Ann Matthews (b. 1805 - d. 1851)
MSA SC 5496-013784
Accomplice to slave flight, Baltimore City, Maryland, 1848
Biography:
Born Ann Hatzell in Pennsylvania in 1805. Married with one daughter, Ann Jane. Arrived in Baltimore City with her husband no earlier than the 1830s. Resided on Light Street, then Hill Street, then 130 Lee Street, then South Howard Street, Baltimore. Died December, 1851.
In the 1840s, Ann Matthews was a middle-aged white woman living near a Society of Friends Meeting house and the Sharp Street Methodist Church. In 1848, she was charged in with enticing "Margaret," a twenty-three-year-old slave belonging to a local brickmaker named Washington Rider, to run away and also to steal on October 12, 1847. Ann and Mr. Rider were neighbors; her address at the time was 130 Lee Street, while his was 118 Lee Street. Ann's case was brought before a jury of the Baltimore City Court in the September Term of 1848. The jury felt compelled to convict her under the law even though Margaret did not in fact run away. Ann was sentenced to serve ten years in the Maryland penitentiary, but the jury as well as a group of fellow citizens petitioned Governor Philip Francis Thomas recommending her pardon due to her advanced age and widowhood. A second petition to the governor signed by sixteen of Ann's fellow citizens asked for pardon "by every consideration of humanity and of public justice." A third petition signed by fifty-nine people requested a pardon because Ann was "far advanced in age and her incarceration in prison would be an act of great hardship if not barbarism." At the same time, however, Mr. Rider and twenty-seven other citizens signed a petition describing Ann was one of "the very worst characters and is a terror to her neighbors."
Governor Thomas heeded the more favorable petitions, issuing a pardon
on November 2, 1848. His handwritten note stated that Matthews was "pardoned
on condition of keeping the peace for 12 months and giving security
thereto." The Secretary of State's Pardon Record states that the reason
for her pardon was that, because of her advanced age and poor health, "her
life would be endangered by incarceration in the Penitentiary." On December
10, 1851, Ann Matthews wrote her last will and testament, stating that
she was ill and wished to settle her affairs. Leaving her house on South
Howard Street to her daughter Ann Jane, she passed away by the end of the
month at the age of forty-six.
Return to Ann Matthews' Introductory Page
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