Search Results - Grandy, Moses, 1786-1843

Moses Grandy

[[Great Dismal Swamp Moses Grandy (, p. 333. Sobel says 1796. Most sites, like the Documenting the South website, say that he was born about 1785. Bill Bartel safely says the late 1700s.|group="nb"|name="year of birth"}} – unknown) was an African-American author, abolitionist, and, for more than the first four decades of his life, an enslaved person. At eight years of age, he became the property of his white playmate, James Grandy, and two years later, he was hired out for work. The monies Moses earned were collected and held until James Grandy turned 21. Moses helped build the Great Dismal Swamp Canal and learned how to navigate boats. It was that skill that led him to be made commander of several boats that traveled the canal and Pasquotank River, transporting merchandise from Elizabeth City, North Carolina, to Norfolk, Virginia. The position allowed him to be better fed, shod, and dressed. Able to keep a portion of his earnings, Moses arranged to buy his freedom twice, and twice, his enslavers kept the money and held him in slavery. An arrangement was made for an honorable man to buy him, and Grandy earned the money to buy his freedom a third time, this time successfully.

In the course of his life, he had witnessed beatings and sales of family members, including his first bride, only eight months after their marriage. Once he obtained his freedom, he worked to make money to free his wife and children. He was able to secure the release of his wife and 15-year-old son. He dictated a narrative of his life, ''Narrative of the Life of Moses Grandy, Late a Slave in the United States of America'', to buy the freedom of additional family members.

His slave narrative and others, read in the United States and overseas, helped to bring awareness of slavery and fuel the abolitionist movement. Provided by Wikipedia
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