Pedro Tovookan Parris (1833-1860) papers

Collection Type

  • Manuscripts

Date

1845-1972, predominant 1845-1856

Location Note

Box 1 temporarily located on shelf HGO-02-105-A-B-104 in Haverhill HAV-01-403; Box 2 located in POD in Haverhill, HAV-01-503-D-K

GUSN

GUSN-188080

Description

This collection contains correspondence; financial records; legal records; photographic materials; printed matter; and original art related to the life of Pedro Tovookan Parris. Materials in the collection are dated from 1845-1972 with the bulk of materials dated between 1845 and 1856. The series is arranged in six series. Folder titles were assigned by the processor.

Details

Descriptive Terms

legal files
trials
slaves (people)
slavery
manuscripts (document genre)

Physical Descrption

6.875 linear feet (1 document case and 1 oversized print box)

Finding Aid Info

An electronic finding aid is available through Historic New England’s Collections Access Portal. A paper finding aid is available in the Library & Archives.

Custodial History

Collection was purchased by Historic New England in the 1960s. The materials were part of a larger lot which was separated. Two daguerreotypes of Pedro Tovookan Parris from the lot are privately owned. Correspondence between Earle Shettleworth, Jr. and the Federal Records Center was accrued in 1972.

Collection Code

MS034

Collection Name

Pedro Tovookan Parris (1833-1860) papers

Date of Acquisition

1960s; 1972

Reference Code

MS034

Abstract

Collection of correspondence, financial and legal records, printed matter, photographic materials, original art, and other papers related to the life of Pedro Tovookan Parris.

Date Notes

1845-1972, bulk 1845-1856

Credit Line

Library & Archives Purchase, 1960s; Gift of Earle G. Shettleworth, Jr., 1972

Places

Paris (Oxford county, Maine)
Rio de Janeiro (Rio de Janeiro state, Sudeste region, Brazil)
Boston (Suffolk county, Massachusetts)
Portland (Cumberland county, Maine)
Mystic (New London county, Connecticut)

Record Details

Originator

Parris, Pedro Tovookan, 1833-1860

Material Type

manuscripts (document genre)

Other People

Parris, Pedro Tovookan, 1833-1860
Libby, Cyrus, Capt.
Gordon, George William, 1801-1877
Parris, Virgil, 1807-1874

Other Organizations

Eastern Argus (Portland, Me.)
J.E. Farwell & Co.
Sanborn & Carter (Portland, Me.)
Thomas, Cowperthwait and Co.

Subjects

Enslaved person
Enslaver
Black People
African American men
Slavery
Court

Restrictions

This collection is available for research.

Conservation Note

Materials were refoldered for long-term preservation. A custom box was made to house the oversized watercolor landscape, which is extremely fragile.

Publications Referencing This Collection

(2003.). Cherished possessions : a New England legacy / Nancy Carlisle ; photography by Peter Harholdt..

Description Level

Collection

Location Note

Box 1 temporarily located on shelf HGO-02-105-A-B-104 in Haverhill HAV-01-403; Box 2 located in POD in Haverhill, HAV-01-503-D-K

Accruals Note

Accruals are not expected.

Appraisal, Destruction, and Scheduling Note

No materials have been removed from this collection.

Language Note

Materials are entirely in English.

Preferred Citation

Item identification. Box #. Pedro Tovookan Parris (1833-1860) papers (MS034). Historic New England, Library & Archives.

Processing Information

This collection was processed by Jordan Meyerl, Archives Cataloguer, 2023. Finding aid was updated by Jordan Meyerl, Senior Archives Cataloguer, 2024.

Rules and Conventions

This finding aid is Second Edition DACS-compliant.

Historical/Biographical Note

Historical/Biographical Note

Pedro Tovookan Parris (1833-1860) was an enslaved person born in 1833 on the eastern Africa, likely in Tanzania or Mozambique. He was enslaved at about ten years of age by a neighboring nation and was ultimately sold to a Portuguese enslaver in Zanzibar before being transported to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on the Porpoise, a United States brig captained by Cyrus Libby of Scarborough, Maine. At this time, it had long been illegal for United States citizens to engage in the slave trade. Upon arrival in Rio de Janeiro, Captain Libby was arrested for violating the slave trade laws of the United States.

Parris and two other enslaved men were taken into custody and transported to Boston, Massachusetts, by George William Gordon, the United States consul to Brazil at the time, to testify at Libby's trial. These men were kept in custody until Libby's acquittal in 1846. Following the trial, Parris lived with the family of United States Marshall Virgil D. Parris, whom he had met during the trial, in Paris, Maine. While living with the Parris family, Parris learned to read and write, the basics of mathematics, and practiced public speaking and art. He was also solicited to campaign for George William Gordon during his unsuccessful 1856 gubernatorial campaign. He lived with the Parris family until he died of pneumonia on April 10, 1860.

Sources


Bouchard, K. (2018, July 15). Story of Paris Hill man connects Maine to ‘complexities’ of slave trade. Portland Press Herald. connects-maine-to-complexities-of-slave-trade/
Carlisle, N. (2003). Cherished Possessions: A New England Legacy. History New England.
McNamara, M.J. (Summer 2019). A Pictorial Slave Narrative. Historic New England Magazine, 20(1), 12-15.

Material in Other Collections

Material in Other Collections

George William Gordon papers (MssCol 1177). Manuscript and Archives Division, The New York Public Library.

Arrangement

Arrangement

The collection is arranged in 6 series:
Series I. Correspondence, 1972-1973
Series II. Financial records, 1845-1847
Series III. Legal records, 1840-1846 (bulk 1845-1846)
Series IV. Photographic material, undated
Series V. Printed matter, 1837-1856
Series VI. Original art, 1853, undated

Reparative Language in Collections Records

Historic New England is committed to implementing reparative language description for existing collections and creating respectful and inclusive language description for new collections. If you encounter language in Historic England's Collections Access Portal that is harmful or offensive, or you find materials that would benefit from a content warning, please contact info@historicnewengland.org.

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