Draft:Rhodes Family Incident

The Rhodes Family Incident describes the story of the Rhodes Family who escaped slavery from Missouri in 1837 and legally won their freedom in 1845. Their enslaver, Singleton Vaughn, found them in Hamilton County, Indiana in 1844 and went to court to claim the family as his property. The court found that since the family lived in Illinois, which was a free state, for six months, they were legally free before Vaughn had bought them. Therefore Vaughn had no legal claim over them.

History
The Rhodes family consisted of John and Louann Rhodes, a married couple, and Lydia Rhodes, their daughter—but were previously known as the Burkes while enslaved. In 1836, the family was sold from Illinois to Singleton Vaughn in Missouri. In April 1836, after learning that Vaughn planned to sell Louann and Lydia and forcefully separate the family, the Rhodes escaped to Illinois where they were temporarily jailed. After the Underground Railroad members in Illinois broke the family out of jail, the family travelled and subsequently settled in Hamilton County, Indiana.

In 1844, Singleton Vaughn managed to track them down to their home in Hamilton County. After being found, John Rhodes told Vaughn that a neighbor owed him a $50 debt and asked to go collect it before they left. Vaughn allowed this as the money would legally go to him after finding the Rhodes family. However, there was no debt; Rhodes had wanted to call for help from his neighbors.

After a crowd of 150 neighbors had gathered around Vaughn, he tried to leave with the Rhodes to Noblesville, Indiana, where he wanted to go to court to legally reown the Rhodes family. The neighbors urged them to go to Westfield, Indiana, which was known to be more abolitionist leaning in the court. They successfully steered the carriage to Westfield.

Upon being taken to court in the case of Vaughn v. Williams of 1845, the jury had found the Rhodes family to be legally free because they had spent 6 months in Illinois, a free state. Vaughn had no ownership over the family and could not force them back into slavery.