Patsey's mother was said to have been from Guinea, enslaved and taken to Cuba. She was then sold to a family named Buford in the Southern United States. Patsey is believed to have been born around 1817. In 1830, when she was 13, she was sold to Edwin Epps in Louisiana.[1] According to Northup, Edwin Epps had "repulsive and coarse" manners and did not have a sense "of kindness or of justice." When drunk, he would lash out at enslaved people with a whip, enjoying the sound of their screams.[2]
Epps leased the Bayou Huffpower plantation from Joseph B. Robert, his wife's uncle. In 1845, Epps moved Patsey and other enslaved people to his 300-acre plantation near Bunkie in Avoyelles Parish, Louisiana.[3]Solomon Northup and Patsey became friends on the Epps plantation. Known as the "queen of the fields", Patsey was often praised by her owner for her ability to pick large amounts of cotton, up to 500 pounds a day. Northup said that she was unlike the other enslaved people and had a spirit that was unwavering in its strength.[2][4] She had been "a joyous creature, a laughing, light-hearted girl"[5] who fervently dreamed of freedom.[6]
While an underage teen, Epps began raping her.[3] He whipped Patsey if she resisted his sexual demands, which left "scars of thousand stripes" on her back. His wife, Mary, was jealous of Patsey, and "nothing delighted the mistress so much as to see her suffer," according to Northup.[2] She physically abused Patsey and demanded that Epps sell Patsey, which he would not do.[3] Mary tried to bribe other workers and enslaved people to kill Patsey and dump her body in the swamps, but no one would. Even though Patsey was a highly productive enslaved person and a favorite of Epps, she endured abuse by a "licentious master and a jealous mistress".[3]
On one occasion, Patsey went to a neighboring plantation for a bar of soap. When Epps found out she had left his plantation, he had four stakes hammered into the ground and ordered her hands and feet to be tied to them; she was stripped naked, and Epps ordered Northup to whip her. Epps then took the whip himself until she was "literally flayed" from over 50 lashes. Epps had saltwater poured over her wounds. Patsey nearly died. Northup and Patsey were severely traumatized due to all the abuse that she endured.[7] After this brutal whipping, she lost her light-hearted manner, the sparkle in her eyes, and the ease of her laughter.[2] She often wished that she would die.[5]
Northup knew Patsey for almost a decade. As he was about to leave the Epps plantation in 1853, he said that:
Patsey ran from behind a cabin and threw her arms about my neck. 'Oh! Platt [the name given to Northup by his kidnappers],' she cried, tears streaming down her face, 'you're goin' to be free—you're goin' way off yonder where we'll neber see ye any more. You've saved me a good many whipping, Platt; I'm glad you're goin' to be free—but oh! de Lord, de Lord! what'll become of me?
Northup then boarded a carriage to freedom and he never saw her again.[8] In 1854, his book Twelve Years a Slave was published. Almost ten years after, during the American Civil War, the 110th New York Infantry Regiment came to the plantation. They met Bob, one of the enslaved men mentioned in Northup's book, which several soldiers had read. Patsey left the plantation in May 1863 with the Union soldiers. Patsey's life and fate thereafter are unknown. In 1850, Patsey had a daughter named Mary White, born into slavery on the Epps plantation. Mary was later sold down south, and she had children of her own, sons Jacob White and George Dudley White and a daughter Sarah White, who told the family story to her children.[2][9][10]
Fiske, David; Brown, Clifford W.; Seligman, Rachel (2013). Solomon Northup: The Complete Story of the Author of Twelve Years a Slave., a complete biography of Northup