WANTED: MISSING SLAVES: New databases of old newspaper ads are revealing details about the lives of slaves that had long been lost to history.

AuthorMajerol, Veronica
PositionTIMES PAST

From the 17th century through the Civil War (1861-65), about 8 million black people were enslaved in America. They picked cotton on Southern plantations, toiled as carpenters and blacksmiths, and tended to their masters' homes and families. Some of them ran away, hoping to escape to a place where slavery had been abolished. Others were sold by their masters, never to see their parents, children, or siblings again.

Who were these people, and what were their lives like? For a long time, historians had only partial answers, relying on a limited scope of primary sources, like diaries and autobiographies written by a small number of literate slaves, or transcripts of interviews with former slaves conducted in the 1930s. But now, new searchable digital databases of old newspaper ads--placed by masters looking for escaped slaves or by former slaves looking for family members--are filling in some of the gaps. The ads are helping historians identify patterns about slavery that had been lost to history; they're also helping genealogists and descendants of slaves to begin reconstructing the missing pieces of family trees.

Among the new databases are:

* Last Seen: Finding Family After Slavery (informationwanted.org), which collects ads placed by former slaves trying to locate family members after the Civil War.

* The Geography of Slavery in Virginia (http://www2.vcdh.virginia.edu/gos), which features 18th- and 19th-century ads for runaway and captured slaves from Virginia.

* Freedom on the Move, which aims to digitize up to 200,000 ads by slave masters looking for escaped slaves, from colonial times to 1865. (The project is slated to go live later in 2018.)

Edward Baptist of Freedom on the Move, which is based at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, says the new projects will be extremely valuable to a variety of audiences. They come at a time when many schools are examining their own ties to slavery (see "Slavery & Schools," p. 21).

"[The ads] are going to be a massive broadening of the primary source material that's readily available for not just scholars, but also teachers, students, and the general public to understand the history of slavery in a really immediate way," he says.

When slaves fled plantations and homes, thenowners often placed detailed ads in newspapers offering rewards to anyone who returned them. (The Constitution, ratified in 1788, said escaped slaves must be returned to their masters, and the Fugitive Slave Acts of 1793 and 1850 strengthened that law.) Many of the details included in the written notices describe the runaway slaves more like objects or animals than humans, including references to their mannerisms, skin markings, teeth, and skills.

Some of the content is harrowing.

One ad, written by a slave master named Benjamin Graves of Chesterfield, Virginia, advertises for two runaway slaves named Edmond and Henry. Graves describes the latter as "a tall black fellow, about 24 years of age, many scars on his face and hands occasioned by a burn; on his right cheek there are two or three large welts, also produced by fire."

The scars mentioned in many ads make clear how often the men, women, and children in captivity were whipped, beaten, and shot; were forced to wear metal collars; and had their faces branded. Some advertisers offered bounties for the escapees' corpses or decapitated heads.

These ads also show that some slaves managed to leave with their children and that some were able to pass for white. And the ads document recaptured slaves who kept trying to escape--an important reminder of how vigorously some slaves resisted being enslaved.

To understand slave resistance, historians had long relied on the 100 or so autobiographies written by escaped slaves-- Frederick Douglass's is the most famous--and the roughly 2,300 first-person narratives of former slaves collected from 1936 to 1938 by the federal Works Progress Administration (WPA). But in some ways, Baptist says, the runaway ads provide even deeper insight into acts of resistance.

"What we're talking about with the runaway-slave ads," he says "is actions that were taken in the middle of slavery that broke the authority--even if just temporarily--of the enslaver and the whole system of power that that enslaver represents."

Family Trees & the 1870 Census

After slavery was outlawed in the 1860s (see timeline, p. 20), former slaves often placed ads in newspapers trying to find lost family members who'd been sold to other masters, had run away, or had gone missing while fighting in the Civil War. Judith Giesberg, who heads Last Seen--a project by Villanova University and Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Philadelphia--says most of the ads on that site were placed by mothers looking for their children or children looking for their mothers.

"Each one is a family history," she says.

Many are rich in detail, and heartbreaking, like an 1866 ad placed by a woman named Elizabeth Williams, who hadn't seen her four children in 25 years. Williams describes how her Tennessee master sold her and she wound up in Arkansas, separated from her family. "Any information given concerning them," the ad reads, "will be gratefully received by one whose love for her children survives the bitterness and hardships of many long years spent in slavery."

The details in the ads not only provide a better understanding of the emotional trauma and violence of slavery, according to Giesberg, but also may help genealogists and descendants of slaves retrace family trees prior to the 1870 Census. Before the 1870 Census, slaves were considered property and not people, so they weren't mentioned.

"To find an ancestor in the 1850 or 1860 Census when that ancestor was enslaved is very difficult, if not impossible," Giesberg explains. She says the specific names and places listed in these ads "can take you beyond that 1870 wall." (Efforts to...

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