Monday, March 18, 2019

ABRAHAM BENJAMN JOHNSTONE SLAVE

DELAWARE HISTORY
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
MARCH 2019

Benjamin Johnstone began life in Sussex County Delaware several years before the American Revolution born a slave and shuttled owner to owner over time. As an infant he belonged to Dr. John Skidmore, then when the doctor died he became property of Skidmores nephew who sold
Benjamin to John Grey, blacksmith, Grey sold him to Edward Callahhan who in turn sold him to James Craig, also a blacksmith. Craig appreciated Benjamin's blacksmith skills and attention to the masters business. Once Graig was attacked by a man with a knife and Benjamin grabed the attacker and subdued him for which Creig was thankful and offered to let the slave buy his freedom. Being free Benjamin was allowed to travel to Baltimore where he was arrested as a runaway and Greig
had to secure his release. Then Creig died unexpectedly and the executors of the estate leased the
slave to John Clemmens, merchant , at Mifflins Crossroads near Dover, from where two Georgia men kidnapped Benjamin who was able to escape and made his way to Dover and took up with
Warner Mifflin an abolitionist and got his manumission papers, moved to New Jersey, took another
first name, Abraham. Even now, a free man he still had trouble being accused of crimes in Woodbury, one being the killing of another black man, found guilty and sentenced to death. Before his execution
he wrote a final letter to his wife that he married sometime back. In the letter he encouraged her to
remarry a man who will love and protect you and left her his white hat she was fond of to wear
as her own. He signed the letter of farwell, “not the farewell of a day or month, but an eternal
farewell”.
July 8, 1797, the slave, Abraham Benjamin Johnstone, sold master to master, jailed, kidnapped, risen to be a freeman, was executed for murder.

Abstract: Wednesday, February 3, 2016, Delaware Coast Press, Michael Morgan's
Delaware Diary.

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