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Becoming America - An Exploration of American Literature from Precolonial to Post-Revolution, 2018a

Becoming America - An Exploration of American Literature from Precolonial to Post-Revolution, 2018a

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BECOMING AMERICA<br />

REVOLUTIONARY AND EARLY NATIONAL PERIOD LITERATURE<br />

4.20 HARRIET JACOBS<br />

(c. 1813–1897)<br />

Harriet Jacobs was born in<strong>to</strong> slavery<br />

in Eden<strong>to</strong>n, North Carolina, around<br />

1813. Her father was probably a skilled<br />

carpenter allowed by his master <strong>to</strong> hire<br />

himself out. Though he and Jacobs’<br />

mother were owned by dierent masters,<br />

they were allowed <strong>to</strong> live as a couple<br />

with their children. Jacobs’ maternal<br />

grandmother, Molly Horniblow, was<br />

a freed slave who owned a house in<br />

Eden<strong>to</strong>n. After her mother died, Jacobs<br />

lived as slave in the household <strong>of</strong><br />

Margaret Horniblow, who taught Jacobs<br />

<strong>to</strong> read. Upon Margaret Horniblow’s<br />

death, Jacobs was willed <strong>to</strong> the daughter<br />

<strong>of</strong> Dr. James Norcom and brought in<strong>to</strong><br />

his household. He subjected her <strong>to</strong><br />

relentless sexual harassment. His wife,<br />

out <strong>of</strong> jealousy, subjected Jacobs <strong>to</strong><br />

Image 4.18 | Harriet <strong>An</strong>n Jacobs<br />

physical abuse.<br />

Pho<strong>to</strong>grapher | Unknown<br />

Source | Wikimedia Commons<br />

Jacobs deed Norcom by taking<br />

License | Public Domain<br />

Samuel Tredwell Sawyer, a white lawyer,<br />

as her lover. She had two children, a boy and a girl. As punishment for Jacobs’s<br />

prolonged deance, Norcom sent her out <strong>to</strong> work on his plantation, where he also<br />

threatened <strong>to</strong> send her children. She ran away and hid <strong>from</strong> Norcom for almost<br />

seven years in her maternal grandmother’s attic. Sawyer bought their children but<br />

did not free them (as Jacobs wrote that he had promised <strong>to</strong> do).<br />

In 1842, Jacobs escaped <strong>to</strong> the North, later followed there by her children. She<br />

gave domestic service <strong>to</strong> writer and edi<strong>to</strong>r Nathaniel Parker Willis (Fanny Fern’s<br />

brother). Willis’s second wife would buy and emancipate Jacobs in 1852. Before<br />

that freedom, Jacobs was vulnerable <strong>to</strong> being captured and returned <strong>to</strong> Norcom.<br />

To avoid this danger, she went <strong>to</strong> Rochester, New York, where her brother John S.<br />

Jacobs (1815–1875) was also a fugitive slave who worked for abolition.<br />

Starting in 1849, she worked for the <strong>America</strong>n <strong>An</strong>ti-Slavery Society oce<br />

located in the same building as The North Star, the anti-slavery newspaper founded<br />

by Frederick Douglass. Jacobs <strong>to</strong>ok full advantage <strong>of</strong> the literature available<br />

where she worked. She also became friends with Amy <strong>Post</strong>, a Quaker reformer,<br />

who encouraged Jacobs <strong>to</strong> contribute <strong>to</strong> anti-slavery literature by writing her own<br />

s<strong>to</strong>ry. After ve years, Jacobs completed Incidents in the Life <strong>of</strong> a Slave Girl in<br />

1858. Aware <strong>of</strong> the cult <strong>of</strong> domesticity and sentimental literature—as exemplied<br />

Page | 1149

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