Page 42 - August 2024 Issue Web.pdf
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A Choptank River History Project by Kennedy Thomason

                    Currents of Change: The Choptank River’s Legacy in Slavery
                                           and the Pursuit of Freedom

                          By Kennedy Th omason                  Chesapeake Bay’s temperate climate created ideal conditions
                                                                for tobacco farming. However, the labor-intensive nature

            The Choptank’s waters, once pathways for the arrival and   of tobacco farming necessitated a substantial workforce,
            auction of enslaved African people, later became lifelines   leading to a growing reliance on enslaved labor. Hence,
            guiding daring escapes to freedom. Locals tend to boast   Caroline County became a significant area for the expansion

            that their lands are tied to some of history’s biggest heroes:   of slavery.
            Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, and William Still.


            But why did settlers on the Eastern Shore seek out slave   Due to shifts in agricultural profits leading to many
            labor, and how did Maryland become the state with the   slaveholders freeing their enslaved peoples, the Eastern
            most documented freedom-seekers? The answer lies in the   Shore of Maryland had one of the largest free Black


            existence of the “Great Choptank River.”            communities in any slave-holding territory. This free Black
                                                                community found its niche in the maritime industry. Th e


            The Choptank River played a significant role in facilitating   Chesapeake Bay was a major player in trade, making the Bay
            the growth of slavery in the region. In the 17th and 18th   and its rivers hotbeds for communication between free and
            centuries, the economy of the Mid-Atlantic region was   enslaved African Americans working aboard trade ships.

            heavily influenced by tobacco cultivation. This cash crop   The smuggling of enslaved African Americans from the


            quickly became the cornerstone of Maryland’s economy,   shore on Northbound boats was rampant- Gilpin Point in
            driving settlers inland and up the Choptank River in   Preston becoming one such trade-center-turned-runaway-

            search of fertile land. The river’s rich floodplains and the

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