Margaret Hutton
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Margaret Hutton (
née The birth name is the name of the person given upon their birth. The term may be applied to the surname, the given name or to the entire name. Where births are required to be officially registered, the entire name entered onto a births registe ...
Goe; August 19, 1727 – c1797) was an early settler colonist in southwestern Pennsylvania and the largest enslaver in the state at the time of the first federal census in 1790. Hutton registered nine people as lifetime slaves in 1780 and sixteen children as term slaves between 1788 and her death in 1797. The 1790 census identified twenty-four enslaved people in her household. Her 1795 last will and testament identified twenty-six enslaved people by name. All told, Hutton enslaved at least thirty-six people during her lifetime.Burroughs, pp. 320-321


Early life and family

Margaret Goe was born on August 19, 1727, in Prince George's County, Maryland, to William Goe and Mary Boyd. She married Richard Hutton and the couple had a daughter they named Mary. When Richard died in 1772, he bequeathed to Mary a boy named Edward Simpson and a girl named Hannah. When Mary Hutton married Hezekiah Magruder, Mary and Edward became his property under the law of
coverture Coverture was a legal doctrine in English common law under which a married woman's legal existence was considered to be merged with that of her husband. Upon marriage, she had no independent legal existence of her own, in keeping with society's ...
. The Goes, Huttons, and Magruders moved to southwestern Pennsylvania in 1773, settling near Redstone Creek in what is now Fayette County along with between twenty and thirty enslaved people they brought from Maryland. The death of Margaret's husband, followed by her son-in-law in 1787, left Hutton one of the wealthiest women in the region, as she inherited land and enslaved people from both men.


Slaveholding

Genealogist Genealogy () is the study of families, family history, and the tracing of their Lineage (anthropology), lineages. Genealogists use oral interviews, historical records, genetic analysis, and other records to obtain information about a family ...
Tony Burroughs identifies at least thirty-six people whom Hutton held in bondage during her lifetime. Their names are as follows: "Old Catherine," "Old Rachel," "Old Jeremiah," Tobias, Hannah, William Edward Simpson, Thomas Simpson, Sarah, Susannah, Alice, Isaac, Philimona, Terrementa, Alice, Henriette, Abram, Rachel, Cassandra, David, Benjamin, Henry Fitz Edward, Leah, Priscilla, Charles David, Robert, Anna, Rebecca, Jamima, Daniel, Ester, William, Dinah, Elizabeth, Charity, and George. There were 282 enslaved people in Fayette County in 1790, meaning that the individuals with ties to the Goe, Hutton, and Magruder families constituted a significant percentage of the region's Black community. In her last will and testament, Hutton bequeathed a variety of tools to the people she enslaved, including axes, hoes, sickles, scythes, and ploughs for the men, as well as spinning wheels, pots, kettles, and skillets for the women. Hutton also bequeathed various crops and livestock, including corn, wheat, flax, wool, cows, lambs, and pigs. This suggests that the people whom Hutton enslaved labored primarily as farmers and domestic servants. There were some people, however, who had acquired more specialized skills. Henry Fitz Edward and Charles David possessed knowledge of tailoring and shoemaking respectively.


Death and manumission

When Margaret Hutton composed her last will and testament on February 12, 1795, she provided for the conditional
manumission Manumission, or enfranchisement, is the act of freeing slaves by their owners. Different approaches to manumission were developed, each specific to the time and place of a particular society. Historian Verene Shepherd states that the most wi ...
of the twenty-six people she still enslaved. She generally allowed that older people should have their freedom within a year of her death, while younger people were to be sold for a period of years before having their freedom. Hutton also allowed most of this group to collect cash and goods from her executors in order to support themselves in freedom. Her decision to leave property to the community she had enslaved during her lifetime helped to establish a free Black community in the
Monongahela Valley The Monongahela River ( , ), sometimes referred to locally as the Mon (), is a U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline dataThe National Map accessed August 15, 2011 river on the Allegheny Plateau in north ...
.Conley, pp. 156-157, 161


See also

*
List of slave owners The following is a list of notable people who owned other people as slaves, where there is a consensus of historical evidence of slave ownership, in alphabetical order by last name. A * Adelicia Acklen (1817–1887), at one time the wealthi ...
*
Curtis Grubb Curtis Grubb (17301789), Patriot and oldest son of Peter and Martha Bates Grubb, was a second-generation member of the Grubb Family Iron Dynasty along with his younger brother Peter Jr. The brothers operated the Cornwall Ironworks, making sig ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Hutton, Margaret 1727 births 1797 deaths People from colonial Pennsylvania