Visit our Exhibition in Washington, DC: Jan 27 - Oct 14, 2012
Jefferson’s Monticello - Home Explore Plantation & Slavery companion websites
  • Get Email Updates
  • Sign-in
Landscape of Slavery: Mulberry Row at Monticello
  • Explore Topics
  • Meet People
  • Discover Work
  • View Places
  • Gallery
  • Visit Mulberry Row
AddThis Sign-in to Favorite Share Print
< back to Meet People

James Hubbard

1783–after 1812
MaleEnslaved WorkersWork: Stonecutter, Nailer, Charcoal-burner

James Hubbard, known to Jefferson as Jame or Jamey, was born at Monticello in 1783, a son of James and Cate Hubbard.  In the late 1780s, the Hubbards and their children were moved from Monticello to the Poplar Forest plantation where James became “head man.”  To increase the work force of enslaved boys in the Mulberry Row nailery, Hubbard was sent to Monticello, far away from his family, when he was 11 years old.  At the outset, Hubbard was the least efficient nailer, but within two years he was one of the most productive.  He also learned charcoal-burning. Hubbard made at least two unsuccessful attempts to escape to freedom.  In 1805, with money earned from extra work, he purchased clothing and forged free papers; he headed to Washington but was apprehended in Fairfax.  In 1810 or 1811, he disappeared again, causing Jefferson to sell him to carpenter Reuben Perry.  After his capture in 1812, Hubbard was severely punished.  What became of him is not known.

This account is compiled from Lucia Stanton, “Those Who Labor for My Happiness:” Slavery at Thomas Jefferson's Monticello (University of Virginia Press and Thomas Jefferson Foundation, 2012).

Tags

None
Login or register to tag items

Add comment

Login or register to post comments

Slavery at Jefferson's Monticello: Paradox of Liberty

The Hubbard Brothers

 Learn more about James Hubbard and his brother Philip, two brothers who lived and worked at both Poplar Forest and Monticello. More »

Getting Word: African American Families of Monticello

Hear stories.

Learn more about the descendants of Monticello's enslaved families through our oral history project. More »

Jefferson’s Monticello - Home
Facebook YouTube Twitter Flickr
  • Home
  • About
  • Press
  • Donate
  • Sponsors
  • Explore Topics
    • Treatment
    • Economy
    • Labor
    • Skills
    • Resistance
    • Family
    • Picturing Mulberry Row’s People
  • Discover Work
    • Sawing
    • Rough Carpentry
    • Joining
    • Charcoal-burning
    • Tinsmithing
    • Nail-making
    • Spinning and Weaving
    • Tending of Horses
    • Preservation of Meat
    • Dairying
    • Laundering
    • Blacksmithing
  • View Places
    • Phase I (1769 – 1790)
    • Phase II (1791 – 1809)
    • Phase III (1810–31)
  • About
    • Credits
    • Press
    • Sponsors
    • Donate
    • Visit Mulberry Row
monticello.org UNESCO World Heritage List