In this Book

Freedom Seekers: Escaping from Slavery in Restoration London

Book
Simon P. Newman
2022
Published by: University of London Press
summary

Joint winner of the prestigious 2023 Frederick Douglass Book Prize from Yale University’s Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition, Freedom Seekers: Escaping from Slavery in Restoration London reveals the hidden stories of enslaved and bound people who attempted to escape from captivity in England’s capital.

In 1655 White Londoners began advertising in the English-speaking world’s first newspapers for enslaved people who had escaped. Based on the advertisements placed in these newspapers by masters and enslavers offering rewards for so-called runaways, this book brings to light for the first time the history of slavery in England as revealed in the stories of resistance by enslaved workers. Featuring a series of case-studies of individual "freedom-seekers", this book explores the nature and significance of escape attempts as well as detailing the likely routes and networks they would take to gain their freedom.

The book demonstrates that not only were enslaved people present in Restoration London but that White Londoners of this era were intimately involved in the construction of the system of racial slavery, a process that traditionally has been regarded as happening in the colonies rather than the British Isles. An unmissable and important book that seeks to delve into Britain’s colonial past.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright

Contents

List of illustrations

About the author

A note on language

Acknowledgements

Escape Route

Prologue: Ben

Part I Restoration London and the enslaved

1. London

pp. 3-37

2. The Black community

pp. 39

3. Freedom seekers in Restoration London

pp. 53

Part II The freedom seekers

4. Jack: boys

pp. 71

5. Francisco/Bugge: South Asians

pp. 81

6. ‘A black Girl’ and ‘an Indian black girl’: female freedom seekers

pp. 95

7. Caesar: country marks

pp. 105

8. Benjamin: branded

pp. 113

9. Pompey: shackled

pp. 117

10. Quoshey: escaping from ships and their captains

pp. 133

11. Goude: Thames-side maritime communities

pp. 143

12. Quamy: merchants, bankers, printers and coffee houses

pp. 155

13. David Sugarr and Henry Mundy: escaping from colonial planters in London

pp. 167

14. Calib and ‘a Madagascar Negro’: freedom seekers in the London suburbs and beyond

pp. 181

15. ‘Peter’: London’s connected community of slave-ownership

pp. 185

Part III Freedom seekers in the colonies

16. Freedom seekers and the law in England’s American and Caribbean colonies

pp. 195

17. London precedents in New World contexts: the runaway advertisement in the colonies

pp. 211

Epilogue: King

pp. 217

Index

pp. 219

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