AMOS RILEY ARCHIVE WITH MANUSCRIPT PASS USED BY JOSIAH HENSON, BEECHER'S MODEL FOR "UNCLE TOM,"

Pricing & History
Amos and Camden Riley Papers, 1827-1922, ca 75 items, including account book, two books. Amos Riley is not a household name, but nearly every American in the 1850s knew him, or at least his fictionalized counterpart. Riley was known not for what he did, but whom he owned: a slave named Josiah Henson, the putative model for Uncle Tom in Harriet Beecher Stowe�s Uncle Tom�s Cabin. Born into slavery in Maryland, Henson (1789-1883) was barely five when he was sold after his first master�s death, ending up eventually on the plantation of Isaac Riley, along with his mother. A convert to Christianity at 18, Henson acted as a lay Methodist preacher and saved up funds to purchase his freedom, but nothing was to come easy for him. Facing financial straits in 1825, Riley transferred Henson to his brother Amos in Kentucky, who according to Henson�s autobiography, accepted Henson�s saving as the price for freedom in 1829, but then reneged on the exchange. After finding that Riley was shipping him to New Orleans to be sold - a plan fortuitously delayed - Henson decided to escape. In 1830, he, his wife and four children crossed the Ohio River through Indiana and Ohio, via Buffalo, into freedom in Canada. There Henson established a settlement for self-liberated slaves called New Dawn in 1834 and became a prominent member of the black community in read more