https://x.com/AfricanArchives/status/1704567631515160830?s=20
Apart from Henry âBoxâ Brown, who mailed himself to freedom in a wooden box did you know there was a woman who also did the same?
Lear Greenâs story is less well-known.
Green was an enslaved young woman who made one of historyâs most daring and innovative escapes in order to marry the man she loved. Green was able to flee her slaveowner, James Noble, in an old wooden sailorâs chest during a long and arduous shipping journey from Baltimore to Philadelphia. Slaveholder and butter dealer Noble had âinheritedâ Green from his mother-in-law.
Green, born in 1839, was in her teens when she fell in love with a free Black man, William Adams, who asked her to marry him. Green initially refused because she did not want her children to be born into slavery. âHow can I perform the duties of wife and mother while burdened by the shackles of slavery?â Green reportedly asked Adams. But Green later changed her mind after Adams and his mother, also a free woman, came up with a plan for her to escape.
Green, who was now determined to escape the oppression of slavery, purchased an old sailorâs chest and placed various items in it, including âa quilt, a pillow, and a few articles of raiment, with a small quantity of food and a bottle of water.â
Her fiance Adams and his mother fastened the chest with heavy rope, with Green cramped inside. Adamâs mother boarded an Ericsson steamboat in Baltimore and brought the chest with her. The chest was secured with rope and stowed with other freight. During the 18-hour journey to Philadelphia, Adamsâ mother snuck into the compartment and from time to time lifted the lid of the chest to check in on Green and allow her a breath of fresh air.
After 18 hours in the chest, the ship arrived in Philadelphia. Green would meet with Underground Railroad conductor William Still before making her way further North to marry Adams and move to Canada. As expected, Greenâs slaveowner Noble named her a fugitive slave, and a manhunt was launched to bring her back.
Noble reportedly posted an advertisement of her escape, which read as follows: â$150 REWARD. Ran away from the subscriber, on Sunday night, 27th inst., my NEGRO GIRL, Lear Green_about 18 years of age, black complexion, round featured, good looking and ordinary size⌠I have reason to be confident that she was persuaded by a negro man named Wm AdamsâŚhe had heard to say he was going to marry the above girl.â
Green and Adams married and settled in Elmira, New York. But their joy together was short-lived. After three years of marriage, Green suddenly died at the age of 21 for unknown reasons.















