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Elizabeth freeman
Elizabeth freeman











elizabeth freeman

He tells Mark Pratt of the Associated Press (AP) that many of his Statehouse colleagues were also unaware of Freeman’s story. Though William “Smitty” Pignatell, a Massachusetts state representative, grew up close to Sheffield, he didn’t hear Freeman’s story until about 20 years ago. Now, VanSant added, Freeman will “stand here longer than the minute she asked for.”

Elizabeth freeman free#

She also read a quote from Freeman, per the Berkshire Eagle: “If one minute’s freedom had been offered to me, and I had been told I must die at the end of that minute, I would have taken it-just to stand one minute on God’s earth a free woman.” “For me, as a Black woman today,” she added, “these events symbolize the bittersweet journey of the lives of liberation that Americans of African descent have been on for centuries now, and the seemingly insurmountable struggle sometimes for peace.” Her story has been “largely understated and untold, if not erased from our American history,” Gwendolyn VanSant, co-founder of the racial equity nonprofit Multicultural BRIDGE, said at the event, according to the Berkshire Edge’s Shaw Israel Izikson.

elizabeth freeman

At the dedication ceremony, activists, historians and civic leaders spoke to the importance of remembering Freeman’s legacy. The unveiling was the culmination of a three-day celebration, which included a ceremonial walk from the Ashley house to the Sedgwick house in honor of Freeman’s journey. Sheffield’s bronze memorial to Freeman faces the Sedgwick house. Per the Berkshire Eagle, the two became the first enslaved people to gain freedom by invoking Massachusetts’ constitution. They then added to the case a man named Brom, also enslaved by Ashley.

elizabeth freeman

She asked if he could help her fight for her freedom in court along with attorney Tapping Reeve, Sedgwick took the case. Published in 1780, the Constitution’s first article reads: “All men are born free and equal, and have certain natural, essential and unalienable rights.” That didn’t quite square with Freeman’s lived reality.Īfter listening to the reading of the constitution, Freeman is said to have walked some five miles from the house of John Ashley, her enslaver, to the house of Theodore Sedgwick, an attorney who was involved in Massachusetts’ fight against the British. But one day, so the story goes, she overheard a public reading of the Massachusetts Constitution that caught her attention. “That alone is going to cause folks to stop and see who she is.”Īs an enslaved person, Freeman could not read nor write. “I’m glad she’s in the center of town,” Massachusetts resident Luci Leonard tells the Berkshire Eagle’ s Matt Martinez. But earlier this month, officials and activists unveiled an eight-foot-tall bronze statue of Freeman in her hometown of Sheffield, Massachusetts. Her remarkable story has long been cast aside in history books.

elizabeth freeman

She named herself Elizabeth Freeman to reflect her new status. John Ashley, Esq., paved the way for the state to effectively outlaw slavery in 1783. In 1781, a jury in Massachusetts ruled in favor of an enslaved woman known as Bett, granting her freedom-more than 80 years before the Emancipation Proclamation.













Elizabeth freeman