A Plausible Man: The True Story of the Escaped Slave Who Inspired Uncle Tom's Cabin, Susanna Ashton, c. 2024. Clemson University. Fascinating. Really, really good.
Introduction
- began in 1850
- visit to Harriet Beecher Stowe's house in Brunswick, Maine
- "a genuine article from the "Old Carliny State"
- Stowe may have never known the man's name, but drawing on that experience in 1850, seven weeks later, Stowe began to write Uncle Tom's Cabin
- a novel that helped inspire th most consequential social revolution in the history of the Western world: the overthrow of modern slavery
- he was fleeing to Canada; he went by the name of John Andrew Jackson
- his story was more significant than the novel
- born enslaved sometime around 1820
- wife Louisa and daughter "Jinny"
- later, a lecturing career under the mercurial patronage of powerful British Baptist Evangelicals who assisted him in publishing his memoir, The Experience of a Slave in South Carolina (1862) -- during the US Civil War!
- feloniously inveigling -- p. xi
- Doctor Clavern ("Doc") -- Sumer County
- Doctor was Jackson's father -- that's another generational story in this book
- that began the author's search for the Jackson family
- the Clavon / Clabon / Clyburn family -- p. xii
- Jackson: no direct descendants but many nephews and nieces survived
- honored their patriarch "Doc" with generation after generation naming at least one child "Doctor," "Dock," or "Doc."
- this modern family of Clavons (author used this name for the Clavon family and Clavern for Jackson and his father) surprisingly rich with clergy, salespeople and vibrant personalities;
- photo of Dr Doctor Clavon, 2022 -- awarded a doctorate degree from George Washington University in engineering, 2022
Prelude: The Man Who Came Back -- W.P.A. Interview with Jake McLeod (1936)
- Federal Writers' Project
- 83-years old, Jake McLeod, interviewed in 1936 (born 1853, before the US civil war; would. have been ten years old in 1863)
- agreed to be interviewed by federal agents to speak about survivors of slavery
- native of South Carolina
- interviewers: H Grady Davis and Mrs Lucile Young
- mentions a Black Creek man; Charleston area
- a fascinating story: it turned out to be the story of John Andrew Jackson, who achieved almost mythical status in Black memory even while he was effectively erased from history, by many of his former white friends and allies
- 1846: John Andrew Jackson fled a slave labor camp near the area of Lynchburg, South Carolina, close to the Black River, or what McLeod called the "Black Creek."
- after the US Civil War, Jackson returned with barrels and boxes of secondhand goods shipped from Northern communities; Jackson went back and forth over the decades that followed
- 1881: Jackson bought a lot in the tiny town of Lynchburg, close to the crossroads where he had once lived back when he was enslaved by Robert English and, as Sumter County property records demonstrate, immediately adjacent to McLeod's small parcel of land
Chapter 1:"Feloniously Inveigling" -- A Judgment on the Kidnapping of Doctor (1821) -- Lynchburg, South Carolina (1821 - 1846)
- story begins with a man named Doctor
- two white men got into a fight over a slave, Doctor, along the Black River
- along the coast of the Atlantic, slightly closer to Myrtle Beach to the north than to Charleston to the south
- page 10: early genealogy: read this when you have time
Chapter 2: The Reverend Loweryk's Story Based on Facts (1911) -- Lynchburg, South Carolina (Fall-Winter 1846)
- from a book by Reverend I. E. Lowery, Life on the Old Plantation in Ante-Bellum Days or A Story Based on Facts
- Lowery's story serves up his competing truths about the Black community of Lynchburg
Chapter 3: "Speaks Plausibly" -- The Reverend and His Runaway Advertisement (1847) -- Lynchburg - Charleston, South Carolina (December 1846 - February 1847)
- begins with facsimile of a $50 reward of a man named Jackson; published in the Sumter Banner
- about 30 years of age
- tall, nearly six feet in height, stoug and well proportioned
- "speaks plausibly"
- has a wife in Houston County, Georgia, belong to Mr J. R. Mac Law
- notice signed by Thomas R. English, March 27, 1847
- the story of Jackson's escape
Chapter 4: Henry Foreman's Boarding House Census Report of 1850 - Boston, Salem, and Western Massachusetts (February 1847 - November 1850)
- begins with a facsimile of a portion of the 1850 Census
- shows Henry Foreman and his family living at the Boston boarding house along wiht a list of Black men in their twenties; all with the profession of "Seaman" and of "unknown" place of birth
- "Andrew Jackson" is listed on the very last line
Chapter 5: "A Genuine Article" -- Harriet Beecher Stowe's Letter to Her Sister (1850) -- Maine (November 1850 - March 1851) -- this is where it really begins!
- begins with a facsimile of part of a letter from Harriet Beecher Stowe to her older sister Catharine Beecher
- tells the story of the man that came to her house and provides a scene that she would later use in Uncle Tom's Cabin
Chapter 6: Race: United States -- The New Brunswick Census of 1851: Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada (1851- 1856)
- begins with a facsimile of a portion of the 1851 Census for Saint John County, Kings and Sydney Wards. Note heading of "Blacks in King's Ward -- Chiefly Servants" and John Jackon, age 35; listed as the 19th name in the far left column
Chapter 7: The Experience of a Slave in South Carolina by John Andrew Jackson (1862): The British Isles (1856 - 1862)
begins with a facsimile of a cover of a book, The Experience of A Slave in South C
Chapter 8: The White Preacher and the Black Slave Lecturer (1865)
Chapter 9: "One Thousand Acres" -- A Letter to General Howard (1868)
Chapter 10: "Hard Labor" -- Court Minutes from Surry County, North Caroline (1881)
Acknowledgments
Notes
Image Sources
Index