hear of her death than for her to come here.”
   In his distress, Tom wrote a letter to Mr. Bigelow, of Wash-
   ington. People who are not in the habit of getting such
   documents have no idea of them. We give a fac simile of Tom's
   letter, with all its poor spelling, all its ignorance, helplessness,
   and misery.
   February 18, 1852.
   Mr. Bigelow.--Dear Sir,--I write to let you know how I am getting
   along. Hard times here. I have not had one hour to go outside the place since
   I have been on it. I put my trust in the Lord to help me. I long to hear from
   you all. I written to hear from you all. Mr. Bigelow, I hope you will not forget
   me. You know it was not my fault that I am here. I hope you will name me to
   Mr. Geden, Mr. Chaplin, Mr. Bailey, to help me out of it. I believe that if
   they would make the least move to it that it could be done. I long to hear
   from my family how they are getting along. You will please to write to me just
   to let me know how they are getting along. You can write to me.
   I remain your humble servant,
   Thomas Ducket.
   You can direct your letters to Thomas Ducket, in care of Mr. Samuel T. Har-
   rison, Louisiana, near Bayou Goula. For God's sake, let me hear from you all
   My wife and children are not out of my mind, day nor night.
   * The words of the Georgia Annual Conference: “Resolved, That slavery, a
   it exists in the United States, is not a moral evil.”
   CHAPTER VIII.
   KIDNAPPING.
   The principle which declares that one human being may
   lawfully hold another as property leads directly to the trade
   in human beings; and that trade has, among its other horrible
   results, the temptation to the crime of kidnapping.
   The trader is generally a man of coarse nature and low
   associations, hard-hearted, and reckless of right or honour.
   He who is not so is an exception, rather than a specimen. If
   he has anything good about him when he begins the business,
   it may well be seen that he is in a fair way to lose it.
   Around the trader are continually passing and repassing men
   and women who would be worth to him thousands of dollars in
   the way of trade--who belong to a class whose rights nobody
   respects, and who, if reduced to slavery, could not easily make
   their word good against him. The probability is that hundreds
   of free men and women and children are all the time being
   precipitated into slavery in this way.
   The recent case of Northrop, tried in Washington, D. C.,
   throws light on this fearful subject. The following account is
   abridged from the New York Times:--
   Solomon Northrop is a free coloured citizen of the United States; he was born
   in Essex County, New York, about the year 1808; became early a resident of
   Washington County, and married there in 1829. His father and mother resided
   in the county of Washington about fifty years, till their decease, and were both
   free. With his wife and children he resided at Saratoga Springs in the winter of
   1841, and while there was employed by two gentlemen to drive a team South, at
   the rate of a dollar a day. In fulfilment of his employment, he proceeded to New
   York, and, having taken out free papers, to show that he was a citizen, he went
   on to Washington city, where he arrived the second day of April, the same year,
   and put up at Gadsby's Hotel. Soon after he arrived he felt unwell, and went
   to bed.
   While suffering with severe pain, some persons came in, and seeing the condi-
   tion he was in, proposed to give him some medicine, and did so. This is the last
   thing of which he had any recollection, until he found himself chained to the
   floor of Williams' slave-pen in this city, and handcuffed. In the course of a few
   hours, James H. Burch, a slave-dealer, came in, and the coloured man asked him
   to take the irons off from him, and wanted to know why they were put on. Burch
   told him it was none of his business. The coloured man said he was free, and
   told where he was born. Burch called in a man by the name of Ebenezer Rodbury,
   and they two stripped the man and laid him across a bench, Rodbury holding him
   down by his wrists. Burch whipped him with a paddle until he broke that, and
   then with a cat-o'-nine-tails, giving him a hundred lashes; and he swore he would
   kill him if he ever stated to any one that he was a free man. From that time
   forward the man says he did not communicate the fact, from fear, either that he
   was a free man, or what his name was, until the last summer. He was kept in
   the slave-pen about ten days, when he, with others, was taken out of the pen in
   the night by Burch, handcuffed and shackled, and taken down the river by a
   steam-boat, and then to Richmond, where he, with forty-eight others, was put on
   board the brig “Orleans.” There Burch left them. The brig sailed for New
   Orleans, and on arriving there, before she was fastened to the wharf, Theophilus
   Freeman, another slave-dealer, belonging to the city of New Orleans, and who in
   1833 had been a partner with Burch in the slave-trade, came to the wharf, and
   received the slaves as they were landed, under his direction. This man was im-
   mediately taken by Freeman, and shut up in his pen in that city. He was taken
   sick with the small-pox immediately after getting there, and was sent to a hospital
   where he lay two or three weeks. When he had sufficiently recovered to leave the
   hospital, Freeman declined to sell him to any person in that vicinity, and sold him
   to a Mr. Ford, who resided in Rapides Parish, Louisiana, where he was taken, and
   lived more than a year, and worked with a carpenter, working with Ford at that
   business.
   Ford became involved, and had to sell him. A Mr. Tibaut became the pur-
   chaser. He, in a short time, sold him to Edwin Eppes, in Bayou Beouf, about
   one hundred and thirty miles from the mouth of Red River, where Eppes has
   retained him on a cotton plantation since the year 1843.
   To go back a step in the narrative, the man wrote a letter, in June, 1841, to
   Henry B. Northrop, of the State of New York, dated and post-marked at New
   Orleans, stating that he had been kidnapped and was on board a vessel, but was
   unable to state what his destination was; but requesting Mr. N. to aid him in
   recovering his freedom, if possible. Mr. N. was unable to do anything in his be-
   half, in consequence of not knowing where he had gone, and not being able
   to find any trace of him. His place of residence remained unknown, until
   the month of September last, when the following letter was received by his
   friends:
   Bayou Beouf, August 1852.
   Gentlemen,--It having been a long time since I have seen or heard from you,
   and not knowing that you are living, it is with uncertainty that I write to you;
   but the necessity of the case must be my excuse. Having been born free just
   across the river from you, I am certain you know me; and I am here now a slave.
   I wish you to obtain free papers for me, and forward them to me at Marksville,
   Louisiana, Parish of Avovelles, and oblige
   Yours,
   Solomon Northrop.
   Mr. William Peny, or Mr. Lewis Parker.
   
					     					 			; On receiving the above letter, Mr. N. applied to Governor Hunt, of New
   York, for such authority as was necessary for him to proceed to Louisiana as
   an agent to procure the liberation of Solomon. Proof of his freedom was
   furnished to Governor Hunt by affidavits of several gentlemen, General Clarke
   among others. Accordingly, in pursuance of the laws of New York, Henry
   B. Northrop was constituted an agent, to take such steps, by procuring evidence,
   retaining council, &c., as were necessary to secure the freedom of Solomon, and to
   execute all the duties of his agency.
   The result of Mr. Northrop's agency was the establishing of
   the claim of Solomon Northrop to freedom, and the restoring
   him to his native land.
   It is a singular coincidence that this man was carried to a
   plantation in the Red River country, that same region where the
   scene of Tom's captivity was laid; and his account of this plan-
   tation, his mode of life there, and some incidents which he
   describes, form a striking parallel to that history. We extract
   them from the article of the Times.
   The condition of this coloured man during the nine years that he was in the
   hands of Eppes was of a character nearly approaching that described by Mrs.
   Stowe as the condition of “Uncle Tom” while in that region. During that
   whole period his hut contained neither a floor, nor a chair, nor a bed, nor a
   mattress, nor anything for him to lie upon, except a board about twelve inches
   wide, with a block of wood for his pillow, and with a single blanket to cover
   him, while the walls of his hut did not by any means protect him from the
   inclemency of the weather. He was sometimes compelled to perform acts
   revolting to humanity, and outrageous in the highest degree. On one occasion,
   a coloured girl belonging to Eppes, about seventeen years of age, went one
   Sunday, without the permission of her master, to the nearest plantation, about
   half a mile distant, to visit another coloured girl of her acquaintance. She
   returned in the course of two or three hours, and for that offence she was called
   up for punishment, which Solomon was required to inflict. Eppes compelled
   him to drive four stakes into the ground at such distances that the hands and
   ankles of the girl might be tied to them, as she lay with her face upon the
   ground; and, having thus fastened her down, he compelled him, while standing
   by himself, to inflict one hundred lashes upon her bare flesh, she being stripped
   naked. Having inflicted the hundred blows, Solomon refused to proceed any
   further. Eppes tried to compel him to go on, but he absolutely set him at defiance,
   and refused to murder the girl. Eppes then seized the whip, and applied it until
   he was too weary to continue it. Blood flowed from her neck to her feet, and in
   this condition she was compelled the next day to go into the field to work as a
   field-hand. She bears the marks still upon her body, although the punishment
   was inflicted four years ago.
   When Solomon was about to leave, under the care of Mr. Northrop, this girl
   came from behind her hut, unseen by her master, and, throwing her arms around
   the neck of Solomon, congratulated him on his escape from slavery, and his
   return to his family; at the same time, in language of despair, exclaiming, “But,
   O God! what will become of me?”
   These statements regarding the condition of Solomon while with Eppes, and
   the punishment and brutal treatment of the coloured girls, are taken from
   Solomon himself. It has been stated that the nearest plantation was distant from
   that of Eppes a half-mile, and of course there could be no interference on the part
   of neighbours in any punishment, however cruel, or however well disposed to
   interfere they might be.
   Had not Northrop been able to write, as few of the free
   blacks in the slave States are, his doom might have been sealed
   for life in this den of misery.
   Two cases recently tried in Baltimore also unfold facts of a
   similar nature.
   The following is from
   It will be remembered that more than a year since a young coloured woman,
   named Mary Elizabeth Parker, was abducted from Chester County and conveyed
   to Baltimore, where she was sold as a slave, and transported to New Orleans. A
   few days after her sister, Rachel Parker, was also abducted in like manner, taken
   to Baltimore, and detained there in consequence of the interference of her Chester
   County friends. In the first case, Mary Elizabeth was, by an arrangement with the
   individual who had her in charge, brought back to Baltimore, to await her trial
   on a petition for freedom. So also with regard to Rachel. Both, after trial--
   the proof in their favour being so overwhelming--were discharged, and are now
   among their friends in Chester County. In this connexion we give the narratives
   of both females, obtained since their release.
   rachel parker's narrative.
   “I was taken from Joseph C. Miller's about twelve o'clock on Tuesday (Dec.
   30th, 1851), by two men who came up to the house by the back door. One came in
   and asked Mrs. Miller where Jesse McCreary lived, and then seized me by the arm,
   and pulled me out of the house. Mrs. Miller called to her husband, who was in
   the front porch, and he ran out and seized the man by the collar, and tried to
   stop him. The other, with an oath, then told him to take his hands off, and if he
   touched me he would kill him. He then told Miller that I belonged to Mr.
   Schoolfield, in Baltimore. They then hurried me to a waggon, where there was
   another large man, put me in, and drove off.
   “Mr. Miller ran across the field to head the waggon, and picked up a stake
   to run through the wheel, when one of the men pulled out a sword (I think it
   was a sword, I never saw one), and threatened to cut Miller's arm off. Pollock's
   waggon being in the way, and he refusing to get out of the road, we turned off to
   the left. After we rode away, one of the men tore a hole in the back of the car-
   riage, to look out to see if they were coming after us, and they said they wished
   they had given Miller and Pollock a blow.
   “We stopped at a tavern near the railroad, and I told the landlord (I think it
   was) that I was free. I also told several persons at the car-office; and a very nice
   looking man at the car-office was talking at the door, and he said he thought they
   had better take me back again. One of the men did not come further than the
   tavern. I was taken to Baltimore, where we arrived about seven o'clock the same
   evening, and I was taken to jail.
   “The next morning a man with large light-coloured whiskers took me away by
   myself, and asked me if I was no Mr. Schoolfield's slave. I told him I was not;
   he said that I was, and that if I did not say I was he would `cow-hide me and
   salt me, and put me in a dungeon.' I told him I was free, and that I would say
   nothing but the truth.”
   mary e. parker's narrative.
   “I was taken from Matthew Donelly's on Saturday night (Dec. 6th or 13th,
   1851); was caught whilst out of doors, soon after I had cleared the supper-table,
   about seven o'clock, by two men, and put into a waggon. One of them got into
 &n 
					     					 			bsp; the waggon with me, and rode to Elkton, Md., where I was kept until Sunday
   night at twelve o'clock, when I left there in the cars for Baltimore, and arrived
   there early on Monday morning.
   “At Elkton a man was brought in to see me by one of the men, who said that I
   was not his father's slave. Afterwards, when on the way to Baltimore in the cars,
   a man told me that I must say that I was Mr. Schoolfield's slave, or he would shoot
   me, and pulled a `rifle' out of his pocket and showed it to me, and also threatened
   to whip me.
   “On Monday morning Mr. Schoolfield called at the jail in Baltimore, to see me,
   and on Tuesday morning he brought his wife and several other ladies to see me.
   I told them I did not know them, and then Mr. C. took me out of the room, and
   told me who they were, and took me back again, so that I might appear to know
   them. On the next Monday I was shipped to New Orleans.
   “It took about a month to get to New Orleans. After I had been there about a
   week, Mr. C. sold me to Madame C., who keeps a large flower-garden. She sends
   flowers to sell to the theatres, sells milk in market, &c. I went out to sell candy
   and flowers for her when I lived with her. One evening, when I was coming
   home from the theatre, a watchman took me up, and I told him I was not a slave.
   He put me in the calaboose, and next morning took me before a magistrate, who
   sent for Madame C., who told him she bought me. He then sent for Mr. C., and
   told him he must account for how he got me. Mr. C. said that my mother and all
   the family were free, except me. The magistrate told me to go back to Madame
   C., and he told Madame C. that she must not let me go out at night, and he told
   Mr. C. that he must prove how he came by me. The magistrate afterwards called
   on Mrs. C. at her house, and had a long talk with her in the parlour. I do not
   know what he said, as they were by themselves. About a month afterwards I was
   sent back to Baltimore. I lived with Madame C. about six months.
   “There were six slaves came in the vessel with me to Baltimore, who belonged
   to Mr. D., and were returned because they were sickly.
   “A man called to see me at the jail after I came back to Baltimore, and told me