Occupation: Slave
Husband: Adam
Children: 8 Known
Sold by Br. Fries to a slave-dealer on September 28, 1833. Husband Adam was not sold.
"Wilhelm Fries lived to be nearly a hundred years old, and to the end of his life Fanny and Adam belonged to him. After his wife's death Fanny and Adam cared for the old master faithfully and devotedly. The Negro couple had eight children, all baptized in the Colored Church. Fanny died April 11, 1870 and Adam on September 7 of that same year. Both were buried in the graveyard of the Colored Church in Salem."
Citation of the quoted information above:
Fries, Adelaide L., and Douglas LeTell Rights, eds. Records of the Moravians in North Carolina. 1823-1837 ed. Vol. VIII. Raleigh, North Carolina: State Department of Archives and History, 1954. 3841.
Possible children of Fanny:
Little Carl
Eugene Enoch
Ludwig Alexander Born June 29, 1831
Children are listed as possible children because there were multiple Fanny's referenced in the Records of the Moravians, without last names or references of their masters.
Occupation: Slave
Husband: Adam
Children: 8 Known
Sold by Br. Fries to a slave-dealer on September 28, 1833. Husband Adam was not sold.
"Wilhelm Fries lived to be nearly a hundred years old, and to the end of his life Fanny and Adam belonged to him. After his wife's death Fanny and Adam cared for the old master faithfully and devotedly. The Negro couple had eight children, all baptized in the Colored Church. Fanny died April 11, 1870 and Adam on September 7 of that same year. Both were buried in the graveyard of the Colored Church in Salem."
Citation of the quoted information above:
Fries, Adelaide L., and Douglas LeTell Rights, eds. Records of the Moravians in North Carolina. 1823-1837 ed. Vol. VIII. Raleigh, North Carolina: State Department of Archives and History, 1954. 3841.
Possible children of Fanny:
Little Carl
Eugene Enoch
Ludwig Alexander Born June 29, 1831
Children are listed as possible children because there were multiple Fanny's referenced in the Records of the Moravians, without last names or references of their masters.
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