10 Stories Triumph: Daring Acts of Freedom in the American South

by Marcus Ribeiro

The 10 stories triumph theme shines a light on the extraordinary bravery of people who turned the shackles of slavery into bold acts of resistance, leaving a legacy that still inspires today.

10 Ellen And William Craft

Ellen and William Craft escape portrait - 10 stories triumph

10 stories triumph Highlights

When Ellen and William Craft plotted their flight from bondage, they chose a strategy that was as audacious as it was ingenious: they would travel right under the noses of their owners. Ellen, born to a white plantation owner and his mixed‑race slave, had long been mistaken for a white family member, a fact that both protected and imperiled her. To disguise herself as a man, she cut her hair, wrapped bandages around part of her face, slipped on colored spectacles, and donned male attire, while William pretended to be her enslaved servant. To mask her illiteracy, she tucked an arm into a sling, claiming it prevented her from signing her name.

Armed with passes that allowed a holiday visit to relatives, the couple headed straight for the train station. Their northbound trek was fraught with close calls. On the first leg, Ellen sat beside a close friend of her master and feigned deafness to avoid conversation. Authorities repeatedly demanded proof of William’s ownership, but sympathetic strangers intervened each time. At one point, a Virginian woman tried to claim William as her runaway, forcing Ellen to maintain her deception under pressure.

It wasn’t until they reached Philadelphia that the pair finally revealed their true identities. Northern abolitionists provided shelter, and the Crafts settled into a precarious freedom. Years later, still hunted by slave‑catchers, they fled to England, returning to Georgia in the 1870s to establish a school for freed people.

9 William Wells Brown

William Wells Brown portrait - 10 stories triumph

10 stories triumph Highlights

Born in Kentucky in 1814 to a slave mother and an unnamed white relative of his master, William Wells Brown spent his early years traveling with the family that owned him. In 1832, a failed escape attempt led to his sale and assignment to riverboat work, where he absorbed the knowledge that would later fuel his successful flight to freedom. By 1834, Brown had reached Cleveland, launching a career as an abolitionist lecturer and writer. After a stint in Buffalo, the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 drove him across the Atlantic to England, where he penned Clotel, the first novel credited to an African‑American author.

Clotel dramatizes the life of one of Thomas Jefferson’s mixed‑race children, tracing her quest for happiness amid relentless prejudice and the ever‑looming threat of re‑enslavement. She briefly finds love and wealth through a secret marriage to a wealthy plantation owner, only to be betrayed when he abandons her for a white wife, selling her back into bondage. Upon returning to Boston, Brown broke new ground again with The Escape; Or, A Leap For Freedom, the first play by an African‑American playwright, published in 1858. The drama offers a sweeping commentary on the sectional tensions of the era while telling the intimate story of two enslaved lovers.

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8 Priscilla’s Homecoming

Priscilla portrait - 10 stories triumph

10 stories triumph Highlights

Rare documentary chains link the life of a single enslaved woman across 250 years, and that woman is Priscilla. On April 9, 1756, the ship Hare departed Sierra Leone bound for America, carrying captives destined for a South Carolina rice plantation. Among them was a ten‑year‑old girl who was christened Priscilla upon her sale. She spent her entire life on the plantation, birthing ten children whose lives were also recorded, creating an unbroken documentary trail that stretches to her great‑great‑great‑great‑great‑granddaughter, Thomalind Martin Polite.

Polite’s discovery of her ancestry prompted a pilgrimage back to Sierra Leone, where she acted as an ambassador, reconnecting with the land her ancestor was torn from. Her research also illuminated a lesser‑known facet of the trans‑Atlantic slave trade: the involvement of Northern ports. The Hare was registered in Newport, Rhode Island, a hub that dispatched countless captives to the South, challenging the simplistic North‑South narrative of American slavery.

7 Levi And Catharine Coffin

Levi and Catharine Coffin house - 10 stories triumph

10 stories triumph Highlights

The Coffins, a devout Quaker family from North Carolina, believed that any human law clashing with divine morality was null and void. Levi Coffin’s anti‑slavery convictions formed early, after witnessing a chain‑gang of men being led to a market. At fifteen, he helped a peer escape, arranging safe passage with the boy’s friends. Later, after relocating to Newport, Indiana, Levi transformed his eight‑room house into a pivotal station on the Underground Railroad, financing the effort through his role as executive director of the State Bank’s Richmond branch.

Travelers who sought refuge at the Coffin home received hot meals, fresh clothing, and a secure night’s rest. By 1864, Levi had crossed the Atlantic to organize the English Freedmen’s Aid Society, funneling money and supplies back to the United States for the benefit of countless escaped slaves.

6 Blind Tom

Blind Tom at piano - 10 stories triumph

10 stories triumph Highlights

Born on a Georgia plantation, Thomas “Blind” Tom Wiggins was deemed a burden when his owner realized the infant was blind. Sold with his mother and two siblings to lawyer General James Bethune in Columbus, Tom was introduced to the family’s piano and quickly displayed prodigious musical talent. He could mimic any sound and reproduce entire compositions after a single hearing.

The Bethune family soon recognized his commercial potential, sending him on tours across the North and South throughout the Civil War. Proceeds funded Confederate medical care, and Tom’s fame grew to the point where Mark Twain praised his abilities. Despite his brilliance, Tom likely suffered from autism, leaving him dependent on a guardian for financial and logistical matters until his death in 1908, still residing in Hoboken with Eliza Bethune.

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5 Gordon

Gordon portrait with photograph - 10 stories triumph

10 stories triumph Highlights

Gordon’s early life is shrouded in mystery, but surviving accounts reveal a brutal beating by an overseer that left him bedridden for months. While convalescing, he plotted his escape. In 1863, he fled his captors, evading bloodhounds by rubbing onions into his skin—a pungent deterrent. He enlisted in the Union Army, and during a medical exam his scars were documented in a photograph that circulated worldwide.

The image, accompanied by a physician’s note describing Gordon as “intelligent and well‑behaved,” sparked outrage in the North and Europe, providing a stark visual of the cruelty endured by enslaved people. Though records of his post‑war life are scant, his photograph cemented his status as a symbol of resilience and the human cost of slavery.

4 Harriet Jacobs

Harriet Jacobs portrait - 10 stories triumph

10 stories triumph Highlights

Harriet Jacobs entered slavery in 1813 and enjoyed a relatively nurturing childhood, learning to read and sew from her mistresses. As a teenager, she was transferred to the household of Dr. James Norcom, who became obsessively infatuated with her, subjecting her to relentless sexual advances and abuse. To protect herself, Jacobs entered a relationship with a local attorney, bearing two children whose legal status still belonged to Norcom.

In a daring move, Jacobs pretended to have escaped, prompting Norcom to sell her children. In reality, she concealed herself in a cramped crawlspace above the house, where she remained hidden for seven harrowing years, watching over her children. Once the children were transferred to their father in Washington, D.C., Jacobs finally fled to New York, reuniting with them.

In New York, Jacobs penned her memoir, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, under the pseudonym Linda Brent, exposing the sexual exploitation of enslaved women—a topic even many abolitionists ignored. Her narrative galvanized Northern anti‑slavery sentiment, and after the war she returned to the D.C. area to aid displaced refugees.

3 George Liele

George Liele preaching - 10 stories triumph

10 stories triumph Highlights

George Liele, born around 1750 into a devout Virginian family, was separated from his biological relatives early and sold to a Baptist deacon who allowed him to attend church with the enslaved household. After moving to Georgia, Liele felt a divine calling and began preaching to fellow slaves who could not read the Bible. He eventually received ordination and a preaching license from the very congregation that owned him.

Liele’s ministry expanded across Georgia, and he later founded his own church in Kingston, Jamaica, converting hundreds and establishing a school. His congregation included both free men and enslaved individuals, leading to violent backlash: when a convert named Moses Hall opened a church, slave owners stormed it, beheading an assistant named David and threatening Moses. Undeterred, Moses knelt and prayed, inspiring fellow slaves to join in worship despite the danger.

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Liele continued to plant churches throughout Jamaica and is credited with founding the first African‑American churches in the United States, leaving a lasting spiritual legacy.

2 Polly Berry And Lucy Delaney

Polly Berry and Lucy Delaney portrait - 10 stories triumph

10 stories triumph Highlights

Polly Berry, born free in early‑19th‑century Illinois, was abducted by slave‑catchers and sold to a Southern general. She bore two daughters, Lucy and Nancy, with another enslaved man. After the death of their owner, the girls were sent deeper into the South. Nancy escaped to Canada, and Polly soon followed, returning to Illinois. There, she sued her captors, arguing that she had been born free and illegally kidnapped. The court affirmed her freedom.

Polly didn’t stop there; she returned to court to free her daughter Lucy. In 1842, Lucy fled an imminent sale, seeking refuge with her mother, only to be jailed while Polly fought for her legal emancipation. As the daughter of a free woman, Lucy had no lawful basis for enslavement, and after 17 months of incarceration, the court finally granted her freedom at age fourteen. Lucy later married Frederick Turner, who perished in a steamboat explosion named after the attorney Edward Bates, who had defended her case. Lucy chronicled her ordeal in the narrative From the Darkness Cometh the Light, or, Struggles for Freedom.

1 Elizabeth Keckley

Elizabeth Keckley dressmaking - 10 stories triumph

10 stories triumph Highlights

Elizabeth Keckley entered the world in Virginia in 1818 as a slave, later enduring a sexual assault that produced a son, George. In 1852, she married a man who claimed to be free; he was, in fact, still enslaved, thwarting her plans to purchase her and her son’s freedom. Keckley’s seamstress talents attracted affluent clients, and several women funded her emancipation. She moved to Washington, D.C., establishing a thriving dressmaking business that served the wives of Jefferson Davis and Stephen Douglas.

In 1861, Mary Todd Lincoln sought Keckley’s services, and the two women forged a close friendship, supporting each other through the loss of their sons. Keckley accompanied the Lincolns during the Civil War, and after President Lincoln’s assassination, she worked tirelessly to aid the grieving First Lady, even raising funds in New York—a move that sparked scandal.

Keckley authored her autobiography, Behind the Scenes: Or, Thirty Years a Slave, and Four Years in the White House, to generate income for Mary Lincoln. The book’s candid revelations strained their relationship, as Keckley’s editor included personal letters Keckley had asked to omit. Financially ruined, Keckley died in near‑poverty, but her memoir remains a rare, intimate glimpse into the Lincolns’ private lives.

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