Virginia Memory, Library of Virginia
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THIS DAY IN VIRGINIA HISTORY

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January 17, 1820

Judith Hope (fl. 1818–1828), Petition to the Virginia House of Delegates, ca. 1819, Manuscript, Records of the General Assembly, Legislative Petitions, City of Richmond, Record Group 78, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia. Judith Hope (fl. 1818–1828), Petition to the Virginia House of Delegates, ca. 1819, Manuscript, Records of the General Assembly, Legislative Petitions, City of Richmond, Record Group 78, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia. Judith Hope (fl. 1818–1828), Petition to the Virginia House of Delegates, ca. 1819, Manuscript, Records of the General Assembly, Legislative Petitions, City of Richmond, Record Group 78, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia. Judith Hope (fl. 1818–1828), Petition to the Virginia House of Delegates, ca. 1819, Manuscript, Records of the General Assembly, Legislative Petitions, City of Richmond, Record Group 78, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia.

Judith Hope's Petition Was Rejected

Judith Hope (ca. 1803–1873), a young, enslaved woman, submitted this petition to the General Assembly in December 1819 to request that an exemption be made from a law passed in 1806 required newly freed people to leave the state. She wanted to remain in the state as a free woman if her mother, who had purchased her, emancipated her from slavery. Laws passed during the previous two decades had required freed slaves to leave the state within one year of emancipation, or face reenslavement. Although the General Assembly rejected her 1819 petition, Judith Hope finally gained her freedom in 1828.