LC control no. | n 50022819 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Northup, Solomon, 1808-1863? |
Variant(s) | Northrup, Solomon, 1808-1863? Northup, S. (Solomon), 1808-1863? Northup, Solomon, b. 1808 Platt, 1808-1863? |
Biography/History note | Individual was born a free man, but became a slave |
Associated country | Louisiana |
Located | Saratoga Springs (N.Y.) |
Birth date | 1808-07 |
Death date | 1863? |
Place of birth | Minerva (N.Y.) |
Place of death | United States |
Profession or occupation | Authors Farmers Fiddlers |
Found in | A freeman in bondage, 1890. Twelve years a slave, 185-?: t.p. (S. Northup) Amer. fict., 1851-1875, 1957 (Northup, Solomon, pseud.) Northup Trail through central Louisiana, 1984?: cover p. 2 (Northup, called "Platt" as a slave) Voice in the slave narrative of Olaudah Equiano, Frederick Douglass, and Solomon Northrup, 2003: CIP t.p. ; pref. (he came of age as a free black man in the northern state of New York, was kidnapped and enslaved for 12 years in Louisiana) chapter 1 (his slave narrative appeared in 1853) Biog. & geneal. master index, Mar. 27, 2003 (Northup, Solomon (1808-1860?); Northup, Solomon (1808-1863); Northrup, Solomon (1808-1863)) African American biog. database, Mar. 27, 2003 (Northup, Solomon) Britannica online, Mar. 27, 2003 (under Slave narrative: Solomon Northup) Amer. national biog. online, Mar. 27, 2003 (Northup, Solomon (July 1808-1863?)) African American National Biography, accessed March 23, 2015, via Oxford African American Studies Center database: (Northup, Solomon; slave narrative author, fiddler; born July 1808 in Minerva, New York; craftsman on waterways in upstate New York; farmer, fiddler; moved to Saratoga Springs (1834); strangers sold him to slave trader (1841); wrote Twelve Years a Slave: Narrative of Solomon Northup, full of detailed portrait of people, circumstances, social practices, slave market, fellow captives; attempted to escape; sold to another owner (1852); regained freedom, reunited with wife and children (1853); contracted with David Wilson, legislator, to write his memoir, published later in 1853, most detailed and realistic portraits of slave life; novel sold well, and resulted in identification and subsequent arrest of his kidnappers; never received legal recompense for the crimes against him; returned to work as carpenter; apparently died in 1863, United States) |
Associated language | eng |
Invalid LCCN | n 2002038288 |