Anna Maria Weems (1840-?)

March 19, 2016 
/ Contributed By: Euell A. Dixon

Anna Maria Weems

Anna Maria Weems in male attire

Public Domain Image

Anna Maria Weems is best known as an enslaved person who gained her freedom with a daring escape from slavery.  Weems was born into slavery about 1840 in Maryland to John and Arabella Talbot Weems. Her father was a free man of color, but her mother was enslaved, and therefore, so were her children. When her parents learned the family was to be separated and sold off into slavery, they began working closely with abolitionists to emancipate each enslaved member of their family. A Weems Ransom Fund, financed by Quaker abolitionists Henry and Anna Richardson, was established. The Richardsons lived in Britain, so they entrusted control of the fund to their friend, Lewis Tappan, a white Brooklyn, New York abolitionist, and Charles B. Ray, a Black abolitionist living in New York City, New York.

Weems, her siblings, and her mother were the property of Adam Robb, who lived in Montgomery County, Maryland. In 1847, when Robb died, his slaves were divided between his two daughters, Jane Robb Beall, and Catherine Robb Harding. Weems was about seven years old at the time her owner died. Weems, her mother and siblings were sent to Catherine and her husband, Henry Harding. The couple was already heavily in debt and could not afford to maintain the slaves they received, so they sold Weems to plantation owners Caroline and Charles M. Price. Three of her brothers were sold off to another plantation owner, but her mother and one of her sisters were freed by purchase from the Weems Ransom Fund.  Another sister escaped to the North and was adopted by Henry Highland Garnett. The Prices had been offered $700 for Weems’ freedom, but refused the offer and other offers for the next six years.  By 1855, it was clear that her only way to obtain freedom was to escape.

On September 23, 1855, fifteen-year-old Weems ran away from Montgomery County and made her way to Washington, D.C., where she spent time with relatives before arriving at Jacob Bigelow’s residence.  Bigelow was a Quaker whose house was a station on the Underground Railroad. Because of a $500 reward for her capture, Weems was unable to step outside the Bigelow house for six weeks.

Meanwhile, her supporters crafted a plan for her escape from Washington, D.C.  In late November, Dr. Ellwood Harvey, the Bigelow family physician, drove his carriage in front of the White House.  He waited for Weems, who was dressed in a male driver’s uniform including a jacket, pants, a bow tie, and cap and who assumed the name “Mr. Joe Wright.” She arrived with Bigelow and took her position as driver of the carriage.  To most observers, one would assume Dr. Harvey had just finished doing business in the White House and was now being driven away by his coachman.

Weems drove the carriage outside of Washington D.C. and then traveled north as Mr. Joe Wright, stopping at the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania home of William Still, the principal “conductor” of the Underground Railroad, before arriving in Brooklyn at the Tappan home where Sarah Tappan, Lewis’s wife, sheltered her for two days and used $63 from the Weems Ransom Fund to buy her new clothes.

On November 30, Weems traveled by train to Canada with Rev. Amos Freeman, Pastor of Brooklyn’s Siloam Presbyterian Church. When they finally reached the Dawn Settlement in Dresden, Ontario, where other fugitive slaves lived, she was greeted by her aunt and uncle, who had earlier settled in Canada.  Weems remained in Canada for the rest of her life.  In 1858 the rest of the Weems family,  including all her brothers, were purchased through the Weems Fund.  The date and place of Anna Maria Weems’s death are unknown.

Author Profile

Multiple business owner Euell Dixon (formerly Nielsen) was born on November 3, 1973, in Sewell, New Jersey. The youngest daughter of scientist and author Eustace A. Dixon II and Travel Agent Eleanor Forman, Euell was an early reader and began tutoring at The Verbena Ferguson Tutoring Center for Adults at the age of 13. She has owned and operated five different companies in the past 20 years including Show and Touch, Stitch This, Get Twisted, Dimaje Photography, and Island Treazures.

Euell is a Veteran of the U.S. Army (Reserves) and a member of the Order of Eastern Star, House of Zeresh #103. She is also the 3rd Historian for First African Presbyterian Church, the nation’s oldest African American Presbyterian church, located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Additionally, Euell is also a photographer, storyteller, fiber artist, and a historical re-enactor, portraying the lives of Patriot Hannah Till, Elizabeth Gloucester, and Henrietta Duterte. Euell has been writing for Blackpast.org since 2014 and was given an award from the site in 2016 for being the only African American female who had almost 100 entries at the time. Since then, she has written over 300 entries. Euell currently lives in St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Dixon, E. (2016, March 19). Anna Maria Weems (1840-?). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/weems-anna-maria-1840/

Source of the Author's Information:

Daina Ramey Berry, Enslaved Women in America (Santa Barbara, California:
Greenwood Press, 2012); Eric Foner, Gateway to Freedom: The Hidden
History of the Underground Railroad
(New York: W.W. Norton &
Company, 2015); Mary Ellen Snodgrass, The Underground Railroad: An
Encyclopedia of People, Places, and Operations
(New York: Routledge,
2015).

Further Reading