Archives of Maryland
(Biographical Series)
Murray "Morris" Anthony (b. 1856 - d. 1880)
MSA SC 5496-8004
Fled from Slavery, Dorchester County, Maryland 1857
Biography:
Murray Anthony, also known as Morris, was one of twenty-eight slaves to escape from
the Cambridge District of Dorchester County on October 24, 1857. Murray fled with his parents, Kit
and Leah,
and his two siblings. He would have only been about a year old at the
time of their escape, but Murray's absence was still recognized by
their owner Samuel Pattison. The planter owned eighteen slaves in 1857, including his 8 year old brother Adam and seven year old sister Mary.1
This group of freedom-seekers likely
received information from Harriet Tubman, as many local blacks had in recent
years. The news of the escape quickly spread throughout the
Eastern Shore of Maryland. Their profile was much too high to head
directly
to the known accomplices in Wilmington, Delaware. Pattison had already
bought a runaway advertisement, with a $2000 reward for the "fourteen
head of negroes" he lost in one night.2 He and the other
fugitives' owners, were also reportedly on the trail of the massive
group. Murray's parents were forced carry the infant
through constant rain
with scant supplies, assuming that plotting enemies could be anywhere.
They were finally able to make it to William Still's
Philadelphia depot in early November.3
Fellow travelers Aaron
Cornish and Joseph
Viney
were among those that recounted their
harrowing journey to the abolitionist. Still described their pitiable
condition, "with several of the children sick, some of their feet bare
and worn, and one of the mothers with an infant in her arms, incapable
of partaking of the diet." This infant was Murray Anthony, whose
survival must have been seen as a minor miracle. The group, who
were heavily armed for the perilous journey,
even
had a violent encounter with "several Irishmen" in Delaware. One of the
white attackers was severely injured from either a stabbing or bullet
wound
from the determined fugitives.4
Despite his public efforts, and the likelihood that he utilized slave
catchers, Pattison was not able to retrieve Kit Anthony or any members of his family.
In fact, nearly all of the Cambridge party was able to successfully
relocate to the growing fugitive community in Canada. The Anthonys
appear in the 1861 Canada Census, where they lived as freemen alongside
many of the same individuals that they had labored with as slaves in
Maryland, including Joseph and Susan Viney.5 Here,
Murray's literate father was able to support the transition of
newcomers in his role as secretary of the Fugitive Aid Society of St.
Catharines, established and staffed by Harriet Tubman.6
However, life was difficult in the new country and many succombed to
the weather conditions or lack of basic necessities. It seems that
Murray's mother Leah was one of these victims as she is no longer
documented after 1861. The rest of the family, save for his older
brother and sister, would move back to the United States shortly after.
By 1870, "Morris" was living with his father Kit, stepmother Mary, and brother
Robert in Elmira, New York.7
The family was on the move once again in the subsequent decade. Kit may
have felt that he and his sons would find better economic opportunities
in Philadelphia, where many formerly enslaved migrants had moved during
the post-war years. He was working there as a steward, according to the
1880 Census, though his elder son is not recorded.8 At just 25 years old, Murray Anthony died in Philadelphia on
Christmas Eve, 1880.9
Footnotes -
1. DORCHESTER COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS (Assessment Record)
for Samuel Pattison, 1852-1910 C687, Election District 7, p. 161.
2. "Fourteen
Head of Negroes", 26 October, 1857.
3. William Still. Underground Rail Road: A Record of Facts, Authentic Narratives,
Letters, etc. Philadelphia, PA: Porter & Coales, Publishers, 1871.
4. Ibid.
5. Ancestry.com. 1861 Census of Canada, St. Catharine's, Lincoln County, District 4, p. 56.
6. "Relief of Fugitive Slaves
in Canada," The Liberator, 25 October, 1861.
7. Ancestry.com. 1870 United States Federal Census. Elmira, Chemung County, NY, Ward 3, p. 44.
8. Ancestry.com. 1880 United States Federal Census. Philadelphia, PA, District 104, p. 13.
9. Ancestry.com. Philadelphia, Pennyslvania, Death Certificates Index, 1803-1915, "Morris Anthony".
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to Murray Anthony's Introductory Page
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