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After his 12 years as a slave, where did Solomon Northup go?

By AP | Last updated: Mar 26, 2014 - 11:51:45 AM

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SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. - Historians know where Solomon Northup was born, where he lived and where he worked. They know whom he married and how many children he had. They know he played the fiddle and spent 12 years enslaved in the South before being freed. What historians don’t know about the author of 12 Years A Slave is when and how he died and where he is buried. It’s a lingering mystery in the final chapter of the life of the 19th-century free-born Black man whose compelling account of enforced slavery in pre-Civil War Louisiana was made into the Oscar-winning film of the same title.

“That’s sort of a big blank spot in the story, for sure,” said Rachel Seligman, co-author of Solomon Northup: The Complete Story of the Author of Twelve Years a Slave, published last year.

Mr. Northup was born July 10, 1807, in what is now the Essex County town of Minerva, in the Adirondack Mountains. His father, a former slave, moved the family to neighboring Washington County, eventually settling in the village of Fort Edward, on the Hudson River 40 miles north of Albany. Mr. Northup married Anne Hampton in the late 1820s, and the couple lived in an 18th-century house in Fort Edward that is now a museum.

The couple and their children moved to nearby Saratoga Springs when Anne got a job in one of the growing spa-resort town’s big hotels. Mr. Northup found work as a musician, and in 1841, two White men lured him to Washington, D.C., with the promise of more work. Instead, they kidnapped him and took him to New Orleans, where he was sold into slavery.

Mr. Northup endured the next 12 years enslaved on a Louisiana cotton plantation before friends in Saratoga finally won his freedom. In 1853, he published a memoir of his ordeal that led to a speaking tour supported by abolitionists. He got involved in the Underground Railroad, helping escaped slaves find freedom in the Northeast and Canada. But around 1863, the height of the Civil War, he dropped out of sight and was never heard from again.

One scenario has him being captured and killed while serving as a spy for the Union Army. The man who helped rescue him said he believed that Mr. Northup had taken to drink and was kidnapped yet again. Or Mr. Northup could have died in a place where no one knew him or cared to properly bury a Black man at a time when a war over slavery was tearing the nation apart.

“He may have just wandered around from place to place and died somewhere nobody knew who he was, and he was buried in a potter’s field,” said David Fiske, co-author of the 2013 Northup book.

“There’s no paper trail for him,” Mr. Brown added.

Mr. Fiske said Mr. Northup’s descendants also couldn’t provide any documents or hard facts, so he checked cemeteries in communities outside Saratoga and other upstate communities where Mr. Northup’s wife and their children later lived, but came up empty.