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Ellen Craft 1826-1891

Ellen Craft was a light-skinned black who helped herself and her husband escape from slavery by passing as white; William Craft (1824-1900) is known for the autobiographical slave narrative that described the couple's dramatic escape.

ellen craftWilliam and Ellen Craft's self-liberation is one of the most remarkable escapes ever recorded in an African American slave narrative. This is in part due to the brazenness of their plan: the Crafts travelled by public transportation all the way from their home in Georgia to freedom in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, even staying in hotels along the way. Their boldness was made possible by the brilliance of their disguise—which employed race, gender, and class passing to conceal Ellen, a black slave woman, as a white slaveholding man.

Ellen was born in Clinton, Georgia, to a biracial slave woman and her master and was so light-skinned that she was often mistaken for a member of her father's white family. This infuriated her mistress and, as a result, at age 11 Ellen was given as a wedding gift to a daughter who lived in Macon. There, Ellen met William, whom she married in 1846.

Two years later, the Crafts began to devise their escape plan, which involved Ellen posing as a white slaveholder travelling with "his" slave William.

This plan required several levels of deception. Because a white woman would not travel alone with a male slave, Ellen had to pretend to be not only white but a white man. She cut her hair, changed her walk, and wrapped her jaw in bandages to disguise her lack of a beard. To hide her illiteracy, she wrapped her right arm in a sling to have a ready excuse for being unable to sign papers; and she explained all of the bandages by claiming to be an invalid travelling north to receive medical care. In this manner, the Crafts travelled from Georgia to Pennsylvania by train, steamer, and ferry without being discovered.

They arrived in Philadelphia on Christmas Day in 1848. In Philadelphia they were quickly befriended by abolitionists William Wells Brown and William Lloyd Garrison, who recognized the power the Crafts’ story could have as an antislavery tool. The Crafts moved to Boston, Massachusetts, and began travelling as antislavery lecturers. But the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, which mandated that fugitive slaves living anywhere in the United States must be returned to their owners, put their freedom in danger. Because of their celebrity, the Crafts were singled out by slave catchers as targets. In November 1850 they fled to England, where they continued to work as antislavery activists. Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom, William's autobiography, was published in London in 1860.

In 1868, following the American Civil War, the Crafts returned to the United States with two of their children and settled in Ways Station, Georgia. There they farmed a cotton and rice plantation and attempted to start a school, although financial debts from the plantation and hostility from white neighbours ultimately led to the school's demise. Ellen Craft died in 1891 and, at her request, was buried under her favourite tree on their land.

Source: Wikipedia