Women’s Storied Lives

The Curse of Caste, or, The Slave Bride (1865)

The Curse of Caste, or, The Slave Bride (1865)
Julia C. Collins 1842-1865, edited by William L. Andrews and Mitch Kachun.
The Ohio State University Rare Books and Manuscripts Library, Part of the Charvat Collection of American Literature
PS1359.C5457 C65 2006


Julia Collins, the first published African American author, wrote this book as she was suffering from tuberculosis. The piece of historical fiction was unfinished upon her death, leaving editors to create their own endings for the story before publishing. The story follows the life of Lina, a young woman who is enslaved, despite only being a quarter black. Her master's son, Richard, falls in love with her, inevitably and purchasing her seeking her hand in marriage. Because of Lina's race and status as a slave, Richard is treated as an outcast. His father claims their marriage is illegal, refusing to even acknowledge Lina as Roberts wife. Richard’s father, in rage, ends up shooting his son, claiming his wife and child both died. Despite the strength of their love and Lina’s excitement, we see interracial and slave marriage as a formidable, harmful thing, so much so that their history becomes erased. 





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