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Filing Cabinet - Underground Railroad

Letter From Thomas Garrett
to William Still

August 21, 1858

Wilmington, 8th mo. 21st, 1858

Esteemed Friend:  William Still:

This is my 69th birth-day, and I do not know any better way to celebrate it in a way to accord with my feelings, than to send to thee two fugitives, man and wife; the man has been here a week waiting for his wife, who is expected in time to leave at 9 this evening in the cars for thy house with a pilot, who knows where thee lives, but I cannot help but feel some anxiety about the woman, as there is great commotion just now in the neighborhood where she resides.  There were 4 slaves betrayed near the Maryland line by a colored man named Jesse Perry a few nights since.  One of them made a confidant of him, and he agreed to pilot them on their way, and had several white men secreted to take them as soon as they got in his house; he is the scoundrel that was to have charge of the 7 I wrote you about two weeks since; their master was to take or send them there, and he wanted me to send for them.  I have since been confirmed it was a trap set to catch one of our colored men and me likewise, but it was no go.  I suspected him from the first, but afterwards was fully confirmed in my suspicions.  We have found the two Rust boys, John and Elsey Bradley, who the villain of a Rust took out of jail and sold to a trader of the name of Morris, who sold them to a trader who took them to Richmond, Virginia, where they were sold at public sale two days before we found them, for $2600, but fortunately the man had not paid for them; our Attorney had them by habeas corpus before a Judge, who detained them til we can prove their identity and freedom; they are to have a hearing on 2d day next, when we hope to have a person on there to prove them.
                                                        In haste, thine,
                                                        Thos. Garrett

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