
Portrait
of Nancy Michael by Joe Murphy |
Colonel
Cornelius Bassett's personal estate at the time of his death in
1779 included "one Negro boy, Pero, 33 pounds. One Negro
woman, Chole (Chloe?) 27 years ... 150 pounds. One garl (girl),
Nancy 7 years ... 80 pounds." Sold to Mr. Joseph Allen
of Tisbury in that year, Nancy did not disappear into obscurity.
Her story is one of grueling hard times, enslavement, legal problems,
public pauperism, and eventually a position of influence in the
maritime community of Edgartown.
At
this time, Nancy became known as Nancy Michael. The origin
of the name Michael is unclear. There was another Michael whose
name was Caesar who had a connection with the Bassett estate in
Chilmark. In 1789, Nathaniel Bassett of Chilmark was appointed
the guardian of Caesar Michael "a mulatto boy." His
authority as guardian was to protect the property rights that
Caesar had inherited from his mother until Caesar reached the
age of 14. (Dukes County Registry of Probate). The possibility
exists that Caesar was related to Nancy Michael. Caesar Michael
married Elizabeth Sectom in Edgartown in 1797 (Edgartown Vital
Records). Another connection exists with the name Michael.
On December 20, 1819, Nancy Michael "spinster, sister and
only surviving heir to James Michael"conveyed land inherited
from her brother to Isaiah D. Pease of Edgartown for $10.00. (Dukes
Country Registry of Deeds 21/72).
Nancy
Michael lived a long life. Following her sale to Joseph Allen,
he "held and used her as a slave for a series of years."
(SJC #6563 Barnstable) She "fell into distress in
Edgartown in 1812." (ibid) The Town of Edgartown eventually
brought suit against the Town of Tisbury in 1851 to claim "reimbursement
of money spent supporting Nancy Michael, a public pauper".
In the view of Edgartown, Nancy was the responsibility of the
Town of Tisbury because she had been enslaved in that Town.
The
case was heard at the Superior Court in Barnstable in 1851. The
verdict was taken for the defendants, Tisbury, who had claimed
that Nancy had never in fact been enslaved because slavery was
no longer legal in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts at the time
of her enslavement. A previous court action had been taken by
Edgartown in 1813 to force Tisbury to pay for the maintenance
of one of Nancy's children born about 1810. Judgment had been
rendered against Tisbury in 1813, but all records of the Court
in Barnstable had been destroyed by a fire in 1827.

Portrait
of Nancy Michael |
Nancy's
obituary published in The Vineyard Gazette in 1857 presents
a picture of a complex woman. The obituary states that Nancy was
"naturally possessed of kind feelings, she was very fond
of children and unusually attentive to their wants." This
seems at variance with the later statement that she was "possessed
of a strong natural mind, she acquired great influence over some
of our people, by many of whom she was looked on as a witch."
It is stated that Nancy professed to have the power to give good
or bad luck to those about to leave on long whaling voyages. Mariners
about to leave on a whaling voyage sought her protection before
leaving and those who did not incurred her anger. The obituary
states that "in case of bad news from any vessel commanded
by one who had defied her power, she was in ecstasies, and her
fiendish spirit would at once take full control of her."
It
is a fascinating and paradoxical picture of the woman, Nancy Michael.
She obviously performed a service and profited from the gifts
of superstitious sailors. It may be that she practiced the religion
of her ancestors, including the emphasis on the supernatural element
of water. It is quite likely that she may have learned the traditional
rituals of the conjure woman from her mother. Perhaps she was
mentally disturbed or shrewd enough to feign mental disturbance
for her own ends. It seems likely that she used the skills of
a "conjure woman" as a strategy to gain advantages for
her family. What is perfectly clear from the wording of the obituary
is that Nancy Michael was feared in the sea faring community of
Edgartown, and that she had a position of influence over the sailors.
The obituary refers to her as "Black Nance" and states
that her appearance had changed very little in forty years and
that "those who knew her fifty years ago knew her as an old
woman." The obituary concludes: "Her strange power and
influence over many continued until the day of her death, though
for two or three years past she was mostly confined to her room.
Taking her all in all she was a most singular character, and it
will doubtless be a long time before we shall look upon her like
again. She was a professor of religion, and we believe at one
time adorned the profession. May her good deeds live long in our
remembrance, and her evil be interred with her bones."
The
1855 State Census shows Nancy living in the home of Charles and
Julia Vincent in Edgartown. There are five elderly women listed
as living in their home, and four of them were white. The probable
explanation is that the Vincent family were paid by the town to
provide a home for these impoverished women all of whom are referred
to as public paupers. There was no building in Edgartown specifically
designated as a home for paupers.
Nancy
Michael had a daughter, Rebecca, born in 1809. Rebecca
was the mother of Captain William
A. Martin. There is incomplete information about Rebecca,
but we do know that in 1820, Rebecca was found guilty in a court
case and was sentenced for twenty days. At the time of her imprisonment
she would have been eleven years old. This brief story offers
some insights into Rebecca's life. Research by Arthur Railton
published in the Dukes County Intelligencer shows that
Rebecca was imprisoned in the Dukes County Jail on two occasions.
Interestingly, the records show that the complainant against Rebecca
on charges of theft and non-payment of debt was her mother, Nancy
Michael.
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