Ideas - The Amazing Henry Box Brown: Escaping Slavery By Mailing Himself to Freedom
Episode Date: February 3, 2025Enslaved in 1840s Virginia, Henry Brown has himself nailed into a postal crate and mailed to a free state. But that’s less than half his story. In freedom, he becomes Henry Box Brown, and uses his e...scape box as the basis for a subversive magic act that sees him tour the stages of the UK and Canada — his final home.
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This is a CBC podcast.
Welcome to Ideas.
I'm Nala Ayed.
Welcome to Ideas. I'm Nala Ayed. Two people are walking in January snow across a graveyard just east of downtown Toronto.
A worker at the historic Necropolis Cemetery sweeps the snow off a headstone that's more than a century old. As I was going around brushing away at the tops of monuments and not trying to find them,
I tripped over his stone.
Oh, it's so small.
Yeah.
Wow.
It's a modest commemoration for someone described as larger than life.
It's a bit chipped.
Can you see what it says?
Can you read it?
From what I can make out here, it says Henry Brown
died June 15th, 1897.
And do you think that would be the original stone?
That is the original stone, yes.
Let's see.
I'm curious what that wording is on the top.
Yeah.
There is something there.
It looks like a Y and an R and maybe another Y.
Memory?
Henry Brown was a public figure in his time and place,
and he traveled far in his 80-plus years, geographically and otherwise. As a younger man in the 1850s,
he wrote about his beginnings in the American South, in Virginia.
I was born about 45 miles from the city of Richmond, in Louisa County, in the year 1815.
Born into a harsh reality.
I entered the world as slave in the midst of a country whose most honored writings declared
that all men have a right to liberty.
I was a slave because my countrymen had made it lawful, in utter contempt of the declared
will of heaven, for the strong to lay hold of the weak and buy and sell them as marketable
goods.
His African ancestors were among the millions forcibly shipped across the Atlantic, abused
in body and soul, their freedom denied.
In Virginia, that was inflicted on their descendants too, with extreme cruelty at the very moment
of birth.
Tyrants, remorseless destitute of religion and every principle of humanity, stood by
the couch of my mother and as I entered into the world, before I had done anything to forfeit
my right to liberty, and while my soul was yet under filed by the commission of actual sin, stretched forth their bloody
arms and branded me with the mark of bondage, and by such means I became their own property.
A religious man, Henry Brown, knew evil from good.
They robbed me of myself before I could know the nature of their wicked arts, and ever
afterwards, until I forcibly wrenched myself from their hands, did they retain their stolen
property."
Three decades later, he took that idea of the enslaved as property, as marketable goods,
and turned it upside down.
Henry Brown stole himself back.
The idea suddenly flashed across my mind of shutting myself in a box and getting myself
conveyed as dry goods to a free state.
It worked.
He escaped, survived, and invented a new kind of life for himself in order to
keep surviving. With it came a new name.
Henry Box Brown.
That sounds like an ending, but it's simply one chapter in the astonishing story of Henry
Boxbrough.
The great African magician, king of all mesmerists, the African chief, professor of electrobiology,
Dr. Henry Boxbrave.
He lived out his freedom, performed, sang, acted,
and entertained on stages in the US, England, and Canada.
Lots of abolitionists were in England
for various points of time.
Frederick Douglass, Moses Roper, William Wells Brown,
and I think he might've wanted to see
whether things were different in the UK.
He fought slavery in his own way.
The abolitionists start to feel like Henry Box Brown was
making slavery into sort of a circus show.
Mr. Brown will leave Bradford on Thursday
next, packed up in the identical box,
arriving in Leeds by half past six,
then forming a procession through the principal streets to the music hall.
I'm not going to say that there isn't sometimes a carnival-esque atmosphere at some of his
performances, but there was still political content. In this episode, the 19th century life and 21st century afterlife of the extraordinary
Henry Box Brown.
There are all these ways that we can think about Box Brown as performance artists, as
visual artists, as public speaker, as author.
He had this kind of sort of limitless resourcefulness in the way of artistic resistance that marks
him as being rather exceptional.
Here is ideas producer Lisa Godfrey.
Henry Box Brown comes across sometimes as a kind of historical footnote, a colorful quick
fact, the man who mailed himself to freedom.
But there's so much more to his story, and it's evolving even as you hear this.
People are uncovering new facts, and they're finding rich themes in the whole of his life.
Martha Cutter, for one. She's an academic and an author in Philadelphia.
I was working on my previous book and I happened on the story of Henry Box Brown and I got completely
fascinated by that story and I went down this rabbit hole and was obsessed with finding details about
his life.
Daphne Brooks at Yale was writing about enslaved people finding freedom when she started thinking
about Brown.
I gravitated towards these kinds of stories of deep and unusual invention, which is not
to say that I didn't have such deep admiration and a full out reverence
with regards to the bravery of the multitudes.
Henry Box Brown's escape story is still the right place to start in understanding him.
He told it in so many ways through his life and twice in print, part of the genre known
as slave narratives.
Daphne Brooks says this genre was more intentional than just memoir.
It was directed at readers who did not have the full picture of slavery in a time when
news traveled slow, out to...
Create a kind of sympathetic energy in the reader to actually lobby the US government to end slavery. So
we're talking about a genre that was political to its core.
The first version of Henry's story in print was told to and shaped by a white abolitionist.
I think the second book was definitely written by himself. I have some pretty good evidence
in my book that he had become quite literate. Despite the odds.
It was illegal for the enslaved to learn how to read, to acquire literacy, and yet so many
were able to do so under surreptitious and fugitive means.
The second narrative is his voice. It's his attempt to tell the story that he experienced
from his own perspective. So I think he takes a lot more control over his own story, over what is
traumatic to him, over how he found the strength to do what he did. So the version you're hearing
from and will hear from now is Henry's version.
The Narrative of Henry Box Brown.
Written by himself.
Published in 1851, two years after his escape.
It starts with Henry describing his enslaved life.
He's working at a tobacco factory in Richmond.
The hours are unrelenting and the conditions poor.
The enslaved are all considered less than human,
a point that his Christian overseer makes clear.
Mr. Allen was a very pious man.
He was also a church member,
but was much addicted to the habit of profane swearing,
a vice which is, in slave countries, not at all uncommon in church members.
He used particularly to expend his swearing breath in denunciation of
the whole race of Negroes, using more bad terms than I could hear employ
without polluting the pen with which I write.
Among the best epithets were hogs, dogs, pigs.
Henry has been able to avoid physical punishment
for most of his life, but he has other wounds.
He lost his mother at 15.
The entire family simply sold away to destinations unknown.
Henry calls this torture, and it's a situation that leads him to pay Nancy's slaveholder a fee
to make sure it doesn't happen again.
He earns that money through what was called overwork.
But then comes an awful day.
Henry is betrayed.
Then comes an awful day. Henry is betrayed.
I placed myself by the side of a street, and soon had the melancholy satisfaction of witnessing
the approach of a gang of slaves, amounting to three hundred and fifty in number, marching
under the direction of a Methodist minister, by whom they were purchased,
and amongst which slaves were my wife and children.
These beings being marched with ropes about their necks and staples on their arms,
and although in that respect the scene was no very novel one to me,
the peculiarity of my own circumstances made it assume the
appearance of unusual horror.
This second horror marks a shift in Henry Brown. Within months, he finds
himself thinking differently. One day while while I was at work, and my thoughts were eagerly feasting upon the idea of freedom,
I felt my soul called out to heaven to breathe a prayer to Almighty God.
I prayed fervently that he who seeth in secret and knew the innermost desires of my heart
would lend me his aid in bursting my fetters asunder, and
in restoring me to the possession of those rights of which men had robbed me.
When the idea suddenly flashed across my mind of shutting myself in a box and
getting myself conveyed as dry goods to a free state.
So Henry buys a postal crate, and he pays two locals, a freed black man and a white
shoemaker, both named Smith, to help him. It's all incredibly risky. The box which I had procured was three feet one inch wide, two
feet six inches high, and two feet wide. And on the morning of the 29th day of
March 1849, I went into the box. Having previously bored three gimlet holes
opposite my face for air and provided myself with a bladder
of water both for the purpose of quenching my thirst and for wetting my face should I
feel getting faint.
Being thus equipped for the Battle of Liberty, my friends nailed down the lid and conveyed
me to the express office, which was about a mile distant from the place where I was
packed. I had no sooner arrived at the office than I was turned heels up while some person nailed
something on the end of the box.
I was then put upon a wagon and driven off to the depot with my head down, and had no
sooner arrived at the depot than the man who drove the wagon tumbled me
roughly into the baggage car where, however, I happened to fall on my right side. The next
place we arrived at was Potomac Creek, where the baggage had to be removed from the cars to be put
on board the steamer, where I was again placed with my head down, and in this dreadful
position had to remain nearly an hour and a half, which, from the suffering I had thus
twinned yore, seemed like an age to me.
But I was forgetting the battle of liberty, and I was resolved to conquer or die. MUSIC
Henry is a heavyset man,
and he spends more than a day in hard transit
confined to that tiny box.
Cart, steamboat, train.
Finally, it reaches its destination in Pennsylvania,
where sympathizers, white abolitionists in Philadelphia,
are supposed to come get him and uncrate him.
At which time a wagon drove up, and I heard a person inquire for such a box as that which
I was in.
I was then placed on a wagon and conveyed to the house where my friend in Richmond had
arranged I should be received.
A number of persons soon collected round the box after was taken into the house.
But as I did not know what was going on, I kept myself quiet.
I heard a man say, let's wrap upon the box and see if he's alive.
And immediately a rap ensued and a voice said,
trembling, is all all right within?
trembling, is all all right within?
To which I replied, all right.
The joy of the friends was very great. And when they heard that I was alive, they soon managed to break open the box.
And then came my resurrection from the grave of slavery. And so begins Henry's new life.
Henry Box Brown.
This is the name, Henry Box Brown, what we see on a lot of legal documents such as his
passenger records and his death certificate.
The box is not in quotes.
How soon after his escape would you say he became almost legendary?
Well, very quickly because people started, there were illustrations of his escape and
there were songs about his escape and he started making the circuit of all the abolitionist
meetings in Boston and around New England and he became quite famous and he even was
on stage with Frederick Douglass.
I'm Martha Cutter, professor of English and Africana Studies
and American Studies at the University of Connecticut,
and I am the author of the book, The Many Resurrections
of Henry Box Brown.
Resurrections of Henry Box Brown. She's discovered new information from archival sources, and she expands on work done previously
as by...
Daphne Brooks.
I'm William R. Keenan Jr., professor of African American studies, American studies, women's
gender and sexuality studies, and Music at
Yale University.
That's a lot.
Yeah, that's a lot.
As was Box Brown's Escape.
So rich in its details and meaning, so high in its stakes. required such an extraordinary level of extreme endurance, a kind of wile-iness, and a real
sort of spectacular form of risk.
There's also the subversiveness of it.
The fact that he put himself in a box, mailed himself. So he used this federal institution
to ironically emancipate himself.
Henry was by no means alone in using creative means
to escape the South.
Take the couple, William and Ellen Kraft,
who famously cross-dressed and performed their way
to freedom.
Brown soon joins other fugitive enslaved people in the North.
They give public talks in meeting halls and at conventions.
There were folks like William Wells Brown who becomes kind of a quasi-mentor to Henry
Box Brown in some ways.
And the most famous Black abolitionist of them all, the distinguished Frederick Douglass,
author of
Narrative of the Life of an American Slave, published in 1845 and considered to be one
of the greatest works of American literature.
All of them were out to educate audiences in the New England states.
Part of this massive transatlantic lecture circuit designed to fight slavery and to bring about its abolishment.
But how to tell their stories was a source of tension. Frederick Douglass believed the
details of escape should be kept secret for others to use. But Henry seems to have been
proud to tell his story and ambitious in its telling. He took the boxing itself, referenced it in song,
in visual print media broadsides,
so we could think of the boxing episode
as being this kind of foundation that he built upon
on the fugitive abolitionist lecture circuit.
Inspired by fellow speaker William Wells Brown,
he too commissions a panorama, paintings that move.
Massive pieces of cloth that were then hoisted on opposite sides of the stage and these large
cylinders. And then you'd have stagehands that would crank the cloth across the stage.
So they very much were these forms of entertainment that we later see manifest as
cinema by the end of the 19th century. A more mainstream version was a travelogue.
Pastoral scenes in the U.S. South, you were given the sensation of moving down the Mississippi River.
Abolitionists had huge problems with these forms of entertainment because of course what was left out?
Slavery. Box Brown's panorama is pointedly called the mirror of slavery.
It begins with the African slave trade. It begins with, and these are, you know, actual
scenes that are described in the script, the Nubian family in freedom, the seizure of slaves,
the interior of a slave ship. But then it shifts into what I like to think of as these
escape suites. So you get Alan Kraft escaping from slavery. You get the scene of Henry Box
Brown himself narrating his own escape from slavery.
It shows audiences the reality of what has happened.
But also delivers us to the future, the hope of emancipation.
It's a really bold and massively ambitious artistic statement made by a formerly enslaved individual in his collaboration with reformist
painters and other abolitionist orators on the lecture circuit. As a Christian, Henry Box Brown calls out the religious hypocrisy of Southerners in
his narrative, and with his panorama, he demonstrates the gap between America's values and its institutions
by showing... Iconic scenes of U.S. patriotism and national pride, the city of Washington, D.C.
So there's a kind of irony here between what it means to be American and also, you know,
the chivalrous of American freedom that are represented by the enslaved having to free themselves.
Free themselves, and yet even in the free northern states in 1850, live in fear. Martha
Cutter.
In the United States, there was the fugitive slave law and there were many fugitive slave laws
and it made it legal for any person who wanted to to try to take Box Brown or any other slave
back to slavery on very flimsy terms.
This was particularly true for those speaking out, living their lives in public, such as
the orators, such as Henry Box Brown. There was this brawl in
Providence where Box Brown claimed that his former enslaver sent men to try to
take him back into slavery. The evidence on that is a little bit mixed but it's
pretty clear that 1850 was a dicey time, a difficult time to be a free black man
and he was getting to be quite famous.
And so it wouldn't have surprised me
if there were other attempts to take him back.
So I think that's the main reason why he left.
Having journeyed from the South
to the North of the United States in the fall of 1850,
Henry Box Brown decides it's now time to leave his homeland.
He travels across the ocean.
Lots of abolitionists were in England for various points of time.
Frederick Douglass, Moses Roper, William Wells Brown, and I think he might have wanted to see whether things were different in the UK for him.
You're listening to Ideas and to a documentary about Henry Box Brown, who escaped from slavery
and became a touring performer.
Ideas is a podcast and a broadcast, heard on CBC Radio 1 in Canada, on US Public Radio,
across North America on SiriusXM, on World Radio Paris, and in Australia on ABC Radio National.
And you can also stream us around the world at cbc.ca.
Find us wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Nala Ayed. You don't have to face debt alone. We're here to help you regain control of your finances with Trusted Solutions.
Visit Canada.ca slash debt dash solutions and take control today.
A message from the Government of Canada.
Every language is a note.
In the symphony of our heritage, together they create a harmony that cannot be silenced.
Discover your voice on the new APTN Languages TV channel.
Professor Martha Cutter has researched and written a book
called The Many Resurrections of Henry Box Brown.
It contains a lot of visual artifacts,
including advertisements for his stage shows in England.
["The Many Resurrections of Henry Box Brown"]
Great attraction caused in England by Mr. Henry Box Brown, a fugitive slave who made
his escape from Richmond in Virginia, packed up in a box.
Their tone is not quite what you'd expect for a speaker educating audiences as part
of a transatlantic lecture circuit run by abolitionists.
And Martha Cutter says the abolitionists themselves
increasingly felt that way too.
When you didn't kind of stick to a fairly strict script,
the abolitionists were not interested in having
you represent them.
Even someone like Frederick Douglass
didn't want to stick to that script of the passive
enslaved individual.
Henry, who escapes in a box, who shows white audiences a panorama called the Mirror of
Slavery didn't quite fit that script either.
But there was even more to it.
Tuesday, May 20th, two live pigs to be given away with other presents.
The abolitionists start to feel like Henry Box Brown was making slavery into
sort of a circus show. Growing concerns about Henry led to a rift with the
abolitionists. Soon his anti-slavery message is delivered in a whole
different package. He becomes a showman. For six nights only, Professor Box Brown
from Africa and America will appear as the great
African magician, also as the King of Mesmerists.
He's got to earn his living.
The amazing life of Henry Box Brown continues in England.
Ideas producer Lisa Godfrey follows.
Or to be honest, doesn't quite follow.
Because from oration and a panorama to magic and hypnosis?
There's some indication that he learned magic while he was enslaved.
There are oral accounts of that.
So I think that's fascinating too.
Maybe he learned it, but he couldn't use it.
And the panorama?
You might see the panorama,
but you might also see Brown performing these really interesting magic tricks,
some of which involve boxes appearing and disappearing.
And I think the symbolism there is really interesting.
There's one in which he passes a watch through a series of boxes.
And so it seems to reference this time and his time in the box and
the kind of enduring legacy of the box.
Boxes, disappearances, escapes.
These are now classic elements in any magic show.
But Henry was one of the first.
He used that box in his performance throughout his life.
So he would, for example,
in one performance in Leeds,
he jumped out of the box.
He was in the box for like two and a half hours and he jumped out of the box on stage. And there's a later performance in
England where he talks about the Middle Passage, the horrible voyage of the enslaved from parts
of Africa to the Caribbean and onward other parts of Europe, sometimes or to the United
States where many died, many were enchained. He talks about the Middle Passage and then he gets into his own box
as if to demonstrate he had a taste of that Middle Passage.
It was part of his name,
but also part of his show in really interesting ways.
The box is significant for Henry.
It could have been a tomb if the box went the wrong way
or it was never found,
but also a womb in that he was born into
freedom. Unfortunately that wasn't exactly the case because of the fugitive slave law. He's not
entirely free in body or spirit. He's a flamboyant entertainer but with serious intent. There were
still political content. His mesmerism, his hypnosis, it all seems fun on the surface.
One of my favorite shows is where he's got all these individuals on stage and he hypnotizes
them and he makes them, well he makes them do a bunch of things.
First of all they have to act like they're freezing and they chase imaginary insects
and then they act like they're hot.
But eventually he convinces them that they're sheep and they run around on all
fours gobbling down raw cabbage and when they wake up they're chagrined to hear
all about this as the newspaper report goes into detail. It's another subversive
moment in the show. He's making white British individuals run around on stage
and gobble down raw cabbage. And they're the spectacle.
He's not the spectacle there in that scene.
So he's obviously flipping the script.
Yes, this was funny, but it was also about taking control.
Frederick Douglass talks about in his autobiography how the slaves were treated like animals and
they were just thrown mush and had to eat it with their hands.
And Brown talks about that in his own autobiography a little bit too, the view of the enslaved as animals.
He used particularly to expend his swearing breath in denunciation of the whole race of
Negroes. Hogs, dogs, pigs.
Henry Box Brown had left the United States behind, but as a black man, he still faces prejudice and
skepticism.
Slavery had been abolished in England in 1834, but of course that doesn't mean that racism
didn't still exist there.
I think by and large he found it to be a fairly liberal society overall, but he encountered
instances of racism there as well. He was
called the N-word. He was called Sambo. This one guy who was a newspaper guy wrote this
horrible review of one of his shows. This was a guy named Thomas Brinley in 1852. He
called it a gross and palpable exaggeration of the difficulties of enslavement.
So he was more of an apologist for slavery, Brinley, and he called Brown a fraud.
He's called him baboonish and said he enacted nocturnal antics.
And he called him a bedeweled and oily Negro.
As he would several times in his life, Henry fights back in court.
Brinley, who put two really disgusting reviews in the newspapers that affected Brown's shows,
Brown was able to sue Brinley, and he won.
So that's interesting.
I'm not sure if that would have happened in the United States.
Control emerges as a clear theme in his performing life. As a magician, an escape artist, a hypnotist,
the act makes him an authority figure on that stage.
I think he has access to this world of knowledge that the audience doesn't. He did a second
sight performance as well where he would go to the audience and guess what the person
on stage was holding in their hand. And this is coded communication, which was pretty common under slavery to have
a code where you could speak to people without the enslaver knowing what you were saying.
So there is not only this access to this knowledge that his audience doesn't have, but this deeper
knowledge from other spheres that
the audience is completely unaware of, but that does allow a certain degree of
taking power, especially from one who was supposed to be powerless.
Henry experiments with personas in his show. His promotions call him a professor,
a doctor, a king, a prince. The African prince, I think that's him.
It's about connecting to a longer history of power and a larger cultural backdrop.
He did dress up as Native American.
Some people say he would go in red face, which was sort of like yellow face or black face.
It was derogatory.
I think it's also possible like lots of people in the South who were African-American also had Native American ancestry. So it's possible he
really thought he was Native American in part, but I think it's also like
alluding to this other group of individuals who have a various kind of
power outside the dominant mainstream of white culture. He also acts in several
stage plays. One of which is called the Nubian
Captive and he plays an individual who is he's actually a slave owner who then
gets enslaved and in that play he ends up rescuing his wife from slavery and
ends up realizing that slavery is wrong and bad. Henry Box Brown did subversive,
smart, and just plain colorful things with personas.
But his actual character is called into question by James Smith. He is the freed
black man who had helped Henry into his box back in Virginia when he escaped and then later appeared
on stage with him on the abolitionist circuit. Smith and Box Brown part ways at some point.
And then James accuses Henry of being a cheat.
They had a bitter falling out at some point while they were in England about the finances
of the panorama.
Worse, he says Henry is abandoning his children and his wife Nancy sold away in Richmond.
So he claims Brown never tried, Brown had all this money,
he never tried to find Nancy or buy her out of slavery.
So we have two different opinions there.
Martha Cutter found a document, horrifying in its details,
where Henry says he did make an attempt.
In my book I talk about a letter where he claims he tried to buy her out of slavery.
He tried and tried, but the master refused.
And eventually he found out that the master had taken Nancy, was having relations with
her, he was raping her. Henry Box Brown later marries for a second time in 1855 to an Englishwoman named Jane
Floyd.
They have children together and all eventually perform as family singers.
Martha Cutter sees evidence that Brown took the second family to visit Virginia a decade
after slavery was finally abolished
in the U.S. Since Richmond held terrible memories for Henry, she wonders if he had a specific
mission.
I do believe that when Brown came back to the United States in 1875, he went to Virginia
to try to find any living relatives, to try to figure out what might have happened to
Nancy. So
that's my theory is that he went to Richmond and he tried to trace the relatives and he
was unsuccessful. But so that's a piece of the story we really don't know. And maybe
in the future we can figure more out about that from, for example, DNA research could
help there.
AMT – By 1881, audiences in England are starting to dwindle for the Henry Box Brown show, so
he decides to return to North America for good this time.
He tours his show in the northern U.S. and also across the border into Canada.
He was very itinerant throughout his life.
I think he had a bit of wanderlust, and he traveled a lot from place to place, even when
he was performing in the United States back and forth.
But he also traveled back and forth from London, Ontario to parts of Michigan for performances.
He eventually settles in Canada, in Toronto, and stays for the rest of his life, more than
a decade.
I think the fact that he was in Toronto for that much time indicates to me that he found
it to be a good environment.
There was a lot of art.
And I mentioned in my book, like, there's this guy,
Butland, Jerome Butland, I think his name is,
and he had this music store.
And Brown rented his apartment from him for one year.
And if you look at pictures of Butland's music store,
there's all these flyers for artists in the window.
And so I think he enjoyed Toronto
because it's part of a circle of artists.
In Canada, Henry has familiar kinds of friends
and familiar foes.
I talk about in my book a performance he did
in St. Lawrence Hall, and I think that was 1886.
And the recounting of it in the newspaper is very racist.
He was performing, he was singing, and he was doing magic.
And he was performing with his wife, who he had married in England, who was singing and he was doing magic and he was performing with his wife
who he had married in England who was a white woman and the daughter was Annie and they were performing together and the reporter talks about these dark complexioned women. Well Jane was white
so I'm not sure and Annie was mixed race but he talks about them bleeding out songs like they were
sheep, bleeding them out, and has
a lot of derogatory things to say about the performance by Brown.
So I think there's some evidence that in that performance that he was dealing with
a kind of racist ideology of African Americans or Africans in Canada.
A few years later, a review in a Brantford, Ontario newspaper praises the Brown family
for their singing of spirituals and for bringing plantation energy to the event.
The reviewer's tone is positive, almost nostalgic.
That doesn't surprise Martha Cutter, who teaches Africana and American Studies. She says the echoes of slavery persisted
back then as they persist now.
In a lot of fields today that deal with slavery, we talk about the afterlife of enslavement
and neo-slavery, new slavery. We talk about the idea that enslavement seems like it's
a long time ago, but for many people it's very real. It's very current. It's still with them.
And it certainly is still with us in the United States via all kinds of economic gaps.
Generational wealth is still much higher amongst white people.
We didn't have a Civil Rights Act signed into law until the 60s.
The notion of the plantation, plantation energy, it's sort of everywhere.
I mean, you see this in a film like Thirteenth.
What happened right after slavery was the incarceration of black men for the most minor
crimes.
It's ongoing today with the incarceration of people, African and African-American descent,
black and brown men in prisons.
They lose all kinds of rights because of that.
The right to vote, the right to have education.
You can't apply for a lot of educational loans if you've been incarcerated, the right to apply
for certain kinds of mortgages. So the plantation is an ongoing space that hasn't changed over time.
It's still out there and it still needs to be dealt with.
AMT – You've spent a lot of time piecing together Henry Box Brown's movements, his personas, the different ways that he
represented himself. If he was sitting across from you, what psychologically, what kind of personality
would you imagine him to be? I imagined him to be the sort of larger-than-life person, that he would be full of energy and laughter and stories.
I mean, he seemed to be a great storyteller
and he would come across as somebody,
you're like, can I believe all these stories
this guy's telling?
I think I can, but what's, I mean, let's not forget,
this is trauma, trauma narrative, right?
He was enslaved, he lost his wife and children.
He had to exist in this box. He was always defined by lost his wife and children, he had to exist
in this box, he was always defined by this box. But he would tell a lot of stories, whether
they were true or not, I think is less interesting than how he's shaping them to take control
of this trauma and to create a story in which he's always the hero.
You said a central question for you was if he truly escaped that box of enslavement, of trauma
and loss.
It's hard to perhaps tell based on archival documents and things like that, but what would
you imagine about that?
I don't know if I think he did want to actually escape the box.
I think the box was really important to how he created these shows, which
were yes, entertaining, but they also had this underlying political message of the omnipresence
of slavery, the ubiquity of forms of enslavement going forward into the future.
And I think ultimately, when we talk about trauma, trauma, some people say you never
escape trauma. Some people say it's unescapable. Once you can talk about it, it's
not trauma anymore. But there's also this school of trauma theory that talks about the
more you come back to this trauma, the more you take control over it. And that doesn't
mean you're ever going to escape it, but there's a school of trauma therapy where they actually
have people in their mind and in other ways reenact these events. And they have found
that over time, sometimes that helps people have
less flashbacks. So I think for Brown it was about taking control of the space of the box
because it was always going to be part of him. Literally it was part of his name.
You call him something very contemporary at the end of your book. You say he was, quote,
a dissident and insurgent performance artist who recognized the limits of freedom
in his own time and place, but who also points to a future world in which these limits have been
transgressed, if not transformed. Does he feel contemporary to you?
LESLIE KENDRICK He does. And I think that's why he appeals to many contemporary artists,
because, you know, I mean, I'm a huge fan of Frederick Douglass,
but he's kind of a little bit more dignified. He has a certain kind of persona that he presents
throughout his life, whereas Brown is always changing.
I spoke to Daphne Brooks about this too.
I am the author of Bodies and Descent, Spectacular Performances of Race and Freedom, 1850-1910.
I asked her if she thinks of Henry Box Brown as an artist.
Oh, absolutely. He, again, was tapping into so many different expressive forms
in order to fight the evil institution.
The fact that he was a singer, the fact
that he saw visual art as being something that could be
weaponized against slavery, the fact that his unboxing act
anticipates Houdini, who doesn't appear until the late
Victorian era.
So there are all these ways that we can think about Box Brown as performance artists, as
visual artists, as public speaker, author.
He had this kind of limitless resourcefulness in the way of artistic resistance that marks
him as being rather exceptional in a field of exceptional individuals who fought their
own trafficking.
So he's been an inspiration to recent writers and artists and performers.
Why does he feel like such a contemporary figure to us?
There are reports of Box Brown really being comfortable
with his own spectacle, right?
So not just in utilizing spectacle aesthetically,
but he was known for, and we have evidence of this
in the 19th century press, he was known for having,
quote unquote, flashy clothing, you know,
for having a kind of penchant
for deeply striking sartorial style.
And that kind of extravagance is certainly something
we're comfortable with in the modern context,
but I think it also speaks to his ability
to revel in his own adornments,
something that Zora Neale Hurston would write about
come the 1930s in her essay,
Characteristics of Neighbor Expression.
This is a really powerful statement of self-fashioning.
Self-fashioning as resistance, self-making, reinvention.
That's an American story,
but it's also an African-American story.
In your essay, you call him a figure
whose acts may have made him, quote,
too excessive, too performative,
too glam to register as legible acts of social and political resistance.
This kind of outsized self-representation can be read in many ways as a response to the violently limiting definitions of black
being that were placed upon enslaved peoples, right? If you were told you were
not human, if you were told that you were three-fourths a citizen, three-
fifths human juridically, you call attention to the fact that they're constructed, that we construct
ourselves representationally and that we can seize back the tools of representation in
order to invent all sorts of different ways of being perceived in the world.
Do you think there are people we kind of miss today as being socially and politically resistant
who carry on that kind of mission in a way that is glamorous and entertaining and we
almost miss how significant they are and what they're saying. So that's a radical tool and it's a tool that's been used by generations of people of African
descent under duress, living under duress.
And it's certainly an aesthetic that lives on in our popular culture.
One of our greatest and most innovative forces in popular music culture, Beyoncé, has, of
course, made use of these kinds of aesthetics of spectacle to tell larger than life, but
also historically rooted stories about the African American freedom struggle.
So I guess I would say that Box Brown's aesthetics are kind of endemic to the expressive African-American experience.
Henry Box Brown died in Toronto in 1897. Martha Cutter discovered that fact in her research as well as the location where he was buried.
I discovered that he had sued Toronto General Hospital in the 1890s and that on 1880s and
that led to the idea that he had died in Toronto. I
did find the cemetery records for Necropolis and so we went there, my husband and I went
there and we were able to find it and put some flowers there and take pictures of it.
His headstone in the Necropolis among city builders and historic figures is worn down,
but his life is coming into vivid focus through the efforts of writers and scholars
and artists. He was someone ahead of his time who still has a presence in our moment. His life story
and his fight still interests and inspires people. It's quite a busy laneway, isn't it? Yes, it is. It's important.
I call it a living lane.
I met up with three of them.
Pancetta Barnett, Corey Lemoss and Adam Wynn.
A kind of Scooby-Doo trio, determined to discover more about his connections to Toronto and
to honour his place in the city.
I had phoned Corey, mentioning that I had come across a story about a man by the name of
Henry Box Brown and where he was living in Toronto and the story said Corktown but it
didn't give a specific address.
Corktown is located in the downtown east area of Toronto, Coralina Lemos, and I am a Corktown
resident, a history enthusiast and chair of the Corktown
Residents and Business Association. He called me and copied panchetta.
I'm quite an advocate for research not only with the black community but
anything pertaining to that area.
And Corey went through the historical records and actually was able to identify the exact house
where Mr. Box Brown lived for many, many years in Toronto.
Adam Nguyen, and I'm the chair of the Toronto and East York Community Preservation Panel.
Panchera did upload a picture from behind of the properties, and at that point I said,
well, there's a laneway there, let me find out
if it's a public laneway. If it is a public laneway, we can at least try and dedicate
it to Henry Box Brown. So that's how the laneway project started.
Cory went door to door collecting neighbors' signatures in support. The whole effort took three years. But in 2024, the Laneway was officially dedicated.
And a year later, we stood in the cold and we talked at the place where Henry Box Brown Lane
now meets North Star Way. The North Star was the guiding light for the Indigenous to begin with and for escaped enslaved people.
Anchetta Barnett, chair, honorific, street and lane naming committee at the Toronto and East York Community Preservation Panel.
Names have power, the place has power.
The act of naming this laneway, reclaiming that history, has power and he is somebody in Toronto's history that not too many people know about. Reading
his book I really felt taken back when he lost his wife. I felt I felt I heard
the the chains being dragged as she walked in front of him. I seen her face. Horrible these people must have endured to say you
know life or death getting away not taking it anymore any longer. I mean he
could have been killed in the box. He thought he was gonna die because the
blood was in the head in the brain. So this is something that I think is newsworthy,
is historical revelation for people to know that this is not a joke and this is
not a time for us to just sit back and just go through life not remembering
these people and someone like Henry Box Brown. What a man. ["The Life of Henry Box Browne"]
You've been listening to a documentary
on the life of Henry Box Browne,
as told by...
Martha Cutter and Daphne Brooks.
Reading from the narrative of Henry Box Brown by Andre Sills.
Pete Mori read the advertisements for Henry's performances in England.
Thank you to Scott Curry at the Necropolis Cemetery
and Charlie McEvoy of InTune Studio in Stratford.
This episode was produced and presented by Lisa Godfrey.
I feel very honoured to have discovered him. How do you feel?
Yeah, we just have a little tip of the iceberg here.
Lisa Ayuso is the web producer for Ideas. Our technical producer is Danielle Duval.
Our senior producer, Nikola Lukcic. Greg Kelly is the executive producer of Ideas and I'm
Nala Ayad. There may be other people out there who know about Vox Brown, who know
things about him. His daughter Annie lived till 1970 and she had other, she
had many children. So if there's anybody out there who knows stuff about him,
either relative or non-relative, I'd love to hear from them.
I mean, the story will go on.
You can reach us at ideas to cbc.ca slash podcasts.