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A daring escape from slavery, and the love story behind it

“I’ve never read about, studied, or known people with this level of resilience,” says author Ilyon Woo, speaking of an enslaved married couple, William and Ellen Craft. 

The courageous pair are the subject of Ms. Woo’s nonfiction book, “Master Slave Husband Wife,” and this year marks the 175th anniversary of their escape. The duo concocted an audacious plan to disguise themselves as a master and enslaved person and travel north in plain sight.

Why We Wrote This

In the antebellum South, an enslaved couple made a decision for freedom – despite great risk. Their bravery speaks to the courage and spirit of generations of enslaved people.

The ruse worked; light-skinned Ellen, whose white father was also her enslaver, successfully disguised herself as an ailing white gentleman, wrapped in bandages, dependent on assistance from a Black servant, William.

Even in the North they were not safe from slave patrols. Still, the two decided to stay and tell their story, rather than travel on to Canada. Together they wrote a book about their experience and became lecturers on the abolitionist circuit. 

This year marks the 175th anniversary of the escape to freedom of William and Ellen Craft, a married couple enslaved in Georgia. Devoted to each other and determined to start a family only once free, the duo devised a jaw-dropping plan to disguise themselves as a master and enslaved person and travel north in plain sight. The ruse worked; light-skinned Ellen, whose white father was also her enslaver, successfully disguised herself as an ailing white gentleman dependent upon near round-the-clock assistance from a Black servant, William. Ilyon Woo’s book “Master Slave Husband Wife” casts a new eye on their riveting true story. She recently spoke with the Monitor. 

When and where did you first learn of the Crafts? 

I was in graduate school at Columbia University and taking a class called “The Literature of Passing.” The Crafts’ 1860 narrative, “Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom,” was one of many assigned. Once in a while, you read a text where you feel an immediate connection. I remember something seismic happening! That was over 20 years ago, and I kept wondering about it ever since.

Why We Wrote This

In the antebellum South, an enslaved couple made a decision for freedom – despite great risk. Their bravery speaks to the courage and spirit of generations of enslaved people.

What about their story connected with you? 

I hadn’t heard of the Crafts before – and neither had many of my classmates. Their narrative is an adventure story and a page turner, with a voice that’s intimate, ironic, interesting, and, at times, deeply sad. I would’ve followed that voice anywhere.

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