Grateful American® Foundation

What famous African American poet was freed from slavery today?

October 18th

jb_revolut_poetslav_1_mOctober 18, 1775 — Poet Phillis Wheatley was freed from slavery today in 1775. It was a long time coming. Only 7  years old when she was captured and taken from her home in West Africa, a slave ship brought her to Boston in 1761.

Knowing nothing of the talents she would soon show the world, John Wheatley, a prosperous tailor, and his wife, Susanna, purchased the young girl directly from the ship and named her Phillis.

When they saw her writing on a wall with chalk, the Wheatleys encouraged her to learn. Their daughter tutored her in reading and writing. Wheatley also studied English literature, Latin, and the Bible, but what she did best was to write poetry. Her first poem was published in the Newport Mercury newspaper in 1767.

Six years later, in the service of the Wheatley family, Phillis Wheatley sailed to London where she hoped to meet Selina Hasting, the Countess of Huntingdon. While they were not able to meet in person, the Countess helped Wheatley publish a volume of her poetry on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral, was published on September 1, 1773.

Wheatley had another surprise waiting for her back in America. Soon after she returned home, Wheatley was given her freedom.

As a free woman, she published both an antislavery letter and a poem to George Washington, whom she had met. Washington wrote to Wheatley, thanking her and praising her “great poetical Talents.”

In 1778, Wheatley married John Peters, a free black man. She published three more poems. Her husband, however, was not as successful in business. Wheatley became a servant later on in her life, and when she died, she was very poor— but she was a free woman.

Words of Wisdom

The world is a severe schoolmaster, for its frowns are less dangerous than its smiles and flatteries, and it is a difficult task to keep in the path of wisdom.

— Phillis Wheatley, African-American poet

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