In 1854, faced with the threat of yet another brutal beating, a
fifty-year-old slave in Mason County, Kentucky, decided to try
again to escape. His first attempt had ended in his near starvation
as he hid for nine weeks in a swamp, before hunger compelled him to
return to his master. This time the slave sought the help of a
neighbor with abolitionist sympathies, and he joined the hundreds
of other fugitive slaves fleeing across the Ohio River and north to
Canada on the Underground Railroad. After his arrival in Toronto he
discarded his master's surname (Parker), renamed himself Francis
Fedric, and married an Englishwoman. In 1857, he traveled with his
wife to Great Britain, where he lectured on behalf of the
antislavery cause and published two versions of his life story.
Born in Virginia circa 1805, Francis Fedric was not unlike
thousands of other African Americans who escaped slavery in the
southern states and sought refuge in Britain. Many of his fellow
ex-slaves also joined the abolitionist lecture circuit and
published memoirs to support both the cause and themselves.
Addressed to a British audience, these memoirs constitute a
distinctive subgenre of the slave narrative, and an essential
continuation of the narrative tradition established in England by
Olaudah Equiano, Ottobah Cugoano, and Mary Prince.
The first of Fedric's two memoirs, Life and Sufferings of
Francis Fedric, While in Slavery: An Escaped Slave after 51 Years
in Bondage (1859), offers a brief but vivid and dramatic
twelve-page description of his escape. Slave Life in Virginia and
Kentucky; or, Fifty Years of Slavery in the Southern States of
America (1863) provides a much more detailed account of life as a
slave and of plantation culture in the southern states. Together
the two works present a mesmerizing and distinct perspective on
slavery in the South. Amazingly, these narratives, among the most
interesting of the genre, remained out of print for nearly a
hundred and fifty years. Collected here for the first time and
meticulously edited by C. L. Innes, Slave Life in Virginia and
Kentucky: A Narrative by Francis Fedric, Escaped Slave includes a
contextual introduction, substantial biographical information on
Fedric, and extensive annotations that situate and illuminate his
work.
Long forgotten and never before published in the United States,
Fedric's narratives are certain to take their rightful place
alongside the most recognizable accounts in the canon of slave
memoirs.
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