Plymouth County, Massachusetts Freeperson Families in 1790
Couldn't load pickup availability
Mary Blauss Edwards has researched every person of color who was listed as a head of household in Plymouth County in the 1790 Census—the first Federal Census of the new United States. Taken seven years after the abolition of slavery in Massachusetts, Tufts University Associate Professor Kerri Greenidge points out that this census illustrates the “fluidity of racial categories in Massachusetts.” Most of these Plymouth County residents were black and Wampanoag/Massachuset Indian soldiers in the Revolutionary War who purchased their freedom using bounty money from their service. Blauss Edwards details the contributions of people of color to the Plymouth economy through their labor as seamen, blacksmiths, ministers, and common laborers. The 1790 Census in Massachusetts captures a remarkable moment in history, documenting the families of newly manumitted families navigating the complicated domestic, social, and economic realities of transitioning from slavery to freedom in the only American state which fully endorsed total abolition.
This book contains detailed sketches for 28 heads of household with surnames Ashport, Augustus, Clap/Clapp, Cordner, Craine/Crane, Easton, Fuller, Goodwin, Hart, Howe, Hubbard, Jotham, London/Lonnon/Loudon, Negro, Nicolson/Nicholson/Nickerson, Peirce/Pierce/Pearce, Phelps, Quande, Richards, Stavan/Stevens, Torbet/Talbot/Talbert/Tarbet/Tarbil/Tarbot, Turner, White, and Wright.
Mary Blauss Edwards
2024, 6" x 9", paper, index, 382 pp.
ISBN: 9780880824347
125-E2434

