Page content
View related multimedia and linksEve
- Date of birth unknown
- Belonged to Peyton Randolph household
- Date of death unknown
Highly-valued slave
Eve was one of 27 slaves who belonged to the Peyton Randolph household in 1775, the year of Peyton Randolph's death. Valued at 100 pounds, Eve was the highest-valued female slave and one of the most valuable of all the slaves, suggesting that she was of prime age and highly skilled. In his will, Randolph bequeathed "Eve and her children" to his wife, Betty Randolph.
Ran away from household
One month after Peyton Randolph's death, Williamsburg's governor, Lord Dunmore, issued a proclamation that offered "freedom to any slaves who desert rebellious masters and who serve in the king's forces." At that time, Eve may have given some thought to running away, but her son George was too young to run with her.
Six years later, when British General Cornwallis occupied Williamsburg in late June and early July 1781, George was a teenager, and he and his mother joined the large number of runaway slaves that followed Cornwallis’s army. But, when Cornwallis surrendered after the siege of Yorktown in October 1781, the runaway slaves were no longer under his protection. The slaves’ owners quickly reclaimed their slaves.
Evidence suggests Eve returned to the widow Betty Randolph, who later sold Eve due to "bad behavior." George’s fate is unknown. He may have been one of hundreds of slaves who died of smallpox during the siege.
For further reading:
- Introduction to Colonial African American Life
- Peyton Randolph household
- Betty Randolph
- Dunmore's Proclamation: A Time to Choose
Multimedia and related links
-
Podcasts
- View descriptions
-
A Slave's Perspective
The Declaration of Independence was a promise extended to white men only. Hope Smith portrays Eve, a slave in the Peyton Randolph house. July 16, 2007
Audio podcast: Listen (mp3) | Transcript
Image enhanced: View (m4a) | Transcript
-
The Slave Trade
The slave trade touched the lives of people around the globe, explains Colonial Williamsburg's Educational Program Development director Bill White. February 9, 2007
Audio podcast: Listen (mp3) | Transcript
Image enhanced: View (m4a) | Transcript
-
Mr. Wythe's Cook
Valarie Holmes interprets Lydia Broadnax - a cook for one of Williamsburg's most influential men. June 19, 2006
Audio podcast: Listen (mp3) | Transcript
Image enhanced: View (m4a) | Transcript
-
Emily James interprets spirited women
Jamaican-born Emily James has interpreted at least 16 different 18th-century women who learned how to survive lives of enslavement. February 27, 2006
Audio podcast: Listen (mp3) | Transcript
Image enhanced: View (m4a) | Transcript
-
Recalling African American Interpretation
Rex Ellis reflects on 25 years of interpreting the African American experience in the colonial period. February 6, 2006
Audio podcast: Listen (mp3) | Transcript
Image enhanced: View (m4a) | Transcript
-
African American Interpretation
Harvey Bakari discusses the rich history of black Americans in Williamsburg. January 30, 2006
Audio podcast: Listen (mp3) | Transcript
Image enhanced: View (m4a) | Transcript
- more...
- Quicktime 7 (free) is required to view the enhanced and video podcasts.
- Subscribe to our podcast RSS feeds:
Audio | Image enhanced | Video
-
Journal articles
-
Fighting... Maybe for Freedom, but probably not
Slaves and free blacks in the Revolutionary War
-
Slave Conspiracies in Colonial Virginia
-
Finding Slaves in Unexpected Places
Keeping Blacks in Bondage Was Not a Southern Monopoly
-
"In Mind and Heart" with the Enslaved of Yesteryear
- more articles...

Daily jigsaw puzzles

