April 15, 1848 – “One hundred dollars.” (today’s equivalent of a half years pay), is what Daniel Bell, a free African American blacksmith living and working at the Navy Yard in the District of Columbia, was told he needed for his family in 1848. Eleven members of his family, including his wife, children and grandchildren could escape from slavery for $100. Legally they were already free, but lawyers had them tied up in court. Proving their freedom would be expensive, time consuming and uncertain at best. A ship could be chartered, The Pearl, to take his family to freedom.It had been done before and they could get the same captain do it again. Working with two other African Americans living in Washington, D.C., Samuel Edmondson, (who wanted to help his enslaved sisters, Emily and Mary) and Paul Jennings, (a former slave of President and Mrs. Madison then in the process of “paying down the balance of the debt owed for his freedom” from Senator Daniel Webster) Bell would make it happen; he would get the $100. Captain Daniel Drayton took the chance because he needed the money. He chartered The Pearl and brought it to the 7th street wharf in Washington during the great public demonstrations celebrating the establishment of the first French Republic, the exile of King Louis-Philippe and the hope for universal liberty. Washington was aglow with excitement.
The cargo schooner could hold more than the enslaved members of the Bell and Edmondson families. Others learned of the daring plan and asked to join. Drayton accepted all those who could get on board by midnight. Casting off in the dark, they sailed down the Potomac, escaping to their freedom. The largest slave escape in the history of the United States was in progress.
41 slave owners in Washington, Maryland and Virginia awoke the next day to discover 77 people missing. Banding together on the steamer Salem, organized by the then Justice of the Peace, law enforcement officers and others, a posse of 35 armed white men headed out in hot pursuit of The Pearl. Winds pouring down the Chesapeake had forced The Pearl to anchor, waiting for a weather change, and the ship and its passengers were apprehended. The pursuit of family freedom was stymied, but many of the families on The Pearl survived and, when freedom came, they thrived.
Frederick Douglas is pictured above (left) with Mary and Emily Edmonson at the Cazenovia Fugitive Slave Law Convention in New York City. This picture helps to illustrate how ethnically diverse the abolitionist movement had become. The New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington D.C. Underground Railroad cell(s) were very involved in the planning, organization and implementation of the escape.
People of faith and the church of that time served as the life blood for communications and the driving force behind the movement to abolish slavery locally and nationally. The escape on the Pearl Schooner, reignited the abolitionist movement. Thus, led to a series of events and congressional and presidential actions that later laid the foundation for the emancipation of slavery in Washington D.C., the Emancipation Proclamation, and the Civil War. Read More.
Sources:
Read more about the escape on the Pearl at the Washington Post.
Originally published on The Pearl Coalition website.
* Noteworthy
1559 – Elizabeth I is crowned Queen of England in Westminster Abbey, London, England.
1844 – University of Notre Dame receives its charter from the state of Indiana.
1870 – A political cartoon for the first time symbolizes the Democratic Party with a donkey (“A Live Jackass Kicking a Dead Lion” by Thomas Nast for Harper’s Weekly).
1889 – The Coca-Cola Company, then known as the Pemberton Medicine Company, is incorporated in Atlanta.
1943 – The Pentagon is dedicated in Arlington, Virginia.
1967 – The first Super Bowl is played in Los Angeles. The Green Bay Packers defeat the Kansas City Chiefs 35–10.