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Honey
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Title :: Celia, a Slave
Author :: Honey
Category :: Books
Key Words ::
  • Celia, a Slave
Description ::
This book touches on the most ignored part of slavery that America wants us to forget about or just ignore entirely, the rape of female slaves. This book should've been made into a movie, its just that interesting I'm just now finding out about it myself and I purchased the book the other day. I highly recommened it ladies.


Celia, a slave, was probably born in Missouri in 1836. No documentation of her birth date, birthplace, or parentage exists. Her recorded history begins in the summer of 1850 when she was purchased by Robert Newsom, of Fulton Township, Calloway County, Missouri; at the time of the transaction she was about fourteen years old. Celia's recorded history ends five and a half years later when she was tried and hanged for the murder of her owner; she was nineteen years old and the mother of at least two children at the time of her death. Her final resting place and the fate of her children are unknown.

The circumstances of Celia's short life—and the events that led to her hanging—illustrate the realities of slave life in the South and the personal choices the institution of slavery forced upon slaves and slaveholders. The course and outcome of Celia's trial were influenced by individuals and a court system that were trying to reconcile the personal consequences of slavery with existing moral codes, politics, and economics—at a time when nationwide struggles over the same issues were increasingly heated and often violent.

By 1850, when knowledge of Celia begins, Missouri had already been at the center of the national slavery debate for more than a quarter of a century. The U.S. Congress had confronted the dilemma presented by the existence of slavery in a free society in 1819 when Missouri petitioned for statehood. Angry and emotional debates considered whether a territory should be asked to abandon slavery as a condition of statehood. Congress preempted the debate by passing the Missouri Compromise, under which it preserved the nation's balance by admitting Maine as a free state in 1820 and Missouri as a slave state in 1821. The Missouri Compromise also drew a line between North and South by limiting the expansion of slavery in the Louisiana Territory to areas south of Missouri.

During this volatile time, Newsom left Virginia and brought his wife and children to the Missouri Territory. In the fall of 1822, with statehood granted and slavery assured for his new home, Newsom settled in southern Calloway County. Hard work and slave labor made him a prosperous farmer—and Calloway County went on to become a large slave-holding county.

Because many core issues of the slave debate were unresolved by the Missouri Compromise, leaders on both sides of the issue knew that it was only a matter of time before the nation's expansion would force another confrontation. That confrontation came in 1850 when Congress found itself waging a battle over the expansion of slavery in territories gained as a result of the Mexican War. Northern politicians wanted to stop the expansion of slavery and assure the admission of California to the Union as a free state. Their Southern counterparts did not want slavery prohibited in territories for which Southern soldiers had fought and died. Missouri, with roughly equal numbers of citizens supporting each side of the issue, was as deeply divided as the nation.

The residents of agriculture-based, slaveholding Calloway County—including Newsom—probably favored the pro-slavery rhetoric and politics described in the papers of the day. The 1850 census for Calloway County, which shows that Newsom owned five male slaves, supports this assumption, as does Newsom's decision to purchase Celia even while the controversy over slavery was escalating to its ultimate conclusion—civil war.

In all likelihood, however, Newsom did not purchase Celia as a political statement. His reasons for buying Celia were much more personal. Newsom's wife had died in 1849. Following her death, his household comprised a widowed daughter named Virginia Waynescot; her children, James Coffee Waynescot, Amelia Waynescot, and Thomas Waynescot; and an unmarried daughter, Mary Newsom. Two sons, Harry Newsom and David Newsom, were married and living nearby.

When Newsom went to purchase Celia, outward appearances suggested that he was looking for a domestic servant to assist his daughters with cooking and household work. Subsequent trial testimony and transcripts indicate otherwise. At any rate, in the spring of 1850 Newsom traveled by wagon to Audrain County, a day's ride to the north of his home, to buy his new slave. On the return trip, Newsom raped the young girl and established the true nature of her future role in the Newsom household.

Over the next four years Celia's life revolved around her role as Newsom's conjugal partner. He provided her with a brick cabin near the main house and other material possessions indicating both her status and his affection for her. He visited her often and he was most likely the father of her first two children.

The kind of relationship Newsom had with Celia was fairly widespread in the South but seldom acknowledged or publicly condoned. Given the daily rhythms and routines of rural life in 1850 Missouri, Newsom's adult daughters were most likely aware of their father's intimate relationship with Celia; because of their economic dependence on their father they also likely did not make an issue of his relationship with the slave. Though not much is known about the details of Celia's interaction with members of the Newsom household, one author concluded from court documents that she must have been a disturbing presence on the Newsom farm.

By 1854, Celia had tired of Newsom's attentions and begun a forbidden relationship with a Newsom slave named George. Sometime in early 1855 George started staying in Celia's cabin when Newsom was not there. Within months, Celia was pregnant and uncertain of the child's father. George, believing the child to be his, pressured Celia to end her physical relationship with their owner. Newsom, believing the child to be his, and unaware of Celia's intimate friendship with George, saw no reason to change the established pattern of their relationship.

Caught in the middle, Celia was forced to make a choice that would eventually cost her her life. At some point in June of 1855, Celia made an attempt to satisfy George's demands and to stop Newsom's sexual advances by appealing to Newsom's daughters. She threatened to hurt Newsom if he did not stop forcing his attentions on her while she was ill (court documents indicate that the early stages of Celia's third pregnancy were difficult, causing her to be sick much of the time). It is not known if his daughters spoke to Newsom on Celia's behalf but it is clear that Newsom's sexual demands on her did not stop. On Saturday, June 23, Celia confronted her master directly, asking him to leave her alone. He ignored her request and told her he would visit her cabin that evening.

Newsom went to Celia's cabin later that evening and was never seen again. When he did not appear for breakfast on Sunday morning his children and neighbors began to search for him and to question the slaves. A statement from Celia's lover, George, led the family to suspect her involvement in Newsom's disappearance. George told the search party that they were not likely to find anything unless they searched near Celia's cabin.

Celia initially denied any involvement in Newsom's disappearance. But worn down by questioning, she finally confessed to his murder. She admitted that Newsom had come to her cabin the night before. She described how she struck him twice with a large stick to stop his advances. Realizing she had killed him, she decided to burn his body in the fireplace to cover her crime. She buried the bones that did not burn under the hearth and she enlisted the help of Newsom's own grandson, James Coffee Waynescot, to carry the ashes out of the cabin on Sunday morning. A buckle and buttons retrieved from the ashes and bone fragments found under the hearth confirmed her story.

On Monday, June 25, State v. Celia, a Slave, Celia File No. 4496, began. Two local justices, D. M. Whyte and Isaac P. Howe, and a jury of six men—George Thomas, Daniel Robinson, John Wells, Simpson Hyton, George Brown, and John Carrington—considered an affidavit filed by David Newsom accusing Celia of murder. They found probable cause to charge her with murder and she was arrested and taken to the Fulton County jail. An October trial date was set and Judge William Augustus Hall was named to preside.

Newspaper accounts of the murder at the Newsom farm fueled local fears by reporting that the crime was committed without sufficient cause (no mention was made of Celia's intimate relationship with the victim or her reasons for attacking him). These fears, along with Celia's physical condition and the belief that her two children were in the cabin at the time of the murder, led the community to believe that Celia did not commit the crime on her own.

Acts of violence by slaves and the possibility of conspiracy and organized slave rebellion were very much on the minds of Calloway County residents in the spring of 1855. A free-slave conflict in neighboring Kansas Territory had moved from debate to bloodshed. Passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which called for "popular sovereignty" in the territories, along with a threatened repeal of the Missouri Compromise, made Kansas Territory a national battleground. Northern activists channeled antislavery settlers into the territory hoping they would eventually vote against slavery. Slaves themselves were encouraged to commit violent acts as a means of asserting their rights and winning their freedom. Missouri residents poured across the Kansas-Missouri border to antagonize Northern settlers, support pro-slavery residents, and keep the slaves in submission.

With supporters on both sides of the slavery issue watching the proceedings, Judge Hall was under pressure to see that Celia received credible representation at her trial. On August 16 he appointed John Jameson and his associates to defend her. Jameson was a popular citizen in Fulton Township. He was a slave owner but he was not personally involved in the ongoing slavery debates. He had practiced law in the community for three decades and had represented Missouri for three terms in the U.S. Congress. With political savvy and a reputation as an excellent trial lawyer, Jameson was acceptable to those on both sides of the conflict.

On October 9 Celia entered the Calloway County Courthouse for trial. After dealing with numerous preliminary and procedural matters, including jury selection, Celia's attorneys entered a plea of not guilty to the charge of murdering Newsom. Like the inquest jury, Celia's trial jury was made up of male residents of the county: all were married and had children, all but one were farmers, about half were slave owners, and none were as prosperous as Newsom. Though certainly not Celia's peers, they were as good a jury as could be expected for the time.

The next day testimony began. The prosecution stressed the facts of the case and reminded the jury that Celia had confessed to the murder.

The defense focused on Celia's sexual exploitation and the motive for her actions. Jameson argued that Celia was entitled, by law, to use deadly force to protect herself from rape, regardless of her previous sexual relationship with the victim. His argument was unconventional and bold because it was based on a Missouri statute that had been created to protect white women; in most of the South sexual assault on a slave was considered trespass, and owners could not be accused of trespass on their own property.

After concluding their arguments, both sides were allowed to propose jury instructions for Judge Hall's consideration. Jameson requested several instructions that would have allowed Celia to be acquitted if the jury found from the evidence that she had killed Newsom in an effort to prevent his sexual advances. The prosecution objected to Jameson's instructions and Hall ultimately refused to deliver them to the jury. Denied any grounds for acquitting her, the jury found Celia guilty of murder.

On October 11 Celia's attorneys filed a motion to set aside the jury verdict and grant a new trial. Judge Hall's prejudicial rulings and his refusal to issue critical jury instructions were cited as grounds for the motion. On October 13 Hall denied the defense motion and Celia was sentenced to death by hanging on November 16. This execution date may have been set to allow for delivery of Celia's expected child; under Missouri law a pregnant woman could not be executed. Court records indicate she delivered a stillborn baby while in custody.

After the sentencing, Judge Hall was asked to issue a stay of execution while Celia's case was appealed to the Missouri Supreme Court. He refused. Though no record of the appeals document exists, Jameson probably included many of the same arguments and issues outlined in his motion for a new trial. By early November the Missouri Supreme Court had not considered the appeal. When it looked as though Celia would be executed before her appeal was heard, her supporters took drastic measures. On the night of November 11 she was helped to "escape" from jail. She was not returned to custody until after her original execution date had passed. Upon her return a new execution date of December 21 was set.

On December 6 Jameson wrote a letter to Judge Abiel Leonard asking the Missouri Supreme Court to issue a stay of execution until the case could be heard. On December 14 the court ruled that it found no probable cause for an appeal. Accordingly, the stay of execution was refused. Celia's fate was sealed by the same court that had earlier exhibited its pro-slavery leanings in the famous Dred Scott decision, in which a majority of the court ruled that a slave remained a slave—even if he traveled and lived in free territory (Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. (19 How.) 393, 15 L. Ed. 691 [1857]).

The Missouri Supreme Court's ruling in Celia's case was filed in the circuit court of Calloway County on December 18. On the afternoon of Friday, December 21, Celia was hanged for the murder of Newsom. In a final statement, she repeated her story: she had acted alone, she had struck Newsom to stop his advances, and she had not intended to kill him. Unable, or unwilling, to challenge the underlying beliefs and behaviors that allowed slavery to exist, Missouri's pre-Civil War supreme court failed to extend the protection of an existing law to a slave.


View Review
Spice
I want to read this. The theme of the book doesn't surprise me because even now, nobody cares about black women being abused or raped, especially back then. The whites of course didn't care but many blacks didn't either, I think they were desensitized to seeing other blacks being abused because it happened so much. It almost became "normal" for it to go on. But notice the concern and outrage when it's a woman who is not black who has been raped or abused. This way of thinking definitely came from slavery. I also have noticed how when a black woman is raped people are quicker to say she asked for it or provoked it some sort of way. The man is usually always protected and she is made into the villain. A man also gets much less time in jail for raping a black woman, if he gets sent to jail at all.
Honey
Yes girl, nobody cares if a black woman is kidnapped raped etc., you see white women on TV all the time missing but never a black woman. I'm almost done reading this book, I'm hooked I can't put it down. You know another thing that makes me angry is the fact that books like this aren't apart of the curriculum in our public schools. Black children are forced to read and learn about Anne Frank (which isn't American history btw) but no one has ever heard of Celia and a million others just like her.
Spice
QUOTE (Honey @ Dec 23 2006, 05:14 PM) *
Yes girl, nobody cares if a black woman is kidnapped raped etc., you see white women on TV all the time missing but never a black woman. I'm almost done reading this book, I'm hooked I can't put it down. You know another thing that makes me angry is the fact that books like this aren't apart of the curriculum in our public schools. Black children are forced to read and learn about Anne Frank (which isn't American history btw) but no one has ever heard of Celia and a million others just like her.


Dec 14 2006, 02:57 PM

Exactly. Anne Frank had much sympathy, something black women rarely get. Also Honey, did you notice how the male slave demanded that Celia stand up to the slave master to stop the intercourse but he doesn't even stand up to the slave master himself for Celia. Celia stands up to the master to satisfy the request of the male slave and ends up losing her life. I have to question what was George doing and why didn't he get involved as much as Celia did?
Honey
QUOTE (Passions @ Dec 23 2006, 05:15 PM) *
QUOTE (Honey @ Dec 23 2006, 05:14 PM) *
Yes girl, nobody cares if a black woman is kidnapped raped etc., you see white women on TV all the time missing but never a black woman. I'm almost done reading this book, I'm hooked I can't put it down. You know another thing that makes me angry is the fact that books like this aren't apart of the curriculum in our public schools. Black children are forced to read and learn about Anne Frank (which isn't American history btw) but no one has ever heard of Celia and a million others just like her.


Dec 14 2006, 02:57 PM

Exactly. Anne Frank had much sympathy, something black women rarely get. Also Honey, did you notice how the male slave demanded that Celia stand up to the slave master to stop the intercourse but he doesn't even stand up to the slave master himself for Celia. Celia stands up to the master to satisfy the request of the male slave and ends up losing her life. I have to question what was George doing and why didn't he get involved as much as Celia did?



Dec 14 2006, 03:16 PM

Yes, I was gonna touch on that but wasn't sure if you had read that part. Once again the black man not doing anything to help black women who have been wronged, now you know something is wrong if this behavior in black men dates back to slavery. And when you read the book it really shows how much of a punk Geroge was, I don't want to give to much away, but George will piss you off. I don't know what to say about black men sometimes, its like us black women are on our own, we don't have a shoulder to lean on,which has been going on since slavery.
Spice
QUOTE (Honey @ Dec 23 2006, 05:17 PM) *
QUOTE (Passions @ Dec 23 2006, 05:15 PM) *
QUOTE (Honey @ Dec 23 2006, 05:14 PM) *
Yes girl, nobody cares if a black woman is kidnapped raped etc., you see white women on TV all the time missing but never a black woman. I'm almost done reading this book, I'm hooked I can't put it down. You know another thing that makes me angry is the fact that books like this aren't apart of the curriculum in our public schools. Black children are forced to read and learn about Anne Frank (which isn't American history btw) but no one has ever heard of Celia and a million others just like her.


Dec 14 2006, 02:57 PM

Exactly. Anne Frank had much sympathy, something black women rarely get. Also Honey, did you notice how the male slave demanded that Celia stand up to the slave master to stop the intercourse but he doesn't even stand up to the slave master himself for Celia. Celia stands up to the master to satisfy the request of the male slave and ends up losing her life. I have to question what was George doing and why didn't he get involved as much as Celia did?



Dec 14 2006, 03:16 PM

Yes, I was gonna touch on that but wasn't sure if you had read that part. Once again the black man not doing anything to help black women who have been wronged, now you know something is wrong if this behavior in black men dates back to slavery. And when you read the book it really shows how much of a punk Geroge was, I don't want to give to much away, but George will piss you off. I don't know what to say about black men sometimes, its like us black women are on our own, we don't have a shoulder to lean on,which has been going on since slavery.



Dec 14 2006, 03:54 PM

Black women have to stop sticking their necks out (in Celia's case literally) for men who are not going to do the same for them and end up playing victims themselves. I'm sick of seeing so many black women on the front lines defending themselves and defending black men without getting the same loyalty and protection in return.
Honey
You know its sad the way America loves to cover up all the rapes of black women that took place during and after slavery. For instance in Celia's book they talked about a very well known Senator and slave owner from South Carolina named James Henry Hammond. Hammond was well known for having slave mistresses and being very blunt about it. The movie "Mandingo" sheds some light about Senator Hammond. Heres is a link about the Senator.
http://cghs.dadeschools.net/slavery/defens...ery/hammond.htm
Qpid
So in other words George was chicken shit? Typical.
Honey
QUOTE (Qpid @ Jan 3 2007, 01:28 PM) *
So in other words George was chicken shit? Typical.




rotfl.gif Yes, he was!!! You should read the book, if you haven't already, its really good.
Mahogany Pearl
Has this been made into a movie?
chocolatepink
I heard of this book, when looking for something else on Amazon, and then during my American History class, my professor related this story, she was raped repeatedly by her slave owner, i can't even type that word, makes me sick but anyway. She got tired of it and told him she wouldn't tolerate it anymore, but alas he didn't heed her warning, She killed him out of self defense but during those times well enough said, but the interesting tid bit about her is that she was tried and sentence to death but because she was pregnant with his child they waited till she gave birth to the baby (get this because they didn't want to lose his property, that being the baby she was carrying, not because it was a morally corrupt thing to do but those were the times. The irony is if she would have said George( the black man she was rumored to be involved with) killed that their owner, she would have probably not been executed but she wouldn't pin it on him, because until the bitter end, she said it was her, not that he tried to help her, oops just felt a lil jolt hmm...earthquake grouphug.gif bump.gif
Blessed
I dont think i will want to read this book.....it will get me to emotional about the issues involved noway.gif
Sparklytiara
Wow! This book sounds interesting. It's amazing how historical facts like this in particular aren't acknowledged or a part of Black History. Awareness need to brought to the attention of many who aren't aware that a slave woman was on trial for murder. There's a book called "Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl"-another non-fiction book by Harriet Jacobs in which a slave girl experiences similar incidents as Celia. This self published book is fascinating to read as well.
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