JOHN GLASGOW
When researching Buffalo Soldier I came across some
heartbreaking stories, perhaps none more so than that of John Glasgow (related in Slave Life in
Georgia, a Narrative of the Life, Sufferings and Escape of John Brown a
Fugitive Slave).
Born a free man in British Guiana, John Glasgow went to sea as a cabin boy and worked his way
his way up on vessels that sailed between Britain and the West Indies.
He married a woman from Lancashire and they took on a small
farm. He had saved his money while
he’d been at sea and invested in three horses, a plough and a cart. But John Glasgow knew nothing of
farming and so, leaving his wife to manage their land, he returned to sea. The couple prospered, but in 1830, when
John Glasgow was around twenty five years old and the father of two children,
he signed for an English vessel bound for Savannah, Georgia, for a cargo of
rice. He promised his wife that this would be his last voyage to a distant
country, and that in future he would confine his trips to the English coast.
Georgia law required black seamen to remain on board their
ships from 6pm until 5am. As soon
as John Glasgow set foot on shore he was seized, handcuffed and incarcerated in
gaol. There he was kept confined
for several days until the ship had discharged her cargo, re-loaded and was
ready to start the return journey to England. His fate lay in the hands of the
ship’s captain who would have to
pay the high gaol fees to release him.
The captain – who’d had to pay for a slave to do John’s work while he
was in gaol - chose not to do so and set sail without him. On the day John’s
wife and children expected him home he was put on an auction stand and sold as
a ‘green hand’ to a Georgia farmer for
$350.
John Glasgow had the carriage and bearing of a free
man. His ‘brave look’ offended his
new master, Thomas Stevens, who swore to flog the pride out of him.
There was no hope of escape for John Glasgow. He couldn’t read or write; he was
utterly friendless in a distant country. After three or four years in Georgia his master
ordered him to find himself a wife.
John picked Nancy – a young woman from a nearby plantation but Thomas
Stevens didn’t approve his choice.
Any children Nancy bore John would be the property of Thomas Steven’s
neighbour and it was his own ‘stock’ he wanted to increase. Stevens commanded John to pick a woman
from his own plantation but John Glasgow refused to do so. For slipping away on Christmas
Day to see Nancy once more he was punished. When John still refused to choose a different woman Thomas
Stevens vowed, “He’d cure
him of Nancy any how.”
This time John Glasgow was given ‘the Picket.’ In his autobiography John Brown
describes the procedure in detail and it makes gruesome reading. After that particular punishment John
Glasgow, “could not stand,
much less walk, so they carried him to his quarters where the usual application
of salt and water and red pepper was made to his wounds. It was a month before he stirred from
his plank, and five months elapsed ere he could walk. Ever after he had a limp in his gait.”
John Brown made his escape from the plantation some time
afterwards. “The last I know of
John’s history is that in 1840, or thereabouts, the poor fellow was felling a
white oak in the woods, which in falling struck him on his right thigh, just
above the knee, and broke it in two.
As he was thus rendered comparatively useless for field-work, Thomas
Stevens gave him to his son, who kept him to shell corn off the cob.”
John Brown eventually made his way to England. “One of my
chief regrets is that I cannot remember the name of the place where John’s wife
lived.”
I am haunted by the idea that John Glasgow’s English wife
never knew what had happened to her husband, that his children grew up without
their father. But there’s a small
gleam of light in this sad, sad story.
I like to think the spirit of John Glasgow remained intact and
unbroken because John Brown concludes his account with this tribute, “To John (Glasgow) I owe a debt
of gratitude, for he it was who taught me to love and to seek liberty.”
What a tale. How cruel and arbitrary are some people's lives. Our continuing exploitation of workers far away who break their backs so we can have cheap goods may not be as offensive as the breeding and enslavement of a whole people but nevertheless cheapens lives and makes us all culpable.
ReplyDeleteThanks Tanya
So sad when another human does not consider you to be human. The lack of compassion is sadly as alive to day as then. I do hope despite his loss, his family thrived in the UK.
ReplyDeleteWhat a sad and terrible story.
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Tanya and timely too.
ReplyDeleteAlso, interesting the differences in how John was treated in
Britain and in America.
Thank you for sharing this heartbreaking story Tanya, and I completely agree with Catherine Johnson's comment above.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteI read this with interest as I was looking for details of my grandfather (also John Glasgow). He was white though but by coincidence lived his married life in Fleetwood, Lancashire, a fishing port. He suffered 2 heart attacks the latter paralysing his left side. He died 25 November 1976 aged just 49yrs old. I was 9 at the time. It's amazing how many stories like your John Glasgow there are. They should be told. Thanks for sharing xx
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