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Austin Steward (c. 1793 – February 15, 1869) was an African-American abolitionist and author. He was born a slave in Virginia then moved at age 7 with the Helm household to New York State in 1800. The household settled in the town of Bath, New York, in 1803. He escaped slavery at about age 21, settling in Rochester, New York, and then British North America. His autobiography, Twenty-Two Years a Slave, was published in 1857.

LifeEdit

Austin Steward was born in Prince William County, Virginia, in about 1793 to Robert and Susan Steward. He had a sister, Mary. They were enslaved by planter Capt. William Helm. Steward was seven years old when he was assigned his first duties as a house servant to Helm.<ref name=BlackPast>"Steward, Austin (1793-1869)", BlackPast.org.</ref> Steward taught himself to read in secrecy, but he was discovered and severely beaten.<ref name=BlackPast />

Helm moved his family and the Stewards to New York in 1800. Although it was a free state, it had a gradual abolition approach and slavery was still permitted.<ref name="uncsummary">Summary: Twenty-Two Years a Slave, and Forty Years a Freeman; Embracing a Correspondence of Several Years, While President of Wilberforce Colony, London, Canada West, Rochester, N.Y.: William Alling, 1857; at Documenting the American South, University of North Carolina</ref> After continued abuse when hired out to a brutal taskmaster, Steward determined to escape, which he did in 1814 at about age 21.Template:Citation needed

Steward made his way to Rochester, New York. Initially he worked for Darius Comstock, president of the Manumission Society, and took classes to increase his education.<ref name="uncsummary"/> Before his escape, he had consulted about pursuing legal manumission but was discouraged that it would take too long. In 1817 he started what became a successful business in Rochester,<ref>"Austin Steward, From Servitude to Authorship" Template:Webarchive, African American Registry.</ref> opening his own meat market and general store. He gradually acquired considerable property.<ref name=BlackPast /> According to his autobiography, he gave a speech on July 5, 1827, the celebration of final emancipation of slaves in New York, and gained press coverage of the event.<ref name="uncsummary"/>

In 1831, Steward went to British North America, devoting himself to aiding fugitive slaves. He was interested in a new settlement, the Wilberforce Colony (named in honor of William Wilberforce), located north of present-day London, Ontario. The Colony had been founded in 1829 by African-Americans fleeing the Ohio Black Codes, as well as rioting in Cincinnati.<ref name=BlackPast /> Almost immediately upon his arrival, Steward was named president of the Colony's board of managers. Wilberforce Colony struggled, however, with internal divisions and financial difficulties, and he eventually returned, nearly destitute,<ref name="uncsummary"/> to Rochester in 1837.

His memoir, Twenty-Two Years a Slave, and Forty Years a Freeman, was published by William Alling in 1857. It is considered a slave narrative, detailing his early life of enslavement and escape, as well as his years of freedom and work at Wilberforce Colony. In the years before the American Civil War, such books sometimes became bestsellers in the North, and abolitionists drew from them in their arguments against the cruelties of slavery.Template:Citation needed

Steward and his wife Patience had a daughter Barbara Ann Steward, who died of typhoid in 1861.<ref name="coloredconventions">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Steward died of typhoid fever on February 15, 1869, and was buried in Canandaigua, New York.<ref name=BlackPast />

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