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Stolen Into Slavery

Dennis B. Fradin, Judith Fradin

Nonfiction | Biography | Middle Grade | Published in 2005

Plot Summary
Stolen Into Slavery (2012), a non-fiction young adult book by American husband-and-wife writing team, Judith and Dennis Fradin, is a short biography of Solomon Northup, the free-born African-American who, in 1841, was sold into slavery after traveling to Washington, D.C. for a job. Solomon later wrote the famed autobiography, Twelve Years a Slave, which, in 2013, was adapted into an Oscar-winning film.

Solomon was born around 1807 in Essex County, New York. Although his father, Mintus, was a slave, he was freed after the death of his master, who stipulated in his will that Mintus would be manumitted. Around the age of twenty-two, Solomon married Anne Hampton who would go on to bear three children: Elizabeth, Margaret, and Alonzo. The family owned a farm in Hebron, New York, and supplemented the meager farm income with various odd jobs. Anne worked as a cook at various local taverns, while Solomon earned a reputation as an excellent violin player. Work was steady in the summers, but Solomon struggled to maintain consistent employment during the off-season. Therefore, in 1841, Solomon took a great risk in following two men calling themselves Merrill Brown and Abram Hamilton to a gig in Washington, D.C., where slavery was legal. Solomon was careful, securing "free papers" in advance of the trip, but the two men drugged and kidnapped Solomon.

After coming to, Solomon found himself at the mercy of two jailers, James H. Birch and Ebenezer Radburn. He vigorously protested, proclaiming his status as a freeman, but Birch and Radburn viciously beat him until he could no longer speak. Sometime later, Solomon was shipped along with other slaves to New Orleans on a perilous sea journey during which many of the slaves contracted and died of smallpox. After arriving in New Orleans, Solomon was able to send a letter to Henry B. Northup, the son of his father's former owner. Northup received the letter, but at that point, he found it prohibitively difficult to locate Solomon.



At a New Orleans slave auction, Solomon was sold to a Baptist preacher, William Prince Ford. Espousing an extraordinarily charitable view of the man, Solomon considered Ford to be a fundamentally good Christian, however "the influences and associations that had always surrounded him, blinded him to the inherent wrong at the bottom of the system of Slavery." The supposed fundamental "goodness" of Ford didn't stop him from selling Solomon to a vicious man named John M. Tibaut, to whom Ford owed money. After the transaction, Tibaut then owed $400 to Ford because Solomon's "purchase price" was larger than Ford's original debt by that amount.

This debt that most likely saved Solomon's life, according to the writers, because, one day, Tibaut began to viciously beat Solomon for supposedly using the "wrong nails" when working on a construction project on Ford's land. Unwilling to lie down while a weaker man beat him, Solomon fought back, hitting Tibaut. Tibaut responded by instructing two of his employees to kill Solomon by lynching him. Due to Tibaut's debt to Ford, some of Ford's employees interceded, preventing Tibaut's men from killing Solomon. Unfortunately, Solomon had already been bound and noosed, and was left in this position for hours before Ford finally came home and cut his binds.

Shortly thereafter, Tibaut attacked Solomon again, this time with an ax. Solomon fought back, choking Tibaut into unconsciousness and fleeting back to Ford's plantation. In an effort to mediate the situation, Ford convinced Tibaut to sell Solomon to Edwin Epps. It was under Epps that Solomon spent the majority of his time in servitude, working for the notoriously sadistic slave owner for a period of ten years.



After a decade of beatings, indignities, and backbreaking work, Solomon met Samuel Bass, a carpenter from Canada hired by Epps. Bass was not shy about his abolitionist views, and before long, he and Solomon became allies. Bass sent letters to Solomon's friends and family back home. Eventually, word of Solomon's situation finally made its way to Henry B. Northup. Thanks to Northup's connections, he was able to enlist the help of New York Governor Washington Hunt in securing Solomon's freedom. Unfortunately, there was still much work to do. Out of fear, Solomon didn't include his owner or location in the letters. Moreover, Bass was something of a nomad, moving from town to town and job to job. Eventually, Northup tracked down Bass who revealed that Solomon was currently enslaved by Edwin Epps.

When Northup finally arrived at Epps's plantation, the slave owner vigorously protested the legal paperwork provided to him, which proved Solomon's status as a free man. He made violent threats directed at both Henry Northup and Solomon, but in the end, Henry convinced Epps that any attempts to contest the decision, legal or otherwise, would be done in vain. Epps finally relented and Solomon was finally a free man.

Stolen Into Slavery is a straight-forward retelling of Solomon Northup's hellish ordeal, but one that still retains its power as one of the most infuriating—yet ultimately inspiring—stories of American survival.

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