Overview

Location

Talbot Co., MD

Date Constructed/ Founded

not determined

Associated Surnames

not determined

Historical notes

none

Associated Slave Workplaces

Auld Farm (Talbot Co., MD), Lloyd Plantation (Talbot Co., MD)



Associated Free Persons

  • Aaron Anthony (1767-1826) - plantation owner
  • Ann Catherine Skinner Anthony (?-?) - wife of Aaron Anthony (m.1797)
  • Lucretia Anthony (1797-bef.1897) - daughter of Aaron Anthony; wife of Thomas Auld (Auld Farm)
  • Mr. Plummer - overseer


Associated Enslaved Persons

Slaves at Holmes Hill Plantation
The Family of Frederick Douglas

  • Isaac Bailey
  • Betsy Bailey - wife of Isaac Bailey
  • Harriet Bailey (1800-1827) - daughter of Isaac and Betsy Bailey
  • Perry Bailey (1813-?) - daughter of Aaron Anthony (free white) and Harriet Bailey
  • Sara Bailey (1814-?) - daughter of Aaron Anthony (free white) and Harriet Bailey
  • Eliza Bailey (1816-?) - daughter of Aaron Anthony (free white) and Harriet Bailey
  • Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey Douglas (1818-1895) - son of Aaron Anthony (free white) and Harriet Bailey
  • Kitty Bailey (1820->) - daughter of Aaron Anthony (free white) and Harriet Bailey
  • Arianna Bailey (1822-?) - daughter of Aaron Anthony (free white) and Harriet Bailey


Research Leads and Plantation Records

*none reported yet



Miscellaneous Information

Biographical Notes on Frederick Douglas
Frederick Washington Bailey, the son of a white man and a black enslaved woman, was born on Holmes Hill Plantation near Easton, Maryland, on February 7, 1818. Frederick's mother, Harriet Bailey, worked the cornfields surrounding Holmes Hill. As a child, he had heard rumors that the master, Aaron Anthony, was his father. At age six, Frederick was sent to live and work at the Lloyd Plantation. After the deaths of Aaron Anthony and Lucretia Anthony Auld, his ownership went to Lucretia's husband Thomas Auld. In March of 1833, the 15 year old Frederick was sent to live at Thomas Auld's new farm near the town of Saint Michaels, a few miles from the Lloyd plantation. Frederick was again put to work as a field hand. Thomas Auld starved his slaves, who stole food from neighboring farms to survive. Frederick received many beatings and saw worse ones given to others. As a result, he organized a Sunday religious service for the slaves in nearby Saint Michaels. A mob led by Thomas Auld had stopped the meetings. In a final attempt to subdue the willful Frederick, Auld arranged for the infamous slave breaker Edward Covey "tame" him (1834). After working for Covey for a year, Frederick was sent to work for a farmer named William Freeland, a relatively kind master. Preferring freedom to any kind of slavery, Frederick planned an escape North with five other slaves. The plot was exposed and an armed mob jailed the conspirators. Thomas Auld released Frederick, then sent him to Hugh Auld in back Baltimore to work as a ship caulker. Unfair treatment by his owner Hugh Auld motivated Frederick to successfuly escape North. Upon his arrival in New York City, he changed his name from Frederick Bailey to Frederick Douglas.



References

WILLIS and Allied Families


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