<petition><petition_analysis_number>20482801</petition_analysis_number><petition_url>https://dlas.uncg.edu/petitions/petition/20482801</petition_url><state>District of Columbia</state><county>Washington</county><location_type>County</location_type><file_day>8</file_day><file_month>9</file_month><file_year>1828</file_year><filing_court>Circuit</filing_court><end_day>8</end_day><end_month>9</end_month><end_year>1828</end_year><ending_court>Circuit</ending_court><result>granted</result><enslaved_count>1</enslaved_count><fpoc_count>0</fpoc_count><total_people_count>6</total_people_count><repository>National Archives, Washington, D. C.</repository><abstract>Mary Donoho, a woman of color, was sold to Thomas Waring, who left her in the care of Bayer Jeffreys, "with directions to give her her freedom upon her earning &amp; paying therefor eighty dollars."   She was then sold to Archibald Thompson under the same terms: that she would be allowed to purchase her freedom.  Donoho now asserts that she has been "hired to several persons successively at three dollars a month, until she has paid as she verily believes, to the said Archibald Thompson, more than Eighty dollars &amp; is now Entitled to her freedom."  However, Donoho has been arrested in Washington as a runaway slave, and she fears that Thompson has sold her from jail to Henry Ryan, who may sell her as a slave for life out of the court's jurisdiction.  She seeks an injunction preventing Thompson and Ryan from removing her before her petition for freedom is heard by the court.</abstract><subjects><subject>owner(s)/citizens manumit/free slave</subject><subject>Sues for freedom (enslaved)</subject><subject>Purchase of freedom</subject><subject>Virtually free (enslaved)</subject><subject>Jails/Workhouses</subject><subject>Hiring value (enslaved)</subject><subject>Freedom seekers</subject><subject>Purchase/Sale prices (enslaved)</subject></subjects></petition>