Run Away Slave Search

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One appalling morning in 1738 Virginia, Nathaniel Harrison had a rude awaking to find not one, but three of his slaves had vanished. Documented in the Virginia Gazette, Basil, Glocester and Sam had ran away by canoe Sunday, the twenty-fifth of June as they were seen floating down the river. Harrison mentioned that these three men had cotton waste coats and breeches, as well as several old clothes, salt fish and corn stolen from the neighbor. Whoever could return the property back to their “master” would receive twenty shillings for each slave paid by Harrison himself.
James Newgent wrote in the same newspaper eight years later of his run away slave Harry, 35, who had small eyes, a very large beard and played the fiddle. Newgent believed Harry ran away to Richmond to be with his wife. The man that could apprehend him would receive a reward of a pistol and since the slave ran away “without any cause” he would be punished through whipping.
Slavery in eighteenth-century America was a legal form of labor. It was seen as a condition of servitude that included African slaves, white indentured servants, and British convicted felons. Slavery was the preeminent manpower in tobacco fields, homes and docks across the American colonies. In most cases someone was born into slavery, giving the child a predestined life of servitude. Slaves would runaway to any location to free themselves from horrible conditions or to be reconnected with family, risking violent punishment or death. Because having a human labor force was unavoidable, having a slave runaway from their master’s property hurt the production of the owner, making slaves expensive and valuable.
Harrison and Newgent’s advertisement for these run away slaves are two of thousands th...

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...zed labor forced slavery is no longer a part of our culture, advertisement is a vast part of every day life. What will historians three hundred years from now depict about our society today through advertising? Who does not have a voice in our advertising and what topics are being left out? Are we correctly presenting our society? All of these questions can be applied today and in the past through these slave advertisements but sometimes the answer is not always clear.

Works Cited

Brown, Victoria, and Timothy Shannon. Going to the Source . 3rd ed. 1. 2012. Chapter
3. Print.
The Geography of Slavery. University of Virginia, 2005. Web. 29 Jan. 2014.
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