Home / Full timeline / Lucy Terry Prince, an enslaved Black girl, writes the poem “The Bar’s Fight” about an Indian attack in Deerfield, Massachusetts. She is considered by some to be the first Black American female poet.
Lucy Terry Prince, an enslaved Black girl, writes the poem “The Bar’s Fight” about an Indian attack in Deerfield, Massachusetts. She is considered by some to be the first Black American female poet.
1749
At age sixteen, Lucy Terry Prince wrote "The Bar's Fight," a poem about an Indian attack on Deerfield, Massachusetts, where she was enslaved. The poem wasn't published until 1855, in Josiah Gilbert Holland's history of western Massachusetts. Prince is considered by some to be the first Black American female poet, though Phillis Wheatley published work in 1776. Born in Africa, Prince was kidnapped as a child and brought to Deerfield, where she became enslaved to Ebenezer Wells. Prince was married in 1756 to Abijah Prince, a free man who bought his wife's freedom. Prince's past probably inspired her civil rights efforts. She succeeded in convincing the governor's council of Guilford, Vermont, where she was living, to order the protection of her family after their fence had been torn down by white neighbors. She also tried, but failed, to get one of her sons enrolled in Williams College. In 1821, Prince died on the family farm in Sunderland.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.