The big draw, and the most significant, is the house itself because of its association to Northup. Visitors will also learn facts about plantation life, slave life in Louisiana, Oakland Plantation (where LSUA is currently housed) and different artifacts from Eakin’s collection, as well as folk art items from the Alexandria Museum of Art. Inside the single-story wood-frame Creole cottage visitors will learn about Northup’s time as a slave throughout central Louisiana, as well as the efforts of LSUA history professor Sue Eakin who helped save the Epps house. Northup’s story is currently on display at the Epps House: Solomon Northup’s Gateway To Freedom Museum located on the campus of LSU at Alexandria. I just couldn’t believe that people lived there didn’t know that story.” So I asked him about the story and he said he kind of heard of it but didn’t know it that well. “I had just started dating my husband who was from Avoyelles Parish. “I was at LSU at the time and my Louisiana History professor made us read “12 Years as Slave,” Melancon said. Twelve Years a Slave is a fact-checked view of the United States' most horrifying institution.ALEXANDRIA – Meredith Melancon couldn’t believe that more people didn’t know about Solomon Northup’s story. Solomon Northup's story was the rarest of slave narratives and one that deserved to be seen as more than anti-slavery propaganda. Eakin tracked down records to confirm Northup's story - from the Lousiaian ship's manifest to hospital records, as told by the BBC. A 2013 film of Solomon Northup's life, Twelve Years a Slave, directed by Steve McQueen, renewed interest in his story. Solomon Northup's narrative might never have been heard by a contemporary audience if it weren't for the work of Louisiana historian Sue Eakin, who, in 1968, co-edited a new edition of the memoir. It is not known when or how he died - his grave cannot be located. After that, Northup lived the rest of his life in relative obscurity, with the last known mention of him being in an 1857 Canadian newspaper. It was only after Ford arrived at the plantation that Solomon Northup was let free from his noose.Īfter the print of his book, Solomon Northup did a lecture circuit of his life story and produced two stage plays about his experience, and according to NPR, there's evidence that he might have aided the Underground Railroad. To that conclusion I have never since arrived," Northup said of the horrifying torture. "During the whole long day I came not to the conclusion, even once, that the southern slave, fed, clothed, whipped and protected by his master, is happier than the free colored citizen of the North. Tibeats fled the scene, leaving Northup bound under the hot sun for hours. Chapin reminded John Tibeats that he would owe Ford a mortgage if Northup was murdered. As they looked for a tree from which to hang Northup, Chapin, the field overseer, walked up carrying a pistol in each hand. In retaliation, Tibeats, along with some local enslavers, attempted to lynch Solomon Northup and tied a noose around his neck and bound his limbs. Tibeats, in an altercation about nails at a construction site, tried to whip Northup, but Northup physically restrained him and stepped on his neck, something almost unheard-of for an enslaved person. John Tibeats (who was likely named John Tibaut) was an especially cruel man. However, Northup was only enslaved by Ford for about a year. Northup was describing an institution in which not every enslaver was irrevocably evil: "It is not the fault of the slaveholder that he is cruel, so much as it is the fault of the system under which he lives," Northup maintained. It is this particularly generous characterization of Ford that was striking to readers of Northup's memoir. Northup described the intensely Christian Willam Ford as a "model master" - one who avoided unwarranted beatings, who read scripture to those he enslaved each Sunday, and offered praise for his carpentry. Northup was then purchased by a man named William Ford and taken to the Red River region of Louisiana. "Never have I seen such an exhibition of intense, unmeasured, and unbounded grief," Solomon Northup recounted in his book. When the enslaved men and women were cured of their near-fatal illness, Northup witnessed the horrific separation of Eliza and her two children, who had been sold to different enslavers. Before the auction, Northup and many aboard the ship contracted smallpox and were hospitalized, as records confirm.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |