The Story Behind
Bound by Sally Gunning
In the
course of some historical research that took me through a number of seventeenth
and eighteenth century Cape Cod wills I
discovered that slavery was widely practiced and little acknowledged in this
part of the country. My there's-a-book
light bulb went off; I felt that this particular part of New
England's history deserved to see the light of day. But as I discussed the subject with my
brother he said, "All the slaves weren't white, you know," reminding me of a related
subject that had long interested me and greatly influenced the make-up of New
England: indentured servitude. I also remembered that I'd come across an
intriguing story of an indentured servant in researching my previous historical
novel, The Widow's War.
Diarist Benjamin
Bangs of Harwich (formerly Satucket, now Brewster) made the following notation
in his diary in 1764, referencing a former indentured servant who had given
birth to an illegitimate child while alone, and the child died. In that era a single woman in such
circumstance was almost always charged with infanticide, the assumption being
that she would have killed the child to hide the crime of fornication. The diary passage reads:
[July]
10: Tuesday: wind SW: hot: I went in my
chaise with my wife to Bass ponds visited Mrs Kelly and dind then went to see
:Hannah: the black girl we brought up: who has had a bastard child alone at tom
Ralphs: the [grand] jury brot in that
the child died for want help she is in
fitts and weak and almost dead an object
of pity the sheriff Stone has put a
guard over her and intends to put her in goal if she lives She lies lamenting her folly when sencible
Several things intrigued me
about this passage: first, of course, was the fact of the pending infanticide
charge, but second, the fact that Bangs refers to this indentured servant as
"the black girl we brought up," as if she were almost a member of his family, even
going to visit to her in her time of distress.
The literature on indentured servitude is filled with tales of abusive
masters, but Benjamin Bangs was clearly of another type.
Even thought Hannah was not one
of the "white slaves" (Bangs alternately refers to her as "Indian Hannah" or
"Black Hannah") I decided to see what I could find out about her, and was
fortunate to be able to locate the files for the case of "Hannah Nutup, a
spinster from Yarmouth" in the archives of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial
Court. The record contained three
depositions from the women who arrived at the scene, each almost identical to
the one by Sarah Burgess, Hannah's arrest warrant, grand jury indictment, and
trial jury verdict. [These documents and transcripts are reproduced in the paperback
edition of Bound.]
In reading the
record of Hannah's trial I knew that this was a story I wished to tell. But as I began to talk to various people
about indentured servitude I discovered that although they all knew plenty about the
exploitation and enslavement of Africans and Indians, few were familiar with
the "white slaves." I decided I might best
illuminate this unknown part of our history by creating as my main character a
young white girl who came into service the same way so many of them had: she
was bound out by her father in order to help pay for the family's costly
passage to America, a legal practice as long as the child had reached seven
years of age.
So Alice
Cole was born, and although her life converges with Hannah's in some of its
details, it sometimes diverges dramatically, and in at least one instance to Alice's greater
advantage: her path crosses that of someone the readers of my previous
historical novel will recognize: the
widow Lyddie Berry.
The foregoing is excerpted from Bound by Sally Gunning. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced without written permission from HarperCollins Publishers, 10 East 53rd Street, New York, NY 10022