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Epps hires a crew of carpenters to help him build a house on his plantation. Among them is a white carpenter from Canada named Bass, who is a staunch abolitionist. After Northup overhears Bass communicating his anti-slavery views to Epps, he cautiously shares the story of his kidnapping. Bass is horrified and agrees to help Northup mail a letter his friends in New York.
Bass returns to the plantation and tells Northup that he has not received a response to the letter. He promises that he will personally get in touch with Northup’s relations in New York and urges Northup not to lose hope of obtaining his rightful freedom.
After receiving a brutal whipping for oversleeping, Northup begins a typical day of exhausting, pained labor. The normalcy of his day is broken, however, by the sight of two strange men crossing the field toward him.
Chapter 21 explains what transpired in New York while Northup awaited a response. Northup’s letters were forwarded to his wife, who shared them with the lawyer Henry B. Northup (former owner of Mintus, Solomon’s father). Henry B. Northup spent several months putting together a case to prove his client’s status as a free man, contacting several government officials before journeying to retrieve Solomon Northup from Louisiana. In Louisiana, Henry B. Northup had a chance meeting with Bass, who explained Solomon Northup’s situation.
With the help of a local sheriff, Henry B. Northup travels to Epps’s plantation and demands that his client be restored to freedom. Epps furiously protests, but to no avail.
Solomon Northup and Henry B. Northup stop in New Orleans to obtain a legal certificate of his status as a free man. They then stop in DC to press criminal charges against Burch, the slave pen owner who illegally enslaved Solomon Northup.
Burch’s trial displays the judicial system’s extreme bias in a White man’s favor. Burch is allowed to testify on his own behalf, whereas Northup is not because he is Black. In his testimony, Burch makes the absurd claim that Northup volunteered himself into slavery. Unable to contest this claim, Northup helplessly looks on as his captor is freed from all charges.
Northup then meets a warm homecoming welcome from his grateful, emotional family. This family includes his baby grandson—Solomon Northup Staunton—whom his daughter has named in her father’s honor.
The final chapters of Twelve Years a Slave are loaded with details to support the legal credibility of Northup’s case for freedom, as well as his case against the men who captured him. In keeping with this aim, Northup not only explains the legal proceedings Henry B. Northup takes to free him, but also includes the full text of a New York statute that criminalizes the kidnapping of free Black men. This evidence further supports his original aim to provide “a candid and truthful statement of facts” (5). Northup reaffirms his commitment to this truth-telling aim with the closing of his memoir, stating:
Those who read this book may form their own opinions of the ‘peculiar institution’ [of Slavery]. What it may be in other States, I do not profess to know; what it is in the region of the Red River, is truly and faithfully delineated in these pages. This is no fiction, no exaggeration. If I have failed in anything, it has been in presenting to the reader too prominently the bright side of the picture (217).
Just as in the early pages of his text, Northup emphasizes that his work is not a “fiction” akin to Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
Northup uses Burch’s absurd trial—wherein Burch goes free because Northup cannot offer his own testimony—to illustrate how far the justice system must progress. This moment of gross unfairness serves as a call for massive systemic changes and a call to arms for abolitionist activists.
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