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Introduction Introduction
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The New-England Weekly Journal 24 March 1729. The New-England Weekly Journal 24 March 1729.
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Cite
Abstract
The difficulty of determining whether individuals had been legally enslaved, as prisoners of a just war, or kidnapped unlawfully was a key consideration in Samuel Sewall’s 1700 essay questioning the morality of slavery, The Selling of Joseph, and this same difficulty animates the following runaway slave advertisement. Some Bostonians clearly believed that John Mallott, a free man, had been wrongfully detained as a slave. They harbored him from Samuel Bass in an effort to preserve his liberty. But Samuel Bass, the author of the advertisement, and Habijah Savage, a local magistrate, believed that Mallott was a fictional identity assumed by an enslaved man named Caesar in an attempt to bluff his way to freedom. Modern readers cannot know which story was true any more than eighteenth-century readers could; this account captures the narrative complexity of slavery, in which legal status was often shaped by the storytelling abilities of both the enslaved and the enslavers.
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