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Tag: truth

Ipswich, Slavery and the Civil War

November 15, 2025 Gordon Harris7 Comments

In 1765, Jenny Slew, a slave in Ipswich, successfully sued John Whipple Jr. for her freedom. In the mid-19th Century, divisions between ardent abolitionists, moderate anti-slavery people and those who avoided the discussion divided families, churches and the town of Ipswich.

Posted in HistoryTagged Caldwell, Civil War, slavery, truth, Warner Road

The Rev. John Wise of Ipswich

June 14, 2024November 2, 2025 Gordon Harris8 Comments

The concepts of freedom about which Thomas Jefferson wrote in the Declaration of Independence originated from the pen of the Rev. John Wise of Ipswich: "The origin of civil power is the people...and when they are free, they may set up what species of government they please."

Posted in History, Leaders, People, StoriesTagged 1683, Andros, Essex, town government, truth, war

Freedom for Jenny Slew

May 11, 2023May 9, 2025 Gordon Harris1 Comment

Jenny Slew was born about 1719 as the child of a free white woman and a black slave. She lived her life as a free woman until 1762 when she was illegally enslaved by John Whipple. Jenny Slew is believed to be the first person held as a slave to be granted freedom through trial by jury.

Posted in People, StoriesTagged 1766, Ipswich, november, slavery, slider, truth, women

The Defiant Samuel Appleton

January 10, 2023July 29, 2025 Gordon Harris7 Comments
Appleton's Pulpit Massachusetts Bay Colony Tercentenary Commission

In 1687, a warrant was issued for the arrest of several Ipswich men for being "seditiously inclined and disaffected to his Majesty's government." The 62-year-old Major Samuel Appleton scorned the appearance of submission and remained imprisoned in the cold Boston Jail through the winter.

Posted in Andros Rebellion, People, StoriesTagged 1687, Andros, Appleton, Court, Ipswich, September, town government, truth

Eunice Stanwood Caldwell Cowles

March 26, 2021January 1, 2025 Gordon Harris6 Comments

Eunice Caldwell attended Ipswich Female Seminary from 1828 to 1829, where she began a lasting friendship with Mary Lyon. She married the Reverend John Phelps Cowles in 1838, and returned to Ipswich in 1844 to reopen the Seminary, which they ran until it closed in 1876.

Posted in PeopleTagged Caldwell, truth, women

Emma Jane Mitchell Safford

March 10, 2021July 8, 2023 Gordon Harris7 Comments
Emma Safford, Ipswich MA

Emma Jane Mitchell Safford was a descendant of Massasoit, Sachem of the Wampanoag. Her daughter, also Emma, tried to help her relatives regain land taken from them on the reservation.

Posted in PeopleTagged 1950, Native Americans, truth, women

© Gordon Harris 2025

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