A few days before Christmas, 1848, a man named William Craft gave his wife Ellen a haircut—in fact, he cut it to the nape of her neck, far shorter than any other woman in Macon, Georgia, where the Crafts lived. They picked out her clothes—a cravat, a top hat, a fine coat—and went over the plan for what felt like the hundredth time.


Ellen was scared. "I think it is almost too much for us to undertake; however, I feel that God is on our side," she would later write, "and with his assistance, notwithstanding all the difficulties, we shall be able to succeed."

Ellen and William were Black, and they were enslaved. The morning after the haircut they would leave Macon forever, disguised—William as a slave, Ellen as his white master.


If it worked, they would be free.

Ellen Craft was born in 1826, in Clinton, Georgia. Like many slaves, she was the biological daughter of her mother, also a slave, and James Smith, her mother's wealthy white master. Ellen's own mother was the daughter of a plantation owner, and Ellen's complexion was so light she was often confused for another member of her master's family (his white family, that is).

Smith's wife was troubled by Ellen's presence—she looked too much like her own daughters, too much like her husband—and at the age of 11 she was removed from the only life she'd ever known and given as a wedding gift to one of Smith's older daughters, Eliza. Eliza and her husband, a physician, lived in Macon, and Ellen became their house slave.

As a domestic slave in a mid-sized town, Ellen took frequent trips out of the house, and on one of these errands, the year she turned 20, she met William Craft. William was partly owned by Ellen's master, Dr. Robert Collins, and partly by another Macon businessman, who'd been given ownership of him to cover a gambling debt. To maximize their investment, William was also loaned to a town carpenter, who taught him the trade and used his labor as the backbone of a successful business.


William and Ellen married in 1846—their masters allowed the union, but would not allow the couple to live together. At the time, this seemed just as well to the couple: despite their love for one another, both were too familiar with the horrors the institution of slavery brought upon families, and Ellen in particular was fearful of giving birth to a child she might later be forcibly separated from.

But after two years of living in limbo—together, but apart; in love, but each belonging (according to the law) to another—the Crafts made another commitment to each other. They were going to escape.


The actual number of slaves who successfully escaped before the end of the Civil War is extraordinarily difficult to calculate. One Underground Railroad website puts the number at 100,000, while the National Park service suggests just a thousand slaves a year (between 1820 and 1860) made it to safety in the North or in Canada. Most who made it were from border states like Virginia, Kentucky, and Maryland. From Georgia, where the Crafts lived, fewer made it out alive, and Ellen and William were acutely aware of the punishments that could await them if they were captured.


Still, the Crafts had a few advantages. Both had worked in the comparatively bustling Macon, and so knew how to interact with clerks, salespeople, and busybodies. Virtually all of the money earned via William's carpentry work went to his masters, but he was allowed to keep a small wage, and to ask for time off, which, during the week of Christmas, he'd been given by both his boss at the carpentry shop and his master.

The only thing left to do was come up with a plan.

In the end, it was Ellen's skin color, the same thing that had sent her to Macon in the first place, that was going to drive their journey to freedom. William, who was darker in complexion than his wife, was going to dress as a slave, though he'd look shabbier and sound less intelligent than he actually was.


Ellen was going to be white. She was going to be a man. She was going to be rich.

Some of William's wages went to buying her a set of clothes that would allow her, if no one looked too closely, to be a Georgia plantation owner. The night before they left her hair was cut, and they wrapped one of her arms in a sling—despite their comparative positions of privilege in the slave hierarchy, neither Craft knew how to read or write. She would genteelly explain to whomever asked that her writing arm was damaged, allowing her to avoid filling out forms or signing her name.


Ellen bought two tickets to Savannah—one for herself, in the front carriage, and one for William, who would travel in slave cars where they were available and wherever he could find to stand when they were not.


The first clerk, the one they dealt with in Macon, was polite and deferential to Ellen, who, William would remark later, "made a most respectable looking gentleman."

Sitting in the train car before departure, Ellen spotted someone who'd known her master. She thought they'd been found out, that this man was there to collect them and bring them back to bondage. The scene was later described in Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom, the account of December, 1846 the Crafts would co-author:

After a little while, Mr. Cray said to my master, "It is a very fine morning, sir." The latter took no notice, but kept looking out of the window. Mr. Cray soon repeated this remark, in a little louder tone, but my master remained as before. This indifference attracted the attention of the passengers near, one of whom laughed out. This, I suppose, annoyed the old gentleman; so he said, "I will make him hear;" and in a loud tone of voice repeated, "It is a very fine morning, sir." My master turned his head, and with a polite bow said, "Yes," and commenced looking out of the window again. One of the gentlemen remarked that it was a very great deprivation to be deaf. "Yes," replied Mr. Cray, "and I shall not trouble that fellow any more." This enabled my master to breathe a little easier, and to feel that Mr. Cray was not his pursuer after all.


And why would Mr. Cray, or anyone else for that matter, suspect the Crafts of being who they were, presenting themselves as they had? Whiteness was a status, and it was a commodity, but not something that could be achieved—it just was. And the idea that someone without it could successfully pretend to have it was a threat to the order of things so great it could hardly be fathomed.


As a slave, Ellen's fair skin had been nothing more than a minor embarrassment to her owners—knowing she had even some Black blood was more than enough justification for thinking of her as property. Now, on the train, dressed in clothes that signified status and wealth and whiteness, she was every inch the Southern male archetype.

Gender, too—at least in public—was prescriptive and essentialized, and during enslavement, Ellen's womanhood had marked her for particular danger. At her age, Ellen's mother had already borne at least one child by her white owner, and Ellen would have been keenly aware the same fate could befall her, and that any children she might give birth to (if she survived childbirth, if the children survived infancy) would not, in the eyes of the law, truly be her own. But in her scheme, she was able to use society's limited views to her advantage. The idea that a woman could successfully mask herself as male was beyond disbelief in 1840s Macon, and so there, too, Ellen was able to use the rigidity of those around her to remain undetected.


The final disguise Ellen put on would have been, to any whites she met during the journey, the most unusual. The Ellen who had short hair and wore a man's suit and hat wasn't just any man—she was a man who had money, and slaves, no less. Just look at William, silently attentive at every possible moment! If to have money was to be moral, to be right, to be—Ellen was.

From Savannah, the Crafts took another train to Charleston, South Carolina. During both trips Ellen listened to the conversation of her fellow white men, and the topic often found its way to slavery, and to slaves—their worth, their stupidity, their troubles and their virtues. She had to remain stoic when one man suggested Blacks were grateful to their masters, and to deflect the advances of another who suggested that taking William into the northern parts of the South was a mistake, and wouldn't she rather just sell him to this man, who ran a plantation near New Orleans, where the enslaved were much more content?


From Charleston they planned to board a steamship to Philadelphia—not as far north as they'd like to go, but a free city nonetheless. Not realizing direct ships would not run during the winter months, they were forced to continue their journey by rail, every stop in every city a possible site of discovery.

On December 24th, 1848, the Crafts were at Baltimore. It was the last slave city before the free Northern states.


The clerk at the Baltimore station, despite being shown two tickets marking passage from Charleston to Philadelphia, refused to let the Crafts pass without some kind of endorsement marking William as Ellen (now calling herself Mr. Johnson)'s property.

Could anyone vouch for them? There was no one. Could Mr. Johnson not try, with his wounded arm, to write some kind of note assuring the clerk that William was his? He could not. The arm was not usable.


The Crafts and the clerk, the last person to stand between them and Philadelphia, had come to an impasse, when a character they'd met on a previous leg of the trip appeared:

While our hearts were crying lustily unto Him who is ever ready and able to save, the conductor of the train that we had just left stepped in. The officer asked if we came by the train with him from Washington; he said we did, and left the room. Just then the bell rang for the train to leave; and had it been the sudden shock of an earthquake it could not have given us a greater thrill. The sound of the bell caused every eye to flash with apparent interest, and to be more steadily fixed upon us than before. But, as God would have it, the officer all at once thrust his fingers through his hair, and in a state of great agitation said, "I really don't know what to do; I calculate it is all right." He then told the clerk to run and tell the conductor to "let this gentleman and slave pass;" adding, "As he is not well, it is a pity to stop him here. We will let him go."


And so they went, and on Christmas Day, 1848, found themselves at the home of Quaker abolitionists in Philadelphia.

From Pennsylvania the Crafts went further North, to Boston, where they quickly became acquainted with the abolitionist publisher William Lloyd Garrison, whose newspaper, The Liberator, was in the habit of printing escape narratives of newly arrived slaves.


The Crafts settled in Beacon Hill, a community of free Blacks. William found work as a carpenter and Ellen as a seamstress, and they frequented the lecture circuit, where, despite her lead role in their escape, William did most of the talking. Garrison at one point suggested Ellen redon her men's costume and have a portrait taken; audiences were delighted by the handsome white man in the photo and the lovely, soft-spoken Black woman in front of them. This served, in a sense, to heighten the drama of what they'd done—Southerners they'd encountered on the train couldn't see Ellen for who she was. Northerners, electrified by the Crafts' bravery and their love for one another, couldn't imagine her as anything else.

In 1850, barely a year after the Crafts' arrival in Boston, Congress passed the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. Protestations from wealthy Southerners (and their government representatives) convinced President Millard Fillmore to insert the Act into the Compromise of 1850, a bandage on the increasingly tense relations between the Northern and Southern states.


The Fugitive Slave Act made any free Black person a target—Fillmore at one point promised to devote Army resources to the capture of escaped slaves, and bounty hunters quickly realized they could collect rewards from masters whilst being assisted by the Federal government—but the Crafts, whose story had been widely circulated in newspapers like Garrison's, were particularly vulnerable. What better way to send a message, Southern masters thought, than to bring back into chains two people who had defied not just their owners but the very natural order that separated White from Black, man from woman, rich from poor?

The Act did have one unintended side effect—it mobilized many Northern abolitionists. Even those who privately opposed slavery had been able to look the other way before 1850, but now any White person in any free city could claim as a slave virtually any Black person they saw and drag them, against their will and the will of city and state governments, back below the Mason-Dixon line.


Garrison and his supporters were particular in their opposition, and again the Crafts were in the pages of the Liberator, this time in a reprint of something that had ran in the Constitutionalist, a Georgia newspaper. It was the narrative of Willis Hughes, a slave hunter come to Boston specifically to capture Ellen and William:

All the time the excitement was going on with me, there was no protection of the city officers offered me, and none turned out in my favor. But when George Thompson, the English abolition lecturer, was expected, and a meeting was announced to receive him, it was rumored that a mob might assemble on his reception, and the Mayor instantly ordered out the city officers to attend and suppress any mob—showing that the city authorities were disposed to give protection to an abolitionist, which they had withheld from me while engaged in my lawful business; and my opinion is, if we had succeeded in arresting the negroes, that they would have been rescued by the citizens.


Despite the support of many Bostonians, Black and white, the Crafts decided it prudent to sail to England, where they were well-received and quickly became involved with abolitionists working abroad. Both Crafts learned to read and write, and in 1852 Ellen released her first official written statement, presented as a response to a Southern rumor that she was homesick for Macon, her masters, and slavery:

I write these few lines merely to say that the statement is entirely unfounded, for I have never had the slightest inclination whatever of returning to bondage; and God forbid that I should ever be so false to liberty as to prefer slavery in its stead. In fact, since my escape from slavery, I have gotten much better in every respect than I could have possibly anticipated. Though, had it been to the contrary, my feelings in regard to this would have been just the same, for I had much rather starve in England, a free woman, than be a slave for the best man that ever breathed upon the American continent.


They were to remain in England for nearly twenty years, during which time five Craft children were born. In 1860 they published their narrative, Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom (while the book was initially credited to both Crafts, later reprints named William the sole author—some gender constructs are harder than other to shake, it seems. In the later century, academics at the intersection of Black Studies and Women's Studies worked to restore Ellen's place on the title page of the book, and in fact suspect she contributed more to the work than has been previously assumed). The book ends with a declaration of haunting elegance and power, one that refuses to allow their story to be turned into one that makes anyone feel too good, too comfortable:

It is well known in England, if not all over the world, that the Americans, as a people, are notoriously mean and cruel towards all coloured persons, whether they are bond or free.


In 1870, after the end of the Civil War and the passage of the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments of the Constitution, the Crafts returned to Georgia. With funds raised from the sale of their book and wealthy supporters, they purchased land upon which to farm, and upon which to open a school for former slaves, the Woodville Co-operative Farm School. Ellen and William took equal roles in the school's curriculum, with her instituting a particular ban on the whipping of pupils.


They ran the school until it closed in the early 1880s, and lived their final years in Charleston, with their daughter, also named Ellen, and her husband, a doctor, like their master had been.

Ellen Craft died in 1891; William in 1900. She was buried under a tree near their Georgia property, a tree she by all accounts loved very much.


She is still there. She is still free.

Previously: "Lady Colin, the Not-Quite-Divorcee Who Scandalized London"

Angela Serratore is a New York-based writer and historian with a predilection for stories about women who eschew easy categorization (like those in her Master's thesis, which focused on the geography of sex work in 19th century Manhattan). She is the Deputy Web Editor at Lapham's Quarterly and an educator at the Lower East Side Tenement Museum.

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