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Drawn portrait of Mary Perth

Mary Perth

Mary’s deep faith saw her through enslavement into freedom, and a new life after the Revolution.

Devotion and Inspiration

Born around 1740, Mary was enslaved on a plantation owned by John Willoughby in Norfolk, Virginia. At some point during her enslavement Mary became a devout Methodist, possibly after hearing the word spread by an itinerate minister traveling through Virginia.

At night, Mary would quietly leave her owner’s plantation to attend prayer meetings and preach to other enslaved people gathered near the Great Dismal Swamp. Such was Mary’s faith and devotion that she made the ten-mile journey nightly, with her young daughter strapped to her back.

Enslavement and Revolution

In November 1775 Lord Dunmore, the last colonial governor of Virginia, issued a proclamation offering freedom to Virginians enslaved by rebelling, patriot owners.

While thousands of enslaved Virginians risked everything to pursue freedom beyond British lines, Dunmore's offer did not apply to Mary—John Willoughby was a British loyalist.

Image Credit: John Murray, 4th Earl of Dunmore, By Joshua Reynolds, 1765. Courtesy of Wikipedia

Mary Perth was enslaved by loyalist John Willoughby in Norfolk, Virginia when Lord Dunmore offered freedom to those enslaved by rebelling patriots. Thousands of enslaved African Americans escaped to the British in search of freedom.

Painting of part of the Ruins of Norfolk.

The war soon came dangerously close to Mary's doorstep at the Willoughby's, as Dunmore’s forces ravaged communities in and around Norfolk over the winter of 1775 and 1776. On New Years Day 1776, British troops opened fire first to the waterfront, then to the city's interior. Patriots set remaining buildings and warehouses ablaze to prevent the British from benefiting from stores and supplies.

Image: View of Part of the Ruins of Norfolk, c. 1796-98, Benjamin Henry Latrobe. Digital resource provided by the Maryland Center for History and Culture.

According to one account, Willougby handed his "human property" over to Lord Dunmore, including Mary and her children. Mary's name, along with her family members, were listed among 87 enslaved peopled when Willougby petitioned the Virginia legislature to be compensated for loss of property.

An illustrated map showing Perth's marker and a British marker by Portsmouth.

This transfer to Lord Dunmore brought Mary to the British camp at Portsmouth, Virginia, where her journey towards a new life began.

An illustrated map showing Perth's marker and a British marker by Portsmouth with Perth's marking moving up to New York.

Mary stayed with the army through the war, surviving the smallpox outbreak that ravaged refugees at Gwynns Island and the survivors' subsequent journey to New York.

While in New York, Mary met her husband, Caesar, who had also been enslaved in Norfolk before joining the British.

Certificates of Freedom

The end of the Revolutionary War brought uncertainly to thousands, including Mary and Caesar. They had been enslaved in Virginia before being taken behind British lines, but now that the British had lost the war, slave owners were petitioning the British for the return of those individuals who had been their property.

Like many others, Mary's former owner John Willoughby petitioned the British for her return to Virginia, and her status as enslaved. British authorities intervened in owners' demands and issued certificates of freedom for former slaves.

An illustrated map showing a boat moving from New York to Birchtown, Nova Scotia.

A Journey of Faith

The ship L'Abondance brought Mary and her family to freedom in Birchtown, Nova Scotia. The family settled in Birchtown for nearly a decade—but Mary's journey would not end there.

An illustrated map showing Perth's marker leave Nova Scotia.

When a representative from the Sierra Leone Company arrived to recruit settlers to a new colony in West Africa, Mary and Caesar agreed to go with them. Caesar died shortly after their arrival, but Mary's faith made her a prominent member of the community there.

Reverend John Clarke, Chaplain to Sierra Leone described Mary in 1796: "There is one old woman…(named Mary Perth)…she is more like one come down out of heaven to earth, than like one who is only preparing for glory." Through it all, Mary relied on her Methodist faith until her death in 1813.

Themes of the period
Modern-day Legacy

'Black Loyalists at Birchtown' Plaque: Birchtown, Nova Scotia

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