of my ignorance of numbers. + +About twelve years ago, I hired a whale-boat and four black men, and +proceeded to Long-Island after a load of round clams. Having arrived +there, I first purchased of James Webb, son of Orange Webb, six +hundred and sixty clams, and afterwards, with the help of my men, +finished loading my boat. The same evening, however, this Webb stole +my boat, and went in her to Connecticut river, and sold her cargo for +his own benefit. I thereupon pursued him, and at length, after an +additional expence of nine crowns, recovered the boat; but for the +proceeds of her cargo I never could obtain any compensation. + +Four years after, I met with another loss, far superior to this in +value, and I think by no less wicked means. Being going to New-London +with a grand-child, I took passage on an Indian's boat, and went there +with him. On our return, the Indian took on board two hogsheads of +molasses, one of which belonged to Capt. Elisha Hart, of Saybrook, to +be delivered to his wharf. When we arrived there, and while I was +gone, at the request of the Indian, to inform Captain Hart of his +arrival, and receive the freight for him, one hogshead of the molasses +had been lost overboard by the people in attempting to land it on the +wharf. Although I was absent at the time, and had no concern whatever +in the business, and was known to a number of respectable witnesses, I +was nevertheless persecuted by this conscientious gentleman, (the +Indian not being able to pay for it) and obliged to pay upwards of ten +pounds lawful money, with all the costs of court. I applied to +several gentlemen for counsel in this affair, and they advised me, as +my adversary was rich, and threatened to carry the matter from court +to court till it would cost me more than the first damages would be, +to pay the sum and submit to the injury; which I accordingly did, and +he has often since insultingly taunted me with my unmerited +misfortune. Such a proceeding as this, committed on a defenseless +stranger, almost worn out in the hard service of the world, without +any foundation in reason or justice, whatever it may be called in a +christian land, would in my native country be branded a crime equal to +highway robbery. But Captain Hart was a _white gentleman_, and I a +_poor African,_ and therefore it was _all right, and good enough for +the black dog._ + +I am now sixty nine years old. Though once straight and tall, +measuring without shoes six feet one inch and an half, and every way +well proportioned, I am now bowed down with age and hardship. My +strength which was once equal if not superior to any man whom I have +ever seen, is now enfeebled so that life is a burden, and it is with +fatigue that I can walk a couple of miles, stooping over my staff. +Other griefs are still behind; on account of which some aged people, +at least, will pity me. My eye-sight has gradually failed, till I am +almost blind, and whenever I go abroad one of my grand-children must +direct my way; besides for many years I have been much pained and +troubled with an ulcer on one of my legs. But amidst all my griefs and +pains, I have many consolations; Meg, the wife of my youth, whom I +married for love, and bought with my money, is still alive. My +freedom is a privilege which nothing else can equal. Notwithstanding +all the losses I have suffered by fire, by the injustice of knaves, by +the cruelty and oppression of false-hearted friends, and the perfidy +of my own countrymen whom I have assisted and redeemed from bondage, I +am no possessed of more than two hundred acres of land, and three +habitable dwelling houses. I gives me joy to think that I _have_ and +that I _deserve_ so good a character, especially for _truth_ and +_integrity._ While I am now looking to the grave as my home, my joy +for this world would be full--IF my children, Cuff for whom I paid two +hundred dollars when a boy, and Solomon who was born soon after I +purchased his mother--If Cuff and Solomon--O! that they had walked the +way of their father. But a father's lips are closed in silence and +grief! Vanity of vanities, all is vanity! + + F I N I S. + + + +CERTIFICATE. + +Stonington, November 3, 1798. + +These certify that VENTURE, a free negro man, aged about 69 years, and +was, as we have ever understood, a native of Africa, and formerly a +slave to Mr. James Mumford, of Fisher's-Island, in the state of New- +York, who sold him to Mr. Robert Stanton, 2d, of Stonington, in the +state of Connecticut, and said Stanton sold said VENTURE to Col. +Oliver Smith, of the aforesaid place. That said VENTURE hath +sustained the character of a faithful servant, and that of a +temperate, honest and industrious man, and being ever intent on +obtaining his freedom, he was indulged by his masters after the +ordinary labour on the days of his servitude, to improve the nights in +fishing and other employments of his own emolument, in which time he +procured so much money as to purchase his freedom from his late master +Col. Smith; after which he took upon himself the name of VENTURE +SMITH, and has since his freedom purchased a negro woman, called Meg, +to whom he was previously married, and also his children who were +slaves, and said VENTURE has since removed himself and family to the +town of East-Haddam, in this state, where he has purchased lands on +which he hath built a house, and there taken up his abode. + + NATHAN MINOR, Esq. + ELIJAH PALMER, Esq. + Capt. AMOS PALMER, + ACORS SHEFFIELD, + EDWARD SMITH. + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A NARRATIVE OF THE LIFE AND +ADVENTURES OF VENTURE, A NATIVE OF AFRICA, BUT RESIDENT ABOVE SIXTY YEARS +IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, RELATED BY HIMSELF*** + + +******* This file should be named 10075.txt or 10075.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/0/7/10075 + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. 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