Discovering a Hidden Record of Survival: How 国产网红福利一区 Students Chronicled a Story of Slavery and Freedom

RWU undergraduates lead a multi-university research effort to authenticate a rare firsthand narrative that documents a man鈥檚 self-emancipation from slavery to global maritime freedom.

By Kelly Brinza
Exhibit in RWu's University Library
A rare find in a Rhode Island home sparked a multi-university research effort, led by 国产网红福利一区 students, to uncover the hidden story of a man's escape from slavery and into a life of global maritime freedom.

BRISTOL, R.I. 鈥 When Cynthia 鈥淐indy鈥 Elder 鈥87, a member of 国产网红福利一区鈥檚 President鈥檚 Board of Advisors, sorted through her late in-laws鈥 home five years ago in Barrington, R.I., she expected to find the usual family keepsakes. Instead, tucked inside a drawer on a three-season porch, she uncovered hundreds of 19th-century papers chronicling the lives of her husband鈥檚 merchant sailor ancestors 鈥 the Jenkins family. 

Elder, an author from of family of museum curators, immediately recognized the historical value of these documents and began producing a book about the family. Buried in a stack of documents set aside as 鈥渢hrow away,鈥 she found something entirely different: a handwritten manuscript that launched a multi-university research effort between 国产网红福利一区, Brown University, the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth, and the University of Pittsburgh.

Thomas White's manuscript details his escape from slavery in Maryland and his journey north, where he found a life of freedom and global exploration aboard merchant ships.

The manuscript opened with an emotional account of sorrow, faith, and endurance. Elder soon realized she was reading the life story of Thomas White, a man born into slavery in Maryland in the early 1800s, who escaped around the age of fifteen. His narrative traced a perilous northward journey through abolitionist networks, followed by years working and traveling the world aboard merchant ships.

Elder was stunned. She said she remembers thinking, 鈥淗ow did a manuscript from a formerly enslaved man end up inside our family鈥檚 sailing records?鈥

Knowing she needed expert support, she turned to her two alma maters: 国产网红福利一区, where she graduated with a bachelor鈥檚 degree as a double major in Creative Writing and Career Writing, and Brown University, where she received a Master of Public Affairs in 2013. 

Cynthia Elder 鈥87 recalls her shock and awe after realizing the tattered pages she found held the firsthand account of a formerly enslaved man.

RWU Professor of History Charlotte Carrington-Farmer seized the opportunity and formed a team of student researchers to lead the process of transcription, verification, and contextualization. Carrington-Farmer said early progress was slow, hindered by inconsistent handwriting, missing dates, and an initial lack of corroborating evidence. However, that changed dramatically last spring, when two students located a Boston marriage certificate for Thomas White and Ellen Stewart. Those names matched ones in the manuscript and confirmed critical details about White鈥檚 life, including occupations, addresses, and the minister who married them.

Rachel Cabral, a senior History major from Cranston, R.I., who has been leading the research, describes the work her team has done to verify the content of Thomas White's manuscript.

鈥淭hat document was a breakthrough,鈥 said Rachel Cabral, a senior History major from Cranston, R.I., who has been leading the research for more than a year since her junior year. 鈥淚t gave us our first firm foothold. Before that, we couldn鈥檛 even confirm that White鈥檚 last name was really White.鈥

The find propelled the research forward, allowing students to trace White鈥檚 movements across the globe through historical society archives, municipal record archives, and secondary source references. His manuscript recounts his escape on foot and by train 鈥 a technology he had never before seen and marveled at 鈥 from Maryland, which Cabral noted was likely closer to 1841 than the 1831 date he recalled in his account.

Thomas White's manuscript recounts his time working aboard merchant ships that brought him to major ports around the globe.

Once he made it to New England, White found work at a young ladies鈥 seminary in Pittsfield, Mass., before moving to Boston, where he met and married Ellen. Soon afterward, White began working aboard merchant ships, embarking on a series of voyages to San Francisco, Peru, Australia, India, and back to the U.S. His manuscript documents a dramatic episode in Baltimore, where he narrowly avoided being re-enslaved when the ship on which he was working docked in Maryland 鈥 the state he had fled. But for most of his time as a free man, White prospered, taking on roles such as cook, steward, and even started several small businesses at some of the ports where he decided to live and work for brief periods. 

UMass Dartmouth Professor Timothy Walker, a leading expert on the Maritime Underground Railroad who joined the research team, noted that manuscripts like White鈥檚 are exceedingly rare.

White鈥檚 story, Carrington-Farmer said, adds a crucial firsthand account to the small but growing body of scholarship on maritime escape. The sea, as historians increasingly recognize, offered opportunities for mobility, literacy, and economic independence not available on land. Professor Timothy Walker, a leading expert on the Maritime Underground Railroad from UMass Dartmouth, joined the research effort and noted that manuscripts like White鈥檚 are exceedingly rare. 鈥淭homas鈥檚 narrative offers an intimate view into how Black seamen carved out paths to freedom,鈥 Walker said. 鈥淗is story broadens our understanding of what escape and self-emancipation looked like.鈥

Cabral鈥檚 team also uncovered the remarkable history of White鈥檚 wife, Ellen Stewart. Born enslaved in Washington, D.C., she was among the more than 70 people who attempted escape on , the largest nonviolent escape attempt from slavery in U.S. history. Though the attempt failed, abolitionists later raised funds to purchase her freedom, enabling her to move to Boston, where she met Thomas. Archival documents suggest the couple had a daughter, Gertrude, born in 1857. Students are now tracing Gertrude鈥檚 descendants in hopes of reconnecting the family with this newly surfaced history.

鈥淲e've been working on compiling a family tree to not only fully understand Thomas White, but to reunite his story with his family,鈥 said Cabral.

Student researchers trced Thomas White's movements through historical society archives, municipal record archives, and secondary source references.

As their work continues to authenticate his story and uncover more of his family history, Cabral, Carrington-Farmer, and Elder are sharing Thomas White鈥檚 remarkable journey in various ways. Earlier this year, the wrote an article about their find and the research endeavor. Carrington-Farmer and the student researchers also collaborated with University Archivist Heidi Benedict on an exhibit featuring Thomas White鈥檚 journey, which is on display in RWU鈥檚 University Library through Feb. 2, 2026.

Today, the Thomas White manuscript is being prepared for permanent preservation at Brown University鈥檚 , where it will be accessible to scholars and the public. Other Jenkins family documents will be housed safely at the in Barnstable, ensuring that nothing else ends up forgotten on a back porch. 

RWU Professor of History Charlotte Carrington-Farmer explains the significance of finding this manuscript and why the research is crucial to preserving Black History.

For Carrington-Farmer, the significance of the discovery is profound. At a moment when debates over how American history is taught continue nationwide, she sees the manuscript as an urgent reminder of the power of firsthand narratives. 鈥淧eople think they know what slavery was,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut too often we鈥檝e relied on secondhand descriptions or records created by enslavers. Here we have the voice of an enslaved teenager 鈥 later a free Black man 鈥 sharing his own experiences in his own words.鈥

鈥淭hat voice,鈥 she went on to say, 鈥渞eveals both the brutality of slavery and the ingenuity, resilience, and agency of someone who envisioned freedom for himself and pursued it across continents.鈥 She also noted that this manuscript underscores the fragile nature of historical memory. 鈥淭his document sat in a drawer for decades,鈥 Carrington-Farmer said. 鈥淚t could easily have been lost forever.鈥

Instead, through coincidence, curiosity, and collaboration, Thomas White鈥檚 story offers a rare glimpse into the past and a reminder of how many stories of courage and survival still lie hidden, waiting to be found.