From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Littleton Prince was a white man executed by hanging in 1833 at Pike County, Alabama for having helped a runaway slave. [1]

The Alabama Department of Archives and History has a letter from the Montgomery County Sheriff informing the governor, John Gayle, that Littleton Prince had escaped from jail. [2] Evidently, he was later caught and executed.

The case did not get much attention outside Alabama. In the state itself it seems to have been treated as a straightforward criminal case, rather than a politically controversial one. There is no reference to Prince having been a member of any abolitionist organization, or connected with the Underground Railroad. The assumption that helping a fugitive slave was a crime meriting capital punishment might have been connected with the alarm and panic felt throughout the slave states in the wake of Nat Turner's Rebellion two years earlier.

Abolitionists did not take up Prince as a martyr, either at the time or during the later three decades. The story of his life and death remained obscure even at the time when slavery in general and aid to fugitive slaves in particular became a central controversial issue on the American political agenda.

References

  1. ^ Alabama Executions, 1812 - 1965 (entry 20) "Alabama Executions 1812-1965". Archived from the original on October 22, 2009. Retrieved 2010-12-07.{{ cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown ( link), [1]
  2. ^ Biographical Directory of the United States Congress; Gayle, John, 1792-1859 [2]


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Littleton Prince was a white man executed by hanging in 1833 at Pike County, Alabama for having helped a runaway slave. [1]

The Alabama Department of Archives and History has a letter from the Montgomery County Sheriff informing the governor, John Gayle, that Littleton Prince had escaped from jail. [2] Evidently, he was later caught and executed.

The case did not get much attention outside Alabama. In the state itself it seems to have been treated as a straightforward criminal case, rather than a politically controversial one. There is no reference to Prince having been a member of any abolitionist organization, or connected with the Underground Railroad. The assumption that helping a fugitive slave was a crime meriting capital punishment might have been connected with the alarm and panic felt throughout the slave states in the wake of Nat Turner's Rebellion two years earlier.

Abolitionists did not take up Prince as a martyr, either at the time or during the later three decades. The story of his life and death remained obscure even at the time when slavery in general and aid to fugitive slaves in particular became a central controversial issue on the American political agenda.

References

  1. ^ Alabama Executions, 1812 - 1965 (entry 20) "Alabama Executions 1812-1965". Archived from the original on October 22, 2009. Retrieved 2010-12-07.{{ cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown ( link), [1]
  2. ^ Biographical Directory of the United States Congress; Gayle, John, 1792-1859 [2]



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