Solomon Northup was born a free black man in upstate New York in 1808.
By 1841, he had become a husband, a father, a raftsman, and a talented
fiddle-player. That year, while his family was away, he agreed to
accompany two men to Washington DC, on what he thought would be a brief
trip performing for a circus. Instead, these new employers turned out to
be con men, and Northup was drugged, kidnapped, and sold into slavery.
Northup was transported to New Orleans and remained a slave for the next
twelve years, working for a number of masters in Louisiana--some brutal,
some kind. Although Northup never stopped longing for home and thinking
about how he could escape, it seemed impossible to trust anyone with the
facts of his life. He remained a slave for a dozen years, until he
finally met a Canadian abolitionist who was able to get a letter to his
family and eventually gained his freedom. After his release, Northup
told his story to David Wilson, an upstate New York-based white lawyer
and legislator. Northup's memoir, edited by Wilson, was published in
1853 as Twelve Years A Slave. Northup's story and his firsthand
observations of plantation life and the cruel reality of slavery make
this book an important document of the American south and American
history.