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A SLAVE'S ROMANCE.
A SLAVE'S ROMANCE.
Reunited at Eighty with the Husband of Her Youth.
Reunited at Eighty with the Husband of Her Youth.
 
A colored woman, bent nearly double with eighty years and a heavy bundle, was seen to board the Cincinnati Mail line packet yesterday afternoon, says the Louisville (Ky.) Post. Approaching the clerk of the boat she slowly untied a knot in the corner of her red bandana handkerchief and produced enough cash to purchase a deck ticket for Cincinnati. The wrinkled and feeble old negress is the heroine of a romance. In antebellum days she was a slave and was owned by a planter near Asheville, N. C. At an early age she was married to a slave of the same master. By him she had several children. Over half a century ago her husband was torn from her and her children and was sold to another planter. The woman continued to work on the North Carolina plantation, and in a short time was again married. Her whole family was then put on the block and sold to a Virginia man. When the emancipation proclamation was promulgated the family took advantage of their freedom and journeyed northward, finally taking up their home in Louisville. The husband died after the close of the war, and the children one by one left their mother to seek their fortunes elsewhere. The mother toiled and labored to make a livelihood. She heard nothing of her first husband until about a month ago, when one of her sons found that the old man was living in Newport, Ky. The old negress journeyed thither and found the husband of her youth. He had also been married the second time and had several children by the second wife. The latter was dead, however, and the reunited couple decided to again live together. The woman returned to Louisville, disposed of her effects, and yesterday afternoon completed the romance of fifty years by returning to her husband.
A colored woman, bent nearly double  
with eighty years and a heavy bundle,  
was seen to board the Cincinnati Mail  
line packet yesterday afternoon, says  
the Louisville (Ky.) Post. Approaching  
the clerk of the boat she slowly untied  
a knot in the corner of her red bandana  
handkerchief and produced enough  
cash to purchase a deck ticket for Cincinnati.  
The wrinkled and feeble old  
negress is the heroine of a romance. In  
ante-bellum days she was a slave and  
was owned by a planter near Asheville,  
N. C. At an early age she was married  
to a slave of the same master. By him  
she had several children. Over half a  
century ago her husband was torn from  
her and her children and was sold to  
another planter. The woman continued  
to work on the North Carolina plantation,  
and in a short time was again married.  
Her whole family was then put  
on the block and sold to a Virginia man.  
When the emancipation proclamation  
was promulgated the family took advantage  
of their freedom and journeyed  
northward, finally taking up their home  
in Louisville. The husband died after  
the close of the war, and the children  
one by one left their mother to seek  
their fortunes elsewhere. The mother  
toiled and labored to make a livelihood.  
She heard nothing of her first husband  
until about a month ago, when one of  
her sons found that the old man was living  
in Newport, Ky. The old negress  
journeyed thither and found the husband  
of her youth. He had also been  
married the second time and had several  
children by the second wife. The latter  
was dead, however, and the reunited  
couple decided to again live together.  
The woman returned to Louisville, disposed  
of her effects, and yesterday afternoon  
completed the romance of fifty  
years by returning to her husband.

Latest revision as of 20:27, 29 March 2023

A SLAVE'S ROMANCE. Reunited at Eighty with the Husband of Her Youth. A colored woman, bent nearly double with eighty years and a heavy bundle, was seen to board the Cincinnati Mail line packet yesterday afternoon, says the Louisville (Ky.) Post. Approaching the clerk of the boat she slowly untied a knot in the corner of her red bandana handkerchief and produced enough cash to purchase a deck ticket for Cincinnati. The wrinkled and feeble old negress is the heroine of a romance. In antebellum days she was a slave and was owned by a planter near Asheville, N. C. At an early age she was married to a slave of the same master. By him she had several children. Over half a century ago her husband was torn from her and her children and was sold to another planter. The woman continued to work on the North Carolina plantation, and in a short time was again married. Her whole family was then put on the block and sold to a Virginia man. When the emancipation proclamation was promulgated the family took advantage of their freedom and journeyed northward, finally taking up their home in Louisville. The husband died after the close of the war, and the children one by one left their mother to seek their fortunes elsewhere. The mother toiled and labored to make a livelihood. She heard nothing of her first husband until about a month ago, when one of her sons found that the old man was living in Newport, Ky. The old negress journeyed thither and found the husband of her youth. He had also been married the second time and had several children by the second wife. The latter was dead, however, and the reunited couple decided to again live together. The woman returned to Louisville, disposed of her effects, and yesterday afternoon completed the romance of fifty years by returning to her husband.