1855
Pedro Tovookan Parris Collection. Original location is unverified.
GUSN-190774
This head-and-shoulder studio portrait of Pedro Tovookan Parris was possibly taken in c. 1855. Captured in eastern Africa at about the age of ten, Pedro Tovookan Parris was sold to a Portuguese enslaver in Zanzibar, and from there transported to Rio de Janeiro on the American brig the Porpoise, captained by Cyrus Libby of Scarborough, Maine. Transporting enslaved people had long been illegal for Americans, and the sailors on board the ship were disgusted to learn they were participating in the illegal trade. When they arrived in Rio, the sailors turned Libby in to the American consul. Pedro Tovookan Parris and two other young African men were taken into custody and transported to Boston where they were to testify at Libby's trial.
The trial took place in Portland, Maine, in July, 1845. A year later, Libby was acquitted. In the meantime, Pedro Tovookan Parris lived with the family of Virgil D. Parris, U.S. Marshal for Maine and remained with them for the rest of his life. He learned to read and write and the basics of mathematics, practiced public speaking and ventriloquism, and was solicited to campaign for gubernatorial candidate George Gordon, the former consul to Brazil who had freed him from the ship. Pedro Tovookan Parris died of pneumonia on April 10, 1860.
Source: Carlisle, Nancy. Cherished Possessions, 390-393.
studio portraits
photographs
cased photographs
ambrotypes (photographs)
ambrotype (wet collodion process)
Project number HNE0004
1 ambrotype
MS034
Pedro Tovookan Parris papers
MS034.003.001
New England (United States) [general region]
ambrotype (wet collodion process)
Parris, Pedro Tovookan, 1833-1860
African American men
Portrait
Included in the Boston African Americana Project.
Item
Pedro Tovookan Parris Collection. Original location is unverified.
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