MOSES ROPER
___________________________________________
"AMONG THE INSTRUMENTS OF TORTURE EMPLOYED"
Moses Roper, who was born into slavery in Caswell County, North Carolina,
lived in North and South Carolina and in Georgia before he successfully fled
to the North and then to England. In this selection from his autobiography,
he describes the punishment he faced after he tried unsuccessfully to run
away.
My master gave me a hearty dinner, the best he ever did give me; but it
was to keep me from dying before he had given me all the flogging he intended.
After dinner he took me up to the log-
house,
stripped me quite naked, fasted a rail up very high, tied my hands to the
rail, fastened my feet together, put a rail between my feet, and stood on the
end of it to hold me down; the two sons then gave me fifty lashes, the son-
in-
law
another fifty, and Mr. Gooch himself fifty more.
While doing this his wife came out, and begged him not to kill me, the
first act of sympathy I ever noticed in her. When I called for water, they
brought a pail-
full
and threw it over my back ploughed up by the lashes. After this, they took me
to the blacksmith's shop, got two large bars of iron, which they bent around
my feet, each bar weighing twenty ponds, and put a heavy log-
chain
on my neck....
Among the instruments of torture employed, I here describe one:-
-
This
is a machine used for packing and pressing cotton. By it he hung me up by
the hands, a horse, and at times, a man moving round the screw and carrying it
up and down, and pressing the block into a box into which the cotton is put.
At this time he hung me up for a quarter of an hour. I was carried up ten
feet from the ground....After this torture, I stayed with him several months,
and did my work very well. It was about the beginning of 1832, when he took
off my irons, and being in dread of him, he having threatened me with more
punishment, I attempted again to escape from him. At this time I got into
North Carolina: but a reward having been offered for me, a Mr. Robinson caught
me, and chained me to a chair, upon which he sat up with me all night, and
next day proceeded home with me. This was Saturday. Mr. Gooch had gone to
church, several miles from his house. When he came back, the first thing he
did was to pour some tar upon my head, then rubbed it all over my face, took a
torch with pitch on, and set it on fire,; he put it out before it did me very
great injury, but the pain which I endured was the most excruciating, nearly
all my hair having been burnt off. On Monday, he puts irons on me again,
weighing nearly fifty pounds. He threatened me again on the Sunday with
another flogging; and on the Monday morning, before daybreak, I got away
again, with my irons on, and was about three hours going a distance of two
miles. I had gone a good distance, when I met with a coloured man, who got
some wedges, and took my irons off. However, I was caught again, and put into
prison in Charlotte, where Mr. Gooch came, and took me back to Chester. He
asked me how I got my irons off. They having been got off by a slave, I would
not answer his question, for fear of getting the man punished. Upon this he
put the fingers of my hands into a vice, and squeezed all the nails off. Hen
then had my feet put on an anvil, and ordered a man to beat my toes, till he
smashed some of my nails off. The marks of this treatment still remain upon
me, some of my nails never having grown perfect since.
Source: Moses Roper, Narrative of the Adventures and Escape of Moses
Roper (London, 1837).
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