The History of Mary Prince: A West Indian SlaveMary Prince was the first black British woman to escape from slavery and publish a record of her experiences. In this unique document, Mary Prince vividly recalls her life as a slave in Bermuda, Turks Island, and Antigua, her rebellion against physical and psychological degradation, and her eventual escape to London in 1828. First published in London and Edinburgh in 1831, and well into its third edition that year, The History of Mary Prince inflamed public opinion and created political havoc. Never before had the sufferings and indignities of enslavement been seen through the eyes of a woman--a woman struggling for freedom in the face of great odds. Moira Ferguson's edition of the book added an introduction, annotations, and appendices. The book has found popularity both in the classroom and with the general public. Recently, an adaptation of the memoirs of Mary Prince appeared as one segment of "A Skirt Through History," a six-part feature film series produced by the BBC. Mary Prince's story has also been the centerpiece of BBC radio broadcasts. In this revised and expanded edition of The History of Mary Prince, Ferguson has added new material, based on her extensive research in Bermuda and London. The book includes new details of Mary Prince's experiences as a freewoman in England, the transcripts of several libel cases brought against her, and the reactions of British society, as seen in prominent periodicals of the day, against the original publication of The History of Mary Prince. This new material brings greater depth and detail and serves to more fully illustrate and contextualize the life of this remarkable woman. Moira Ferguson is James E. Ryan Professor of English and Women's Literature, University of Nebraska. |
Contents
Introduction to the Revised Edition | |
Preface | 51 |
The History of Mary Prince A West Indian Slave | 53 |
Supplement to the History of Mary Prince | 91 |
Mary Princes Petition | 123 |
Postscript to the Second Edition | 125 |
Appendix to the Third Edition | 126 |
Narrative of Louis AsaAsa | 128 |
Historical Slave Resistance in Bermuda | 146 |
The TreadWheel | 147 |
Bermuda Royal Gazette | 148 |
An Excerpt from the Royal Gazette January 20 1994 | 154 |
A Second Excerpt from the Royal Gazette January 21 1994 | 157 |
Proclamation in 1993 | 159 |
Vernon Jackson Paradise FoundAlmost | 161 |
Bibliography | 163 |
Court Case Involving Mary Prince Pringle v Cadell | 132 |
Court Case Involving Mary Prince Wood v Pringle | 136 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
African afterwards Anti-Slavery Society APPENDIX Bermudian Blackwood's Magazine British Captain Ingham character colony conduct Cox's Hill cruel Curtin Darrell defendant Devonshire Parish edition emancipation England evidence fact father female slaves Ferry Reach flogged free black freedom friends heard heart Hetty History of Mary husband John Ingham John Till lady letter lived London magistrate manumission married Mary Prince Mary Prince's History Mary Prince's narrative Mary's master Miss Betsey mistress Molly Moravian mother negro never night owners Packwood pamphlet Parish Pembroke person plaintiff poor Pringle's proslavery punishment refused return to Antigua Royal Gazette salt sell sexual sisters slave narratives slavery Smith's Parish sold Spanish Point statement Susanna Strickland testimony Thomas Pringle tion told treadwheel Turk's Turks Island Vernon Jackson wash West Indian West Indian Slave West Indies whip wife Williams witness woman Wood Wood's


