at Her request: navigating the Unraveling of the macgill estate

the tapestry of macgill’s estate

The story of Polly is one of resistance against a world designed to commodify her existence. Sold from the estate of her long-time enslaver, she escaped her new owner in a daring attempt to re-stitch the torn fabric of her own kinship community. To understand her actions, one must first examine the complex tapestry of the world that sought to control her.

Dr. James Macgill, heir to his uncle of the same name, presided over a sizable estate in Prince George’s County in the 1830s. His 740+ acre plantation was stitched together from various land tracts along present-day Annapolis Road, a significant crossroads in the Vansville District (later Queen Anne District). The estate was bordered by massive operations: the Jesuit’s 2,000-acre White Marsh plantation, the Ogle family’s 2,000+ acre Bel-air estate, and the Bowie family’s 570+ acre Locust Grove. An 1828 tax list documents the human dimension of this operation, enumerating the 34 people Dr. Macgill enslaved: six elders, eleven adults, four adolescents, and thirteen young children under the age of eight.   

The 1828 Levy Court Road Survey details the estate’s strategic location, providing access to the Patuxent River and placing it in direct proximity to the Ogle’s Bel-air plantation—the community where Polly’s future husband, Peter, was enslaved.

 Road No. 1 [now-Annapolis Road]: Commencing at the Priests Bridge on the Patuxent, thence through the White Marsh Plantation; then through Bel-air, thence through the plantation of Dr. James Magill by the Forest Chapel, thence by Magruders Tavern…

Road No. 3: …across Collington Branch, thence with the plantations of William Ogle, James Magill, and Walter Bowie…

Using details from the 1828 Levy Court Road Survey, Martenet’s annotated 1861 map details the route of the area’s primary artery (present-day Annapolis Road), an economic corridor connecting the adjacent plantations of Macgill, Ogle (Bel-air), and the Jesuit’s White Marsh.

Married to Julia Ann Compton in 1829, Macgill also owned property in Anne Arundel County near West River Post Office and Samuel Carr, the husband of Mary Compton.  The property was situated in the First District along the road that led to Mount Pleasant Ferry, connecting Anne Arundel to Prince George’s County closer to Upper Marlboro, the county seat. The estates wove together the family’s interests across two counties, creating a broader and more complex tapestry of land and human property.

the Snag: the death of the patriarch (1840)

A decade after his marriage, Macgill’s impending death created a snag in the tapestry of his estate, and he composed his last will and testament, dividing his real and personal property among his wife and three born children, while making provisions for his unborn child.  Like his uncle, he dictated how the fabric of his estate was to be cut and divided, specifically naming different mother-child family groups and directing the heir who would acquire four family groups, with a third being conveyed to Macgill’s wife as her right of dower, and the unnamed “balance” going to James P. Macgill.   

ripped threads of kinship

Macgill’s division in his will ripped the threads of kinship among the community enslaved on his estates.  While he nominally kept mother-child groups together, Polly and her children were divided from her larger extended family.  As the wife of Peter, she became part of the larger Lee family group, and with Macgill’s will, she was separated from Harriet Lee and her children, Daniel, Oswald [Osborn], Caroline, Ann, and Amelia, who, while unnamed in the will, were named in the inventory and much later in the 1867’s Compensation List of Septimus J. Cook, the second husband of Julia Macgill.  Whereas, Polly and her children were conveyed to Thomas Macgill, the oldest son, who would also receive a sizable portion of the Prince George’s estate through provisions of the 1833 will of the older Dr. James Macgill.  Polly, Peter, their children, and the family of Harriet Lee were the threads that gave the plantation its texture and life. Macgill’s death subjected these threads to immense strain. They were stretched thin across counties, torn from one another, and tangled with new and unfamiliar threads.

This diagram illustrates the legal fracturing of an enslaved community following the 1840 death of Dr. James Macgill. His will distributed specific mother-child groups, including those of Rachel, Sue, Sophia, and Polly, among his heirs, pulling the kinship network apart and setting the stage for future sales and separations.

threads of inheritance

The will, far from ensuring a smooth transition, pulled the tightly woven kinship community of the enslaved in three distinct directions. Each heir represented a thread pulling part of the tapestry away from the whole. These distinct lines of inheritance did not exist in isolation; they actively pulled the community apart, a process accelerated by the legal and personal entanglements of the heirs.

the dower of the widow: the cook connection 

Under Maryland law, Julia Ann Compton Macgill had a dower right to one-third of her husband’s property. This included the enslaved families Macgill designated for her, most notably Harriet Lee and her children. When Julia remarried to Septimus J. Cook in 1845, her dower portion—including Harriet’s family—was legally absorbed into the Cook household. This single act pulled an entire branch of the original enslaved community away, transplanting them into a new network under a new enslaver.

the son’s portion: the line of thomas macgill 

Thomas Macgill’s inheritance was anchored in Prince George’s County. As stipulated in two generations of wills, he received a large portion of the home plantation and legal ownership of Polly and her children. While this provision placed Polly in the community where her husband Peter lived, it rested on the financial acumen of the Magill’s guardians to maintain a sizable estate without need to sell off “assets” This thread represented the patriarchal line of succession from uncle to nephew to son.  

the balance of the estate: the line of james p. macgill 

The younger son, James P. Macgill, inherited the family’s Anne Arundel County property near West River, along with the “balance” of the enslaved people not otherwise assigned. This act created an immediate geographic fracture in the community, moving another group of individuals to a different county and physically separating them from the kinship network on the home plantation. This thread established the West River estate as a distinct, yet connected, Macgill holding—and created the destination Polly would later seek in her flight.

The division of human property among Julia, Thomas, and James P. Macgill set the stage for further disruption. The fifteen years that followed Macgill’s death were marked by a cascade of events—probate, remarriage, and death—that continued to unravel the fabric of the enslaved community.

unraveling in motion: 1840-1855

Multiple events occurred in the years after Macgill’s death that led to self-liberation of Polly in 1855.  First, there was the division of the estate as it traveled through probate, followed by the marriage of Julia Macgill to Septimus J. Cook and her subsequent death in 1846, and the re-division of her estate with her children’s.  There were sales to settle the debts of the estate.  Ultimately in 1855, Thomas Macgill sold his estate that inherited from his uncle to Joshua T. Clark, a neighbor and Justice of the Peace.  It is most likely this sale that prompted Polly to seek ways to weave a new beginning for her family. 

Polly’s design: weaving against the grain

The impending 1855 sale of the plantation from Thomas Macgill to Joshua T. Clark likely acted as the final catalyst. In response, Polly leveraged her social capital within the enslaver’s network to reach out to William Elson Peach, her late enslaver’s son-in-law. She initiated her own sale, requesting that Peach purchase her to ensure her continued proximity to her husband, Peter. However, while navigating this arrangement with Peach, she almost certainly utilized her own community’s social networks to connect with individuals who offered an alternative path. The “designing person” mentioned in the subsequent bounty notice suggests Polly was not merely seeking a new enslaver but was simultaneously orchestrating an escape. This was her attempt to gather the scattered threads of her own kinship and find lasting liberty beyond the reach of Peach, Clark, and the unraveling Macgill estate.

Sources

1828 Tax List, Prince George’s County

1828 Levy Court Road Survey, Prince George’s County

Marriage Records, for the Macgill-Compton union (1829) and the Macgill-Cook union (1845)

  • Maryland, U.S., Compiled Marriages, 1655-1850
  • Maryland, U.S., Compiled Marriages, 1667-1899

Last Will and Testament of Dr. James Macgill (the elder), 1833, PC 1:1

Last Will and Testament of Dr. James Macgill (the nephew), ca. 1840, PC 1:129

Probate Records, Estate of Dr. James Macgill (the nephew), post-1840, which would include:

  • Inventory and Sales Records of the Estate (PC 4:43, 57, 299; JH 1:20,107,268, 273)

Land Records, for the sale of the Macgill estate to Joshua T. Clark (ca. 1855); EWB 1:137

Newspaper Bounty Notice for the capture of Polly (1855), Baltimore Sun, newspapers.com

1867 Compensation List of Septimus J. Cook

planter panic of 1857

An illustration depicting a chaotic scene outside a bank during a financial panic, featuring men in top hats and various individuals in distress.
“Run on the Seamen’s Savings’ Bank during the panic.” Illustration from Harper’s Weekly, August 11, 1857. As published on CultureNOW in “Panic of 1857.” Accessed July 5, 2025. https://culturenow.org/site/panic-of-1857/preview/74e9e4cf-1bce-4fe9-8459-72751b88269c.

a man Undone

merchant of queen anne

William B. Harwood operated as a merchant in Queen Anne on the Patuxent River during the 1850s. The 1850 census enumerated his household, including a wife and child, and recorded his modest real estate valued at $1,200, likely a town lot and store. An 1852 Bill of Sale documents his role as a purveyor to the local planter class, detailing a substantial sale to Haswell Magruder of dry goods, spirits, groceries, and 1,000 cigars. Yet, by 1857, Harwood was insolvent, unable to pay his creditors.

An 1857 insolvency notice for William B. Harwood, detailing his application to the Prince George's County Circuit Court for relief from debts.
Transcription of Insolvent Notice

INSOLVENT NOTICE.

PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY, TO WIT:

ON application to the subscriber, Judge of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County by petition in writing of WILLIAM B. HARWOOD, of said county, stating that he is in insolvent circumstances and unable to pay his debts, and praying for the benefit of the act of the General Assembly of Maryland, entitled “An act for the relief of insolvent debtors,” passed at January session, eighteen hundred and fifty-four, on the terms therein mentioned, a schedule of his property and a list of his creditors on oath, as far as he can ascertain the same, being annexed to his petition; and the said WILLIAM B. HARWOOD, having taken the oath by the said act prescribed, for the delivering up of his property, and given sufficient security for his personal appearance at the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County to answer such interrogatories and allegations as may be made against him; and the said WILLIAM B. HARWOOD, having further made oath, that he has not, at any time, sold, lessened, transferred or disposed of any part of his property, for the use and benefit of any person or entrusted any part of his money or other property, debts, rights or claims, thereby to delay or defraud his creditors or any of them, or to secure the same, so as to receive or expect to receive any profit, benefit or advantage himself therefrom; and having appointed JAMES M. BOYD his Trustee, who has given bond as such, and received from the said WILLIAM B. HARWOOD a conveyance and possession of all his property, real, personal and mixed—I do hereby order and adjudge that the said WILLIAM B. HARWOOD be discharged; and that he give notice to his creditors by causing a copy of this order to be inserted in some newspaper published in Prince George’s County, once a week for three consecutive months, before the next November Term of said Circuit Court, to appear before the said Circuit Court, at the Court House of said County at the said Term, to show cause if any they have, why the said William B. Harwood should not have the benefit of said act as prayed.

Given under my hand this eighth day of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty-seven.

PETER W. CRAIN.

True copy—Test: CHARLES S. MIDDLETON, Clerk.

June 10, 1857—3t [Planters’ Advocate]

Despite his established business, the economic pressures that precipitated the Panic of 1857 proved insurmountable. The panic was fanned by overspeculation, falling grain prices after the Crimean War, and tightening credit. Harwood, a merchant in Queen Anne, would have been reliant on credit and the local farmers ability to pay their bills. Falling crop prices and credit crisis would have crushed his ability to navigate the market, leading to his unpaid debts. By June 1857, Harwood petitioned the Circuit Court, declaring himself insolvent and unable to pay his creditors.

Map depicting the locations related to William B. Harwood and James M. Boyd in Queen Anne County.
Queen Anne District from 1861 Martenet Map

a trustee’s ledger: seizing a merchant’s accounts

The court appointed James M. Boyd to act as trustee for Harwood’s accounts. Boyd was a landholder whose 160-acre farm, part of the tract “Ample Grange,” was situated about two miles north of Queen Anne Town. His property holdings, which included a tobacco house, corn house, granary, and “quarters for servants,” marked him as a successful small yeoman, a class of farmer holding between 40 and 280 acres. The scale of his diversified operation placed him at the upper end of this group, a man of sufficient standing and perceived stability to be entrusted by the court with the assets of a failed peer.

The legal process of insolvency, while offering relief from creditors, stripped Harwood of his economic autonomy and subjected his actions to the scrutiny of both the court and his community. The oath he swore—that he had not hidden assets to “delay or defraud his creditors”—would soon become a focal point of conflict. Within months, accusations would surface that directly challenged this sworn statement, moving the conflict from the formal setting of the courthouse to the arena of public opinion and vigilante action, where the planter network sought to enforce its own economic and social order.

the underground economy

an Economy within an economy: the m.s. plummer notice

M. S. Plummer was a large planter whose estate on the border of Queen Anne and Marlboro District was home to the hundreds of people he enslaved. His real estate was valued at $120,000 and his personal property $500,000 in the 1860 census, speaking to his wealth acquired from the labor of the people enslaved on his estates. The heir of William Wells of George and married into the Waring family of Mt. Pleasant, M. S. Plummer was established among the large planter class.

In July 1857, just months before the official start of a national financial panic, an unknown thief entered a cabin within the quarters on Plummer’s estate and stole clothing belonging to the enslaved occupants. The stolen items—including cassimere pants, a flowered vest, and lawn dresses—were not the rough, utilitarian workwear of tweed or osnaburg issued to field hands. Instead, they were fashionable, ready-made garments that, along with the five dollars also taken, point to the owners’ participation in the internal economy of the enslaved.

This underground economy was essential for survival and for carving out a space for self-expression. Through activities outside their forced labor, enslaved people generated income that allowed them to supplement the meager provisions provided by enslavers. They completed “overwork” tasks, sold produce from their garden plots, marketed handmade goods like baskets, and sometimes hired out their own time on Sundays or holidays. The resulting income enabled them to purchase goods from merchants or peddlers, trade for different foods, and acquire clothing that reflected their own tastes and style.

Advertisement for stolen clothes and notice to neighborhood about "free negores, mulattos, and slaves" from crossing the farm of M. S. Plummer
Transcription of Advertisement and Notice

$50 Reward.

I WILL give a reward of FIFTY DOLLARS for the apprehension and conviction of the rogue or rogues who entered one of my quarters on Thursday morning, the 9th instant, between ten and eleven o’clock, and took therefrom the following articles:

1 pair blue cassimere Pants, 1 black summer cloth Coat, 1 white Skirt, 1 white Vest with blue flower, 1 pair Shoes, with brass tacks, 1 blue lawn Dress, 1 pink lawn Dress. Also—Five Dollars in money.

And I also forewarn all free negroes, mulattos or slaves from Anne Arundel or Prince George’s Counties from crossing over or through my farm, either day or night, Sunday or any other time, without permission of myself or my overseers; and I will give TEN DOLLARS reward for the apprehension of every free negro or mulatto caught so trespassing.

I will give TWENTY DOLLARS reward for the conviction of any person or persons who deal with or purchase hogs, shoats, pigs, lambs, meal, fish or bacon from any of my servants, or who purchase such articles from others, stolen from my farm. And I will also give a liberal reward for any information that will lead to such conviction.

M. S. PLUMMER.

July 15, 1857—tf

A historical map showing locations associated with William B. Harwood, James M. Boyd, and M. S. Plummer in Queen Anne and surrounding areas.
Queen Anne District from 1861 Martenet Map
Clothing Advertisements and Sketch of Enslaved People
A newspaper advertisement promoting various dry goods for sale, including dresses, handkerchiefs, ribbons, and fabrics, emphasizing low prices and variety.
Richmond Dispatch, 1857
Advertisement for clothing showcasing various items like cloth frock coats, cassimere suits, and pants, highlighting quality and prices.
Daily National Intelligencer and Washington Express 1857
Advertisement for Domestic Goods for Servants' Weart including kerseys, tweeds, jeans, cassinets, etc.
Planters’ Advocate, 1859
A historical illustration depicting three individuals engaged in agricultural work, highlighting aspects of labor and the home economy in Virginia. The figures are shown spinning wool, grinding corn, and using traditional tools, symbolizing the hard work and industry of the time by enslaved people
Miller, Lewis. Represents Our next door neighbor. Mid-nineteenth century. Watercolor and ink on paper. The Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum, The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, Williamsburg, VA. As published in Encyclopedia Virginia. Accessed July 6, 2025. https://encyclopediavirginia.org/4118hpr-00ee78908746584/.

Plummer’s notice sought more than the return of the stolen articles; it was a comprehensive effort to sever the networks that sustained the enslaved community. He issued a strict prohibition against Black people—enslaved or free—traversing his extensive estates, not only during the day but specifically at night and on Sundays, the very periods that allowed for a greater freedom of movement and social interaction. This clampdown on physical movement was directly linked to a more critical prohibition against economic exchange. By offering a reward for the conviction of anyone who purchased goods from his “servants,” Plummer attempted to dismantle the underground economy itself, denying the enslaved community the ability to profit from their own production and to exercise consumer choice.

opportunity knocks at the Quarters’ door

By publishing his notice in the Planters’ Advocate—a newspaper that served the interests of Prince George’s County’s white society with its advertisements for runaway enslaved people, trustee sales, and plantation managers—M.S. Plummer did more than just report a theft. He publicly drew a line against the local underground economy, threatening conviction for “any person or persons” who dared to purchase goods from the people he enslaved. This public ultimatum raises a critical question: who in the community would risk social condemnation and legal trouble by engaging in this forbidden trade? The circumstances of William B. Harwood, a merchant residing just a few miles away in Queen Anne Town, present a compelling answer. Declared insolvent just one month prior, his legitimate business shuttered and his assets seized by a trustee, Harwood possessed both the motive of financial desperation and the commercial skills of a merchant, making him an ideal candidate to operate within this illicit, cash-based market.

Although no single document provides direct evidence of William B. Harwood’s participation in the underground economy, a powerful case can be built from the convergence of his financial ruin and his social position. The 1850 census is a critical source, recording him not only as a merchant in Queen Anne but also as the head of a household that included the Coursey family, a free Black family. This long-standing association could have provided Harwood with a level of access and familiarity within the broader Black community—both free and enslaved. When his formal business collapsed in 1857, this pre-existing social network, combined with his skills as a merchant, would have made him an accessible and logical, if illicit, trading partner.

1850 Census for Queen Anne District, Prince George’s County, ancestry.com

panic ignited

A historical map highlighting locations in Montgomery County, Maryland, including Queen Anne, Bladensburg, and notable landmarks with labeled names.
Northern part of Prince George’s County from 1861 Martenet Map

While Plummer was attempting to control the economic activities of the Black community, local enslavers were fearing the escape of their “valuable servants” through the Underground Railroad, often blaming “outside agitators.” Two attempts at self-emancipation from the summer of 1857 highlight this conflict between the enslavers’ public narrative and the reality of enslaved resistance.

The first event was the coordinated escape of two enslaved women, Mary (Molly) Adams and Lucy, from Owen Carroll’s property, and two enslaved men, Anthony and Nat Butler, from a neighboring enslaver. The two news artifacts detailing this escape present conflicting stories. An article in the Planters’ Advocate frames the event as an abduction by a white Northerner, portraying the actions of a vigilante “committee of citizens” not as extra-legal intimidation but as a decorous civic procedure. This sanitized version stands in stark contrast to the reward notice placed by the enslavers. The bounty ad’s detailed descriptions of Lucy’s “intelligent countenance” and the men’s worldliness—Anthony having been hired out for years and Nat Butler being a prior runaway familiar with Washington and Georgetown—point to a group of capable, knowledgeable individuals. The joint escape of Mary, Lucy, Anthony, and Nat Butler suggests a carefully planned operation, undermining the paternalistic propaganda of the Planters’ Advocate, which sought to erase the agency of the self-liberating individuals by portraying them as guileless “servants.”

“Abducting Slaves.” The Planters’ Advocate [Upper Marlborough, MD], 19 Aug. 1857. MSA
Transcription of “Abducting Slaves”

Abducting Slaves.—We regret to learn that two valuable servants, the property of Mr. OWEN CARROLL, living near Beltsville, in this county, went off from home on Sunday night, the 9th instant. It is supposed they were enticed away by a white man, hailing from the North, who was last winter employed in the factory of Mr. C. At that time he was suspected of tampering with the slaves; and suspicion becoming certainty, a committee of citizens escorted him to the cars, and “shipped” him to a more suitable field of action. It is supposed he returned secretly, and the result is as above stated.

“$700 REWARD,” The Baltimore Sun (Baltimore, MD), August 29, 1857, 3.
Transcription of Bounty for Freedom Seekers

$700 REWARD.—Ran away from the residence of Mr. Owen Carroll, near Beltsville, in Prince George’s county, on Sunday night, August 9th, negro woman
MARY OR MOLLY ADAMS,
aged about 21 or 22 years, stout, strong built, color black, full faced and short curled hair; walks very straight and quick. Also,
LUCY,
aged about 17 years, medium size, color dark chesnut, very intelligent countenance, and pleasant when spoken to. Also, negro man
ANTHONY,
who calls himself Anthony Radley, about six feet tall, strong and well made and rather fleshy, black complexion, short curly hair, especially on the forehead. He has for the last two years been hired to Mr. Batchelor, on the Plank Road. They took a variety of good clothing. Also, negro man
NAT BUTLER,
who sometimes goes by the name of Joseph or George Brown, who ran away from the same neighborhood about this time last year, and since that time has been lurking in Washington, Georgetown and their vicinity. He is tall, well made, with a sharp chin, high cheek bones and more prominent nose than common to the negro race.

The two girls belong to Owen Carroll, Esq., who offers a reward of one hundred dollars each for their apprehension and security in jail, so that they may be obtained again.

The two men belong to Dr. James Higgins, and a reward of $250 each will be paid for their arrest and security in jail so that they be obtained again.

Address DR. JAMES HIGGINS, Baltimore, Md.; OWEN CARROLL, Beltsville, Prince George’s county, Md., or JEFFERS & COOK, No. 5 Law Buildings, Baltimore.
a25-6t*

The second escape occurred in the same relative vicinity, involving a family from the farm of Isaac Scaggs. A series of articles and runaway ads describe the flight and subsequent recapture of Maria and her four children: Dall, Lem, Bill, and Ben. An initial report describes their escape as part of a larger “Stampede of Slaves,” noting the clear evidence of coordination as they acquired a wagon under the pretense of attending a camp meeting. Another article speculated they were seen on a canal boat near Cumberland, Maryland, suggesting they were using the C&O Canal to make their way north.

The bounty ads Scaggs placed, however, reveal a more intimate and courageous story. Adam Smith first self-liberated with the larger group, then risked his newfound freedom by returning to Scaggs’s farm to help his partner, Maria, and their four children escape with him. After the family was recaptured, Scaggs’s narrative shifted. He claimed in the press that a “would-be friend” had actually abducted them, intending to sell them into the domestic slave trade through a slave “pen” in Alexandria. This story, which contradicted earlier reports of an Underground Railroad escape, served to delegitimize abolitionist aid. As a final act of control, Scaggs had the newspapers publish Maria’s coerced “script of penitence.” Her forced expression of gratitude towards her enslaver was a calculated mode of survival, likely performed to ensure she and her children would not be sold South as punishment for their bid for freedom.

A post-emancipation record offers a final, telling chapter to the family’s story. In the Slave Statistics submitted by enslavers for potential compensation, Isaac Scaggs listed the people he held in bondage as of November 1, 1864, the date of Maryland’s emancipation. On that list were the four children: Dal (spelled Dall in the 1857 notice), Lem, Bill, and Ben.

Maria, their mother, was absent.

Her absence from the record points to one of two likely, and equally tragic, outcomes. It is possible that between 1857 and 1864, Maria made another, successful bid for freedom, a choice that would have required the devastating sacrifice of leaving her children behind. Alternatively, Scaggs may have made good on the implicit threat in the recapture notice, selling Maria to the domestic slave trade as a final act of retribution for her agency in the 1857 escape. Regardless of the specific path, the official record confirms the family unit was violently and permanently broken before emancipation arrived.

“STAMPEDE OF SLAVES.” Evening Star [Washington, D.C.], 25 Aug. 1857, p. 3.
newspapers.com
Transcription of Stampede of Slaves

STAMPEDE OF SLAVES.—On Saturday, a number of slaves, belonging to various citizens of the District, obtained a covered wagon, under pretence of going to the camp meeting in the adjoining county. They departed, but have not returned, and their owners have reason to believe that they have emigrated by the underground railroad. Some fifteen slaves are missing, most of them belonging in this city and county. Among the losers are Messrs. Linton, Randolph, Harbaugh, and Isaac Scaggs. Officers have been in search of the fugitives, but up to this time none have been recovered.

Transcription of Abducted Slave Regained

Abducted Slave Regained.—Our readers will remember that we, a few weeks ago, related the elopement from their home, on the line of the Baltimore Railroad, of a number of slaves, the property of Mr. ISAAC SCAGGS, of this county, including a man, woman and four children. We learn that this woman and children have been reclaimed. Our informant gives us the following account, as received from the woman:

On her way from dinner to the field she met a man, who asked if she would not like to better her condition. An affirmative answer being given—“like a fool to leave so good a master,” as she expresses it—he made arrangements to meet her that night, which he did, and compelled her, with her family, ranging from two to fourteen years of age, to walk to Washington, a distance of from twelve to fourteen miles. On reaching that city they were locked up, and allowed to see no one, except the woman who supplied them with the necessaries of life. They were finally taken to Alexandria and placed in a “pen,” and, had not their owner succeeded in finding them there, would doubtless have been sold away down South. She expresses her detestation of the would-be friends of the slave, and is now satisfied with her return to her old quarters.

Interior view of a historical slave pen with barred doors and brick walls, showcasing empty cells
Slave pen, Alexandria, Va. Virginia Alexandria United States, None. [Photographed between 1861 and 1865, printed between 1880 and 1889] Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/2013651888/.
An engraving of Franklin and Armfield's slave prison, featuring enslaved individuals being marched past a large building with multiple stories and a walled enclosure.
American Anti-Slavery Society. Slave market of America. New York: Published by the American Anti-Slavery Society, 1836. Broadside. Library of Congress, Rare Book and Special Collections Division, Washington, D.C. Accessed July 6, 2025. https://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2008661294/.

exorcism

illusion of Justice and Mercy

These events shook the established sense of security in Queen Anne District, creating a panic to rival the Panic of 1857. Not only was the global market in crisis, imperiling the sale of the planters’ cash crops, but Harwood’s insolvency was a stark reminder of the crisis that beheld the perilous role of credit in the lives of American capitalists. Moreover, agitators, decoys and the Underground Railroad was stealing the planters’ most valuable assets: the people they enslaved. This double threat to the financial security of planters required them to convene and establish a response to the threats to their security.

The planters of Queen Anne District, roiled by the recent events, met as a committee of citizens and as such, resolved that William B. Harwood, disgraced merchant, be expelled from Queen Anne for his “illegal trafficking with negroes” — the phrase “trafficking with negroes” could refer to the trafficking of stolen goods, warned about by M. S. Plummer, or could refer to the trafficking of stolen people, warned about by Isaac Scaggs. In either situation, the “most respectable and intelligent farmers and slaveholders of that section” acted outside of a legal court proceeding and as a self-appointed vigilance committee. By framing their meeting as a consideration of “matters appertaining to their interests,” they were asserting their collective power to define and enforce the social and economic rules of the community.

Occurring in the midst of a national financial panic and after a summer of high-profile escapes, the expulsion of William B. Harwood was the culmination of multiple crises. He was the perfect scapegoat: a failed merchant with a history of violating social norms. The “Notice to Quit” was the planter community’s definitive response, an act of vigilantism that purged a man they saw as a threat to their economic interests, their social order, and the institution of slavery itself.

“Notice to Quit,” The Planters’ Advocate (Upper Marlborough, MD), December 9, 1857.
Transcription of “Notice to Quit”

**Notice to Quit.—**We learn that a large meeting of citizens of Queen Anne District and the adjoining portions of Anne Arundel, comprising many of the most respectable and intelligent farmers and slaveholders of that section, was held at Queen Anne on Saturday last to consider certain matters appertaining to their interests. The result of their resolutions was to serve on WM. B. HARWOOD of that place a notice to quit the neighborhood, and giving him thirty days in which to remove. The cause of this action was alleged illegal trafficking with negroes on the part of HARWOOD and general conduct in the premises that was thought to be incompatible with the interest of the community.


fire by an incendiary: a microhistory of a forgotten act of Rebellion

empires of Leaf and Labor

Queen Anne District was situated in the “Forest of Prince George’s County”, and a contributor to the New York Times described it as “the great tobacco region of Maryland, and probably no other territory of equal extent in America produces so much of that famous weed.” [Dec 6, 1861] This immense agricultural output depended entirely on a vast population of enslaved people, who by 1860 constituted the majority of the county’s residents. From preparing the soil and the seedbeds, to tending the transplanted seedlings, to the constant worming and topping of the plants, to the harvest where entire stalks were cut, hung to cure, and stripped of their leaves for passage to the markets, the work was tedious and back-breaking.

lord of thorpland and thomas circle

Charles Hill was a descendant of Clement Hill, who owned Compton Bassett, a large estate to the east of Upper Marlboro near Hill’s Landing. Since 1700, the Hill family had implemented strategic marriages with the Darnalls, Digges, and other prominent Catholic families, establishing their status among the elite planters. Charles Hill purchased the nearby Thorpland in the 1810s and later acquired other lands throughout Queen Anne District. By 1828, his holdings were assessed at nearly 2,000 acres. An estate of this scale, classified as a large plantation, depended on the forced labor of more than one hundred enslaved people to generate the profits necessary to sustain and expand his agricultural enterprise. In addition to his holdings in Prince George’s County, Hill was a director for the Bank of Metropolis in Washington, cementing his role as a capitalist with a fashionable city residence in Thomas Circle.

plows, prizes, and profit

The hands of enslaved people plucked worms from the plants, their fingers snapped buds off the top, and their arms swung hoes to clear the weeds as they slowly moved up and down the rows of the cultivated fields. In addition to the labor of the field hand, the enslaved laborers used a variety of agricultural implements as they moved the stalks and leaves from the fields to the tobacco houses.

Planters’ Advocate and Southern Maryland Advertiser | MSA Special Collection
Transcription of Advertisement

lighting a firework on a hot july night

Waud, Alfred R. , Artist. Tobacco House. United States, None. [Between 1860 and 1865] Photograph. https://www.loc.gov
Historic American Buildings Survey, Creator, and Catherine C Lavoie, Boucher, Jack E, photographer. Warington Tobacco Barn,Enterprise Road, Mitchellville, Prince George’s County, MD. Mitchellville Prince George’s County Maryland, 1933. Documentation Compiled After. Photograph. https://www.loc.gov
Waud, Alfred R. , Artist. Tobacco house. North Ga. Georgia United States, None. [Between 1860 and 1865] Photograph. https://www.loc.gov

This unremitting cycle of labor, designed to maximize profit for the enslaver, was met with calculated resistance by the enslaved people forced to endure it. Resistance took many forms, from slowing the pace of work and breaking tools to more overt and dangerous acts of defiance and were often direct assaults on the economic engine of the plantation.

During the hot, humid months of July, while enslaved men, women and children were expected to be vigilant for worms and weeds, while their bodies were bent with the tasks of hoeing, topping, and weeding, the tobacco barns sat empty, waiting for the harvest that was to come in late summer.

One late night in July, a man left the estate of Dr. Benjamin Lee and walked to a farm of Charles Hill. There, he set fire to the empty tobacco house, which contained a valuable tobacco prize, burning the wooden structure along with nearby shocks of grain.

Fire.—We regret to state that on Saturday night last a large Tobacco-house on the farm of CHARLES HILL, Esq., near this village, was entirely consumed by fire. There was nothing in it at the time except a Tobacco prize. Several shocks of grain near the house were also fired.—The whole was undoubtedly the work of an incendiary. A negro man belonging to Dr. BENJAMIN LEE has been since arrested, charged with having caused the fire.

a journey of two miles or four

The newspaper’s reference to the fire occurring at a farm “near this village” [Upper Marlboro] initially suggests the target was Charles Hill’s primary residence, Thorpland, located in the Marlboro District. The geography, however, presents a logistical challenge to this assumption. Thorpland was situated four miles from Dr. Benjamin Lee’s property near the Northampton estate, a significant distance for the accused man to travel covertly on foot at night.

A more probable location was a satellite plantation owned by Hill, known as his “Quarter Place.” This farm, managed by an overseer and worked by a contingent of enslaved people, was located only two miles northwest of Dr. Lee’s residence in the Western Branch neighborhood. The shorter, more manageable distance makes this quarter farm the most likely target of the arson, rather than Hill’s more distant home plantation.

Moreover, the report describes the location simply as a farm.” Had the fire been set at “Thorpland”, the site of Hill’s main residence, the paper likely would have used more specific language to denote the home of a prominent planter, such as “dwelling house,” “estate,” or “the residence of Charles Hill.” The generic term “farm” aligns perfectly with the status of a quarter place—a property that was purely an agricultural operation, distinct from the family seat.

an anxious planter class reassured

The enslaver class responded swiftly through both the legal system and the press. Initially reported in the local Planters’ Advocate, the story was picked up by the Alexandria Gazette, the Baltimore Sun, and the Port Tobacco Times and Advertiser.

His fate now hung precariously between two systems of control. Would he be turned over to the formal legal system to be sold out of state at a public auction, chained in a coffle, and sent to the cotton plantations of the Deep South? Or would his enslaver, Dr. Lee, arrange for his release from the jail, only to “resolve” the situation through the private violence of “plantation justice”—either by a public whipping or a more profitable private sale to a slave dealer from the District?

The fleeting, fiery assertion of his will—a profound risk for liberty—was answered with the permanent, crushing reality of the slave system, a midnight conflagration met with the cold finality of the chain and the coffle under the hot sun.

smith’s purchase: carter-bowie alliance

The 1851 marriage of Alice Carter, daughter of Charles H. Carter and Rosalie E. Calvert, to Oden Bowie, solidified a powerful alliance between two prominent enslaving networks. This union not only consolidated significant landholdings but also intertwined the complex kinship networks of the hundreds of Black people they held in bondage, whose forced labor was the bedrock of their wealth and political power.

Alice Carter was a scion of the Calverts, descendants of the colonial proprietors of Maryland, and the Carters of Shirley Plantation.  Her father, Charles H. Carter operated the “Goodwood” plantation in the Queen Anne’s District, which was inherited from his wife’s family: George and Rosalie Calvert of Riverdale.  

Oden Bowie was the heir of William Duckett Bowie and Eliza Mary Oden, with connections to Bowie, Duckett and Oden networks, with their extensive landholdings, including the “Fairview” plantation in the Darnall’s Grove Neighborhood, were equally entrenched in the economic and political fabric of the state. Oden Bowie, a rising figure in Maryland politics, would later become governor.

Excerpt of the 1861 Martenet Map showing the location of Fairview in the Darnall’s Grove neighborhood.

While Oden and Alice Bowie resided at “Fairview” in the Darnall’s Grove Neighborhood, they purchased a consolidated tract of 471+ acres, composed of land from four older tracts: Smith’s Purchase, part of Dundee, part of Strife, part of Swanson’s Lot in the Wootton’s Landing Neighborhood (CSM 4:177).  

Hienton and Martenet’s map shown side-by-side with land tracts and landowner name marked. See page on geographic mapping for more detail

This purchases complicates analysis of Oden Bowie’s 1867 compensation list, as the list does not specify which estate the enslaved people labored on (i.e., Fairview or Smith’s Purchase).  Another complication in the reconstruction of kinship groups  is the lack of transparency around the transfer of ownership during land purchases.  Research has shown that land purchases within Queen Anne District may only document the transfer of land with its metes and bounds, but would also contain the transfer of the people who labored in the fields.  For example, the Tilghman kinship group conveyed within the Hall network from Francis Magruder Hall to Notley Young’s son in 1826 Hall’s will appears in Charles C. Hill’s 1867 compensation list; Charles C. Hill purchased Elverton Hall from the Young family in the 1850s.

A review of the 1850 and 1860 Slave Schedules show the change in population of the communities enslaved by Oden Bowie.  In 1850, prior to his marriage and the acquisition of Smith’s Purchase, the census enumerated 47 people.   In 1860, at the dawn of the Civil War, the census enumerated 101 people.  The 1867 Compensation List submitted by Bowie lists the names of 103 people