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Wallace Turnage

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wallace Turnage (c. 1846 – 1916)[1] was anenslaved African American who recounted his story of repeatedly trying to escape brutal slaveowners before escaping to Union Army lines. He moved to New York City with his family and lived in economic poverty. He wrote anarrative about his life.[1] It was published for the first time in 2007.

He was born inNorth Carolina, and was the son of a fifteen-year-old female slave and a white man.[2] He was sold multiple times and made repeated attempts to run away, and succeeded. He lived inNew York andNew Jersey, working as a waiter, janitor, glass blower, and finally as a watchman.[3]

Hismanuscript was passed on to his daughter,Lydia Turnage Connolly (1885 – 1984). After her death, it was another 20 years before it was published. In 2007, Civil War historianDavid W. Blight publishedA Slave No More: Two Men Who Escaped to Freedom, Including Their Own Narratives of Emancipation, the two men being Turnage andJohn M. Washington.

A historic marker inMobile, Alabama, reads as follows:

In 1864, Wallace Turnage, a seventeen year old slave[,] was owned by a merchant, Collier Minge, whose house stood on this site. Turnage escaped wartime Mobile by walking 25 miles down the western shore of Mobile Bay. After surviving three weeks in the Fowl River estuary, he paddled a row boat into the Bay. In late August, 1864, he was take to Fort Gaines and freed. Turnage's heroic emancipation was one of the most dramatic for African Americans in the Civil War. He later lived in New York City where he wrote his rare narrative, discovered in 2003 and published in 2007 in the book,A Slave No More. Through bravery and determination on this, his fifth attempt to escape, Turnage seized his own freedom. ¶ The African American Heritage Trail of Mobile[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abGates Jr., Henry Louis;Yacovone, Donald (October 1, 2013)."The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross". Hay House, Inc – via Google Books.
  2. ^Blight, David W. (Fall 2008)."A Slave's Audacious Bid For Freedom".American Heritage.58 (5).Archived from the original on 2021-02-10. Retrieved2021-03-25.
  3. ^"Wallace Turnage". Hstg.Archived from the original on 2008-01-24. Retrieved2007-12-06.
  4. ^Wallace Turnage, Historical Marker Data Base, 2015,archived from the original on 2020-10-19, retrieved2022-03-21
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