Ridgely Compound
of Hampton
Towson, Baltimore County, Maryland
by Dr. David Taft Terry
For much of the antebellum
period under consideration, the Ridgelys of Hampton were among the largest
holders of enslaved blacks in the state of Maryland. In addition, there
was a large free black community connected by kin and work to the Hampton
Compound and other Ridgely properties. This study examines the Hampton Compound
and its inhabitants, both black and white, to allow a deeper understanding
of how slavery functioned in antebellum Maryland.
A watershed moment for blacks
of the Hampton community was the death of Charles Carnan Ridgely in 1829.
The ramifications of his death, or most specifically, the administration
of his will, impacted hundreds of black lives. It affected the blacks that
Charles Carnan "owned," as well as the ones who came to Hampton as a result
of his death. Charles Carnan Ridgely's will set up conditional manumission
for a number of persons enslaved at Hampton or Ridgely's other sites. An
inventory of Ridgely's holdings at the time of his death in 1829 listed
303 persons enslaved by Ridgely at various sites. Further research has raised
the final number of enslaved blacks to 311.
Legally, slaves over the
age of forty-five could not be manumitted. The will stipulated that the
aged who could not be set free be cared for by Ridgely's assigns. While the
inventory does not give age information, at least 169 of the 303 were appraised
at less that one hundred and fifty dollars. This group most likely consisted
of the aged who could not be manumitted. Of the remaining inventoried
persons, 105 were appraised at values of at least two hundred dollars. Ridgely
ordered immediate freedom for those women aged twenty-five to forty-five,
and men twenty-eight to forty-five, and they likely came from this group
of 105. In the various records held by the Maryland State Archives, we have
uncovered at least ninety Certificates of Freedom for persons manumitted
under Ridgely's 1829 will. The great bulk of these persons were freed during
1829, with others receiving freedom as late as 1843. We likely cannot recover
with any certainty the exact number of men and women (and toddlers under
2) that went free immediately. However, we do know a few of their names:
Jacob Carter (aged thiry-eight), John Crowmell (aged forty), Nathanial Jamison
(aged thirty-one), Philip Smith (aged thirty-three), and Isaac Wilson (aged
about thirty), all of whom had their newly won status certified by the Court
under the oath of former Ridgely employee, Richard Green.
It is possible to investigate
kinship ties through the study of surnames and possessive prefixes (as an
example, Hannah's Bill) appearing along with first names. Sixty-two different
surnames appeared on the inventory; "Batty" was a prominent surname, linking
ten individuals. "Cummins" was also well represented with fifteen persons,
as are "Johnson" (eighteen) , "Lee" (ten), and "Wicks" (nine). Possessive
Prefixes also linked people on the Ridgely Properties. In all, fifty-seven
persons were linked to twenty-seven other individuals by prefixes, presumably
signifying kinship ties. For example, eight individuals were identified with
the possessive prefix "Milly's" . There are five individuals identified as
"Keziah's" . "Betty's" was attached to three names, though these are distinguished
from "Bett's" and "Great Betty's." Other predominant possessive prefixes
among the enslaved black manumitted in 1829 included "Hannah's", "Luce's",
and "Henry's."
With so many "common" surnames
among the 1829 manumittees - "Brown," "Smith," "Anderson," etc. - a directory
search yielded little stand-alone evidence of their post-manumission lives.
The preponderance of common surnames that hampers the effectiveness of
directory searchers for Ridgely manumittees also threatened any search of
census records. Census enumerations before 1850 only list head of household,
with other household members appearing by age, gender, race, and caste as
anonymous check marks. However, a few discoveries may merit further investigation.
Gabriel "Gabe" Cromwell was
freed by Ridgely's will in 1829. Twenty-nine years old at the point of manumission,
Gabe Cromwell was counted in 1850 as one of several free blacks working
for a white landholder. Though no other direct matches are apparent, the
surnames of other slaves manumitted in 1829 ("Johnson," Brown," and "Sheridan")
were attached to blacks around and near Cromwell. Another "Cromwell" - perhaps
Gabriel's kin - is found elsewhere in the 2nd District of Baltimore County
in 1850. A "Harriet" was enumerated as forty years old with a one year old
female child, and residing with a white male of twenty-nine. No other persons
are enumerated with this household. Allowing for age mistakes before or after
the fact, this may be Harriet who was manumitted in September 1829 after
presenting herself to the Court as a twenty-six year old woman enslaved by
the late Charles Carnan Ridgely. A third coincidence involves the unmistakable
name, "Harcules" or "Hercules" Brice. Brice was found among the inhabitants
of Baltimore County's 1st District. This instance, however, was not attached
to the man who at thirty-eight was freed by Ridgely, but rather a fifteen
year old mulatto living with a white farmer and family. The name alone suggests
a probable kinship link of some sort to those manumitted in 1829.
Those slaves too old to be
freed by Charles Ridgely in 1829 were distributed among his heirs for the
expressed purpose of caring for them, though it is not exactly clear what
that meant. Certification records for those freed also suggest a wide dispersal
of Charles Carnan's bondspeople not qualified for manumission. If the oath-giver
designation is any clue, then Ridgely's former slaves went to his daughters
Sophia (gave ten oaths) and Prudence (gave one oath), another daughter,
Mary (gave two oaths) , swore to the status of former slaves, whereas a
son, David (gave eleven oaths) , did as well. The most prominent oath-giver
was Charles Carnan's son, John, who attested to thirty-two claims of freed
status. This is interesting because by his father's will, John received
Hampton Plantation but no slaves. The overwhelming majority of those for
whom John vouched presented themselves in 1829 or 1830.
Because his father left him
no slaves, John Carnan Ridgely, the new Master of Hampton, had to assemble
a workforce quickly. He doubtlessly had some slaves of his own, but too
few to run the plantation. Records show a good deal of activity in purchasing
slaves for eleven months beginning September 1829. Over that span, Ridgely
purchased twenty-seven men, women, and children, at a cost of six thousand
dollars. John Ridgely or his agents acquired enslaved blacks from estate
sales, from holders, and from slave dealers, like Hope Slatter.
It must have been a surreal
experience for blacks moving into and out of slavery at Hampton, literally
passing each other on the way to different futures. Surely, among the enslaved
population, an oral history developed about those who were set free 1829.
What impact must this have had on those moving to slavery at Hampton? Of
the slave purchases for which records have been identified, the majority
were made from local sellers based in Baltimore City and County (some of
whom were likely dealers and speculators). Some of the new Hampton slaves
were identified as coming from Kent, Harford, and Frederick counties. Altogether,
fifty-five, forty-one, and sixty-three blacks were enumerated as enslaved
under John Ridgely at the Hampton Plantation in census schedules for 1840,
1850, and 1860.
Like all keepers of slaves,
the Ridgely masters were doubtlessly concerned with issues of safety and
control. Flight was obviously an issue. Examples of enslaved African Americans
fleeing Hampton have been gleaned from a variety of sources including newspaper
advertisements, sheriff's committal notices, court petitions, and plantation
documents. Yet, it is difficult to comment with any certainty on any but
a handful of instances of flight. Perhaps, however, a consideration of flight
from Hampton in categorical and hypothetical terms may prove more enlightening
than treating the episodes singularly.
Again, the period under consideration,
1830 - 1860, embraces two overlapping phases in the history of Hampton's
African Americans. The execution of Charles Carnan Ridgely's will saw an
exodus from Hampton. Whether being released immediately, or at some future
date, or not being freed because of the constraints of Maryland Law but simply
being sent to live elsewhere "[in comfort…]," the historical black community
of Hampton was moved out during the final months of 1829. At the same time,
the new "Master" of Hampton, John Carnan Ridgely , worked briskly to re-populate
the slave quarters. It is to be expected that among each of these groups,
outgoing and incoming, some saw the transition as an opportunity or motivation
to flee. Evidence survives in support this.
While the limited manumissions
resulting from Charles Carnan Ridgely's passing were welcomed by many enslaved
at Hampton, others may well have received manumission with great trepidation
and perhaps a sense of powerlessness. Flight may have been viewed as a proactive
- or at least opportunistic - response to the pending transition. Yet, without
further evidence, conjecture is difficult except on the broadest basis.
We know, for example, that there was a moment of uncertainty as to the future
of the enslaved population when two of the late-Charles Carnan's sons-in-law
challenged the will, petitioning the court to sell of them all and divide
the proceeds among the heirs. This action likely caused a reaction of flight.
During August 1829, thirteen Hampton slaves fled. One was from the farm,
and twelve were from the forges. All were recaptured and detained in the
Baltimore Jail.
The fugitive from the farm,
Robert "Bob" Meads , was identified as belong to Charles Carnan's Estate,
but was held for longer than a year before being released, seemingly due
to a warrant against him from the state. The others were released within
days of capture. It is possible, though not yet apparent, that a fourteenth
slave ran with Bob Meads and the twelve from the forge. Godfrey Ashburn was
committed to the Baltimore Jail two months after the others. There is no
evidence as to when he first fled Hampton. Ashburn would be manumitted per
the will in February 1830. Of the twelve forge slaves mentioned previously,
only five are documented as ever having been manumitted by the will: Baptist
Williams in Dec. 1829, Henry Smith in 1830, Frank Green in 1830, Ben Cason
in 1831, and Sam Howard in 1837. All of the remaining seven appear on the
inventory of slaves as attached to the forge. One was appraised at $150
dollars, one at $200, and the other five at three hundred dollars each.
It is unclear what this suggests about their ages, and thus eligibility to
be manumitted. It is highly possible however that they all ran because they
had doubts as to whether they would ever be free. Indeed, it appears that
time waiting was time wasted as Sam Howard and Lloyd Russell, two of the
twelve who worked at the forge, would run again the following year. Another
former slave of Charles Carnan Ridgely, identified in the jail docket as
simply "Jacob," also fled in 1830. He was delivered to his "master" James
Howard.
As has been stated, whether
being freed by Charles Carnan Ridgely's will or simply relocated, all of
the slaves manumitted in 1829 were moving out and away from Hampton. For
those "moving-in," as John Carnan Ridgely frantically worked to replenish
Hampton's laboring population, the transitional nature of late 1829 and early
1830 seemingly presented itself as an opportunity to run. Research notes
suggest that many of the first slaves purchased by John Ridgely, and even
those simply hired from other plantations, were of local-origin involved
John's dealing with neighbors, family, and acquaintances. Thus, the "new"
slaves coming to Hampton in 1829 and the early 1830s were likely not strangers
to Baltimore County. This may in turn inform attempts to interpret why and
how a few of them fled, seemingly, at the first opportunity. Argabus, for
example, ran mere weeks after being purchased in March 1830. So, too, must
have Connier Argalis, aka Thomas Connier, who absconded but was captured
and jailed in Baltimore during April 1830. Another man, Isaac , suspected
of having made his way to Pennsylvania by 1831, was sought by John Ridgely.
While Benjamin Allen, a third example, fled in 1833. Perhaps this was the
same "Benjamin" purchased by John Ridgely from a Baltimore City seller in
September 1829 as an eighteen year old. Benjamin Allen was recovered by Ridgely
from a Baltimore City Slave Jail, having been caught in flight and committed
there in June 1833. Likewise, "George," purchased in 1832 from William Wilmer
was marked "gone" in plantation records by 1837.
John Ridgely's reaction to
runaway slaves is difficult to gauge. Did he consider the occurrences to
be simply annoyances, an unfortunate by-product of keeping people enslaved?
Or was it viewed as serious, potentially disruptive phenomena among his enslaved
population? Perhaps he ascribed to the school of thought which viewed runaways
as mentally-ill persons, or "drapetomanics." We may never know with certainty.
However, in addition to evidence that John Ridgely pursued runaways, there
is also evidence, perhaps, that he punished at least one fugitive he caught
by selling him away, maybe even "South." John's property, Charles Brown
fled from Hampton in during the Christmas Holiday, 1834. He was caught and
jailed on December 30, 1834 in Baltimore City. On January 3, 1835 John sold
Charles, "a slave for life," to a Tennessee-based buyer for three hundred
and fifty dollars. Brown was released from jail a month later to J.S. Skinner.
Research notes tell us that
during the 1840s several of John Ridgely's enslaved blacks fled Hampton.
Eighteen year old "Daniel" fled in 1840, having been with Ridgely only three
years. Another slave, "Henry" was also "gone" by 1840. Between 1844 and 1845,
three more are presumed to have fled according to different plantation record
sources: Dick Matthews, John Patterson, and John Hawkins. For the last, Hawkins,
who fled in February 1845, John Ridgely and his agents (including son, Charles)
were still pursuing him by the 1850s. In fact, under the authority of the
1850 Federal Fugitive Slave Act, the Ridgelys sought John Hawkins in Pennsylvania.
Jim Frisby ran in 1844, but was recovered the following year. John
Kyle and Davy
Jones ran from Hampton together in 1846. The two do not appear in extant
jail dockets for the State of Maryland, and apparently do not appear again
in plantation records.
Looking at approximately
the same time period, the chief chronicler of the organized Underground Railroad,
William Still of Philadelphia, documents better than sixty cases of blacks
from Baltimore City and County who reached him and were shepherded from
Pennsylvania to points further north. No Hampton fugitive is recorded by
Still. Yet, assistance from Pennsylvania was apparently not necessary for
some. Fifteen year old Rebecca Posey absconded in 1852. The following year,
twenty-five year old Henry Jones did likewise. There is no evidence that
either was caught or returned to Hampton.
In what must have been
a dramatic and emotional episode, eight enslaved blacks attempted to flee
Hampton as a group in 1853. What made this effort different from the group
of twelve men enslaved at the Forge who attempted flight in 1829, was that
the 1853 group was composed of both sexes and different ages. They had, perhaps,
come up together at Hampton, and were attempting to leave together. They
were caught, jailed and returned to John Ridgely. Two other long-time Hampton
slaves also fled during the 1850s, but are not known to have been recovered.
Aleck , who had grown up at Hampton with other kinfolk, including his mother,
Milly, ran in 1858, while long-time house servant Lucy Jackson's son Henry
, ran in 1861.
The Ridgely plantation serves
as a window in which we can study the complex environment from which a slave
fled. For individual stories of flight, please read the biographies of those associated with the Ridgely
plantation.
Sources
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