Virginia Immigrant Runaway |
Often when we think of runaway servants,
we equate the historical events to slaves, especially in the south. We fail to
recognize the many immigrants that were contracted to serve several years prior
to gaining their complete “American” freedom.
More than half of the immigrants that
came to America in the 1700’s were assigned, contracted or bound to work for a
fixed term of years. Many did not complete their work terms and instead fled
from their contracts. Since many of these runaway servants, often convicts,
owned both time and money, ads were placed in various newspapers for their
capture. Ads were placed in theall of
the mid-Atlantic states to include Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Maryland.
Runaways
in Pennsylvania
The Pennsylvania Gazette, 1728-1796,
provided over 6000 runaway ads. Copies
of these advertisements are available on ancestry.com
thanks to Farley Grubb’s 1992 publication of “Runaway Servants, Convicts
and Apprentices.”
This collection may offer the family
researcher the runaway’s origin, occupation, and physical features. Often a
date of immigration is provided.
Runaways in
Virginia
Virginia
historians easily spout that over 75% (3/4) of the white colonial immigrants
arrived in bondage in the 1700’s. Familysearch.org
Wiki shares that these immigrants were French, German and Scots.
The
Colonial Williamsburg website offers an
index of the Virgina Gazetter
1736-1780. Be sure to also “Explore
Advertisements” on The Geography of Slavery
in Virginia website. . This project
offers transcriptions and images of runaways.
Runaway Maryland
Servants 1728-1775
As genealogists we rely on early news
accounts of history, and The Dunlop’s Maryland Gazette, the Maryland Gazette
and the Maryland Journal and Baltimore Advertiser do not disappoint. The C. Ashley and Beverly B. Ellefson Collection (MSA
SC 5931)
at the Maryland State Archives
holds an index of Runaway Servants from 1728 -1775 by name.
According
to the Collection
Description, this 4 box compilation of index cards donated by scholars C. Ashley and Beverly B.
Ellefson contains records of convicts imported to Maryland from England,
1716-1774, records of runaway servants, 1728-1775, and runaway convict
servants, 1734-1775.
I have reprinted descriptions (or
abstracts) from the Maryland State Archives website for each Box in the
collection. Be sure to visit the indexed lists of the Inventory.
Box
1, ‘Imported Convicts” A-L and Box 2, “Imported
Convicts” M-Z:
- Records list convicts imported to Maryland from England, 1716-1774:
- Lists or entries in the Baltimore County Record of Convicts, 1770-1774,
- 1783 Kent County Bonds, Indentures, etc.;
- Several volumes of the Provincial Court Land Records;
- Frank F. White's list of imported convicts in the Maryland Historical Magazine, XLII, March 1948, pp. 57-59 (list at that time in Maryland Historical Society);
Box 3, "Runaway
Servants"
Index cards with records
of runaway servants, 1728-1775 taken from advertisements in the Maryland
Gazette, Dunlop’s Maryland Gazette, Maryland Journal and
Baltimore Advertiser.
Box 4, "Runaway
Convict Servants"
Index cards with records
and runaway convict servants, 1734-1775, taken from advertisements in Maryland
Gazette, Dunlop’s Maryland Gazette, and Maryland Journal and
Baltimore Advertiser.
Enjoy Chasing Your Runaways!
Kathleen Brandt, Professional Genealogy
a3genealogy@gmail.com
Accurate, accessible answers