Powerful and Righteous:
The Transatlantic Survival and Cultural
Resistance of an Enslaved African Family
in Eighteenth-Century New Jersey
by Kenneth E. Marshall
REVEREND JOHN BODINE THOMPSON made an intriguing remark in his 1894 address
commemorating the 175th anniversary of the Reformed Dutch Church of Readington
Township in Hunterdon County, New Jersey:
Those [slaves] who came [to New Jersey] from the coast of Guinea [i.e.,
southern West Africa] were regarded as the most valuable because of
their superior endowments, both mental and physical. "Guinea Negroes"
brought more on the open market. Among these were a man who had
been the chief of his tribe, with his wife, who now shared his slavery as
she shared his rule in the land of their fathers. These became the property
of Jacob Kline … [Slavery] is bitter at the best, and it is no wonder that
these Africans were fearfully homesick. Every endeavor was made to
cheer and comfort them — save, of course, that of setting them free,
which, probably, was never thought of. The result was, that when all hope
was gone, they sought and found together the only freedom possible for
them. The spot is still pointed out, on Kline's brook, a mile directly north
of this place, where stood the cedar tree upon which, one morning, the
master found only the lifeless bodies of those who refused to remain as
slaves in a strange land.
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