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One of the most interesting families who lived in the Chatham area was the family of James Monroe Jones. James was the son of Allen and Temperance Jones of North Carolina. Being a slave family, Allen saved enough money to purchase his family's freedom, a vast sum of $2,000., but was swindled out of it by his owner. He again saved $3,000. and this time succeeded in buying his family's freedom including his elderly father, Charles, who had come over on a slave ship in the late 1700's. (1) |
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Allen accomplished this by working as a blacksmith and gunsmith after slaving all day for his master. He was a great believer in education and wanted the same for his children. Consequently, they left North Carolina in 1843. A covered wagon was their home until they reached and settled in Oberlin, Ohio. There the sons attended Oberlin College and graduated before the civil war. (2) James Monroe Jones became a skilled gunsmith and
engraver and moved to Chatham, Canada West, in 1849.
James and Emily's family consisted of six children, Annie, Emily and Frederica, were teachers and Sophia who became a doctor. Their sons were George and James.
Reference: (1) Copy of Manumission papers, Seek The Truth, G. Robinson
(3) Provincial Freedman-November 25, 1854 (4) What About Pistols?-Chatham Daily Planet, September 29, 1860 (5) Chatham Directory, Chatham Library (6) Death Certificate, Washtenaw County, Michigan, November 7, 1905, Record # 38 |
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