The Plantation Owner Bought the Female Slave at Auction—Then Discovered Why No one else Bid on her!

Sold for $25.
A fine price for the day.
Welcome to Crypt Liturgy.
Before we begin, tell us in the comment section where you are watching from, your city, your country, and the time of the day.
If you have not subscribed yet, kindly do so now.
And remember to like this video because what you are about to hear is a story you will not want to miss a single paragraph of.
Relax your mind.
Stay away from all distractions and pay close attention as we begin the forgotten and chilling story of Eliza Ward, the last female slave at a Louisiana auction in 1859 and the terrifying secret that would destroy everyone who came near hereon.
The sweltering afternoon of August 12th, 1859.
A slave auction was held in the town square of St.
Martinville, Louisiana.
one of the regular monthly sales where human beings were displayed and sold to the highest bidder like livestock at market.
The auction that day had drawn a smaller crowd than usual because most of the enslaved people being sold were considered ordinary stock.
Field workers and house servants without special skills or characteristics that would drive compeтιтive bidding.
By late afternoon, the auctioneer was rushing through the final lots, eager to complete the sale and escape the oppressive heat that hung over the square like a wet blanket.
The last person to be brought onto the auction block was a woman recorded in the sale documents as Eliza Ward, approximately 32 years old, described as a house servant with cooking skills and experience managing domestic operations.
The auctioneer opened bidding at $300.
A modest price reflecting the woman’s age and the general ᴀssumption that female slaves over 30 had declining value for both labor and reproduction.
But something strange happened when Eliza was brought onto the platform.
The crowd, which had been calling out bids enthusiastically all afternoon, fell completely silent.
Men who had been competing aggressively for other enslaved people suddenly found reasons to look away to examine their auction cataloges to leave the square entirely.
The auctioneer, confused by this reaction, lowered the opening bid to $200, then to $100, then to $50.
Still, no one bid.
Eliza stood on the platform in complete silence, her face expressionless, her eyes fixed on some distant point beyond the crowd.
The silence stretched for several minutes until finally a voice called out from the back of the square.
A plantation owner named Richard Bowmont, newly arrived from Virginia and unfamiliar with Louisiana Plantation Society, bid $25 for Eliza.
The auctioneer, relieved to receive any bid at all, immediately declared the sale complete before anyone could reconsider.
Bowman paid his $25, took possession of Eliza, and arranged for her transport to his plantation 10 mi outside.
St.
Martinz Bowmont, led Eliza away from the auction square.
He noticed something that would later take on terrible significance.
The other buyers and sellers at the auction watched him leave with expressions that mixed pity with something darker, something that looked almost like fear.
An elderly slave trader approached Bowmont and spoke quietly, suggesting that Bowmont might want to reconsider the purchase, that $25 was not worth the trouble this woman would bring.
Bumont, proud and stubborn, dismissed the warning as the jealousy of someone who had missed an opportunity to acquire valuable property at an absurdly low price.
He believed he had gotten an extraordinary bargain, a skilled house servant, for less than the cost of a decent horse.
What Bowmont did not know was that Eliza Ward had been sold at auction six times in the previous 5 years and that every plantation owner who had purchased her had either died under mysterious circumstances or had been driven to madness within months of bringing her to their property.
The history of Eliza Ward, which Bowmont would only learn after it was too late to save himself, began in 1832 when she was born on a sugar plantation in southern Louisiana to an enslaved woman named Sarah and an unknown father.
Eliza’s early life followed the typical brutal pattern of slavery.
She worked from childhood, first in light tasks around the plantation house and then in increasingly demanding domestic service as she grew older.
She was intelligent and learned quickly, developing skills in cooking, household management, and the intricate social navigation required of enslaved people who worked in close proximity to their enslavers.
By her early 20s, Eliza had become a valued house servant.
the kind of enslaved person who commanded higher prices at auction because of her training and reliability.
But something happened to Eliza in 1854 that fundamentally changed her and that set in motion the chain of events that would make her the most feared enslaved woman in Louisiana.
She had been working on a plantation owned by a man named Thomas Garrett, a sugar planter known for extreme cruelty, even by the standards of a system built on violence.
Garrett had a particular practice that distinguished him from other enslavers.
He believed that enslaved people needed to be psychologically broken on a regular basis to maintain control.
and he had developed elaborate methods of psychological torture designed to destroy people’s sense of self and hope.
Eliza had endured years of physical abuse, Sєxual violence, and the casual cruelties that characterized slavery, but Garrett’s psychological torture was something different.
Something that drove several enslaved people on his plantation to suicide.
And that left others in states of permanent psychological damage.
The specific incident that transformed Eliza occurred in March of 1854 when Garrett decided to punish her for what he perceived as insolence.
She had apparently looked at him in a way he interpreted as disrespectful, had held his gaze for a moment too long when he gave her an order.
The punishment Garrett devised was to force Eliza to watch as he sold her four-year-old daughter to a slave trader who specialized in shipping children to the deep south where they would never be found.
Eliza begged, pleaded, offered to accept any physical punishment if Garrett would spare her child.
Garrett refused, and he made sure Eliza was restrained and forced to watch as the traitor.
took her daughter away while the child screamed for her mother.
This was not unusual in the slavery system.
Families were routinely separated for profit or punishment.
But something in Eliza broke that day in a way that created something entirely new according to testimony that would later be given by other enslaved people who witnessed the transformation.
Eliza stopped speaking after her daughter was taken.
She stopped showing any emotion, any response to orders, any reaction to punishment.
She became almost catatonic, performing tasks mechanically, but showing no sign of consciousness or will.
Garrett, frustrated by her unresponsiveness, began escalating his punishments, but nothing produced any reaction.
Eliza simply existed, moving through days like a ghost inhabiting a body that no longer cared whether it lived or died.
This state continued for approximately 2 months, and then something changed.
Eliza began speaking again, began responding to orders, began appearing to function normally.
But the other enslaved people on Garrett’s plantation noticed that she was fundamentally different.
Her eyes had changed, becoming flat and cold like still water.
Her voice had changed, becoming soft and distant, as if speaking from far away.
And she had developed the habit of staring at Garrett with an expression that made even hardened overseers uncomfortable, 3 months after Eliza’s daughter was taken.
Thomas Garrett died suddenly and mysteriously.
He had been in apparently good health, and there was no obvious cause of death.
The physician who examined the body noted some unusual symptoms, including seizures and respiratory distress, but attributed the death to some unknown illness.
Garrett’s widow sold most of the enslaved people on the plantation to settle debts.
And Eliza was sold at auction to a new owner, a cotton planter named William Harrison, who paid $800 for her.
Believing he was acquiring a valuable trained house servant, William Harrison brought Eliza to his plantation in May of 1854, and for the first few weeks, everything appeared normal.
Eliza performed her duties competently, cooked meals without complaint, managed the household servants efficiently.
Harrison congratulated himself on a wise purchase, and looked forward to years of reliable service.
But after approximately six weeks, Harrison began experiencing strange symptoms.
He complained of feeling watched even when alone, of hearing whispers in empty rooms, of having nightmares that left him exhausted and terrified.
His wife noticed that he had become increasingly paranoid, accusing servants of plotting against him, checking his food obsessively for poison, sleeping with weapons beside his bed.
The symptoms escalated until Harrison became completely irrational, raving about invisible threats and attacking family members he believed were trying to kill him.
In early August of 1854, less than 3 months after purchasing Eliza, William Harrison hanged himself in his study, leaving a suicide note that consisted of the repeated phrase, “She sees everything.
” written hundreds of times across multiple pages.
Harrison’s widow immediately sold Eliza at auction, desperate to remove her from the plantation.
This time, Elisa sold for only $200, despite her skills and training because rumors had begun circulating about the two ᴅᴇᴀᴅ owners.
A rice planter named Charles Morrison purchased her, dismissing the rumors as supersтιтious nonsense and believing he had gotten a bargain.
Morrison brought Eliza to his plantation in September of 1854.
By December, Morrison was ᴅᴇᴀᴅ from what physicians described as heart failure, but what his family believed was the result of extreme stress caused by months of escalating terror that Morrison claimed was caused by Eliza’s presence.
The pattern repeated four more times between 1855 and 1,859.
Eliza would be sold at auction, each time for a lower price as her reputation grew and fewer buyers were willing to risk purchasing her.
She would be brought to a new plantation where initially everything would seem normal.
Then the new owner would begin experiencing psychological symptoms, paranoia, insomnia, hallucinations, the overwhelming sensation of being watched and judged.
Within months, the owner would either die suddenly under mysterious circumstances or would be driven to madness and would either commit suicide or would have to be committed to an asylum.
Each time the enslaved people on the plantation would report the same observation, Eliza never did anything obviously threatening or dangerous.
She performed her duties quietly.
She obeyed orders without resistance.
She showed no emotion.
But there was something about her presence, about the way she looked at people, about the way she seemed to know things she could not possibly know, that created an atmosphere of dread that intensified over time until it became unbearable by August of 1859.
When Elisa was brought to the St.
Martinville auction, her reputation had spread throughout Louisiana Plantation Society.
Everyone who knew anything about the slave trade knew about the woman whose owners kept dying or going mad.
The bidding silence that greeted her appearance on the auction block reflected the fact that no one wanted her regardless of price.
The enslaved woman who should have sold for $800 or more based on her skills could not find a buyer willing to pay even $50.
She had become toxic property.
Someone whose presence brought death and madness, Richard Bowmont.
The Virginia plantation owner who purchased Eliza for $25, knew none of this history when he made his bid.
He was new to Louisiana, had no connections to local plantation society, and had not heard the stories that circulated through slave markets and plantation houses.
He saw only an opportunity to acquire a skilled servant at an absurdly low price, and he was pleased with his business acummen.
As he transported Eliza to his plantation, he tried to make conversation, asking about her skills and experience.
Eliza answered his questions in a soft, distant voice, providing brief factual responses without elaboration.
Bowman found her somewhat strange, but attributed this to the trauma of being sold yet again.
And he ᴀssumed she would warm up once she settled into her new situation.
The Bumont plantation was a medium-sized cotton operation with approximately 50 enslaved workers.
located on fertile land along Bayou Tet.
Bowmont had purchased the property earlier that year and was in the process of establishing himself as a planter after having sold his Virginia holdings.
He was ambitious, confident in his abilities and eager to prove himself successful in Louisiana’s compeтιтive plantation economy.
He ᴀssigned Eliza to work in the plantation house as head cook and house manager.
Positions that reflected her experience and that would make her responsible for overseeing several other enslaved domestic workers for the first week after Eliza’s arrival.
Everything proceeded normally.
She cooked meals efficiently, managed the household smoothly, and gave Bowmont no reason for complaint.
The other enslaved people on the plantation initially welcomed her, grateful to have someone competent managing the house, but within days they began noticing things that disturb them.
Eliza never spoke unless directly questioned.
She never showed any emotion regardless of circumstances.
And most disturbingly, she had a habit of staring at Bowmont during meals, watching him with an intensity that made everyone in the room uncomfortable.
When other enslaved workers asked Eliza about herself, about where she had come from, about her previous experiences, she would respond with silence, or with brief statements that revealed nothing.
First sign that something was wrong came at the end of Eliza’s second week at the plantation when Bowmont began complaining to his wife about unusual dreams.
He said he dreamed of a little girl crying for her mother, calling out endlessly in darkness.
The dream recurred every night becoming more vivid and more disturbing.
Bumont would wake exhausted and he began showing signs of sleep deprivation, irritability, difficulty concentrating, heightened anxiety.
His wife suggested he see a physician, but Bumont dismissed the dreams as meaningless and insisted he was fine, but the dreams intensified.
By the third week, Bumont was barely sleeping at all.
He told his wife that the dreams had changed.
That now he saw not just a crying child, but a woman watching him from shadows.
A woman whose face he could not quite see, but whose presence filled him with overwhelming guilt and dread.
He began asking his wife strange questions about whether she ever felt watched in the house, whether she ever heard whispers in empty rooms, whether she noticed anything unusual about Eliza.
His wife thought he was becoming paranoid from exhaustion and urged him to rest.
The enslaved workers on the plantation, however, had their own perspective on what was happening.
They had begun talking among themselves about Eliza, about the way she moved through the house like a ghost.
About how she always seemed to know where Bumont was and what he was doing even when she had no way of seeing him.
about how the temperature seemed to drop when she entered a room.
An elderly enslaved man named Moses, who had been on the plantation for decades, told the others that he had heard stories from Louisiana plantations about a woman whose owners always died or went mad, and he believed Eliza was that woman.
He warned the others to stay away from her, to avoid speaking to her, to never turn their backs on Herby.
The fourth week, Bowmont’s psychological state had deteriorated dramatically.
He was sleeping no more than an hour or two per night, and he had developed a tremor in his hands.
He complained constantly about feeling cold, even in the August heat.
He became obsessed with locked doors and windows, checking them repeatedly throughout the day and night.
Most disturbing to his wife, he began talking about the crying child from his dreams as if the child were real, as if she were somewhere on the plantation calling for help.
He organized searches of the property, demanding that enslaved workers help him find the child who needs her mother.
becoming angry and violent when they claimed to hear nothing during this period.
Eliza continued performing her duties with the same mechanical efficiency.
Showing no reaction to Bowmont’s deteriorating mental state.
But the other enslaved workers reported that she spent hours standing motionless in the kitchen or in hallways, staring in the direction of whatever room Bowman occupied.
When questioned about this behavior, she would resume working without explanation.
Some of the enslaved workers became so frightened of Eliza that they requested different ᴀssignments that would keep them away from the house.
But Bowmont refused these requests, not understanding the fear that was spreading through his enslaved workforce.
The crisis came in the middle of the fifth week.
During the night of September 16th, 1859, Bowmont’s wife woke to find him gone from their bedroom.
She searched the house and found him in the dining room, sitting at the table in darkness, talking to someone who was not there.
When she lit a lamp, she saw that he was covered in sweat despite the cool night air, and that his eyes had a wild unfocused quality.
He was having a conversation with an invisible presence, apologizing repeatedly, begging for forgiveness, saying that he did not know, but he would never have done it if he had known.
His wife tried to bring him back to bed, but he pushed her away violently, insisting that he had to finish the conversation, that the woman needed to hear his apology when morning came.
Bumont’s wife found him still sitting at the dining table, now completely silent and unresponsive.
She summoned a physician who examined Bumont and declared that he appeared to be suffering from a complete psychological break, possibly caused by a fever or brain illness.
The physician recommended that Bumont be taken to New Orleans for treatment at a facility that specialized in mental disorders.
Arrangements were made and Bumont was transported to New Orleans the following day, but removing Bumont from the plantation did not end the manifestation of whatever was happening.
The enslaved workers reported that they could hear Bumont’s voice in the house at night, even though he was a 100 miles away in New Orleans.
They reported seeing shadows that moved without any source of light to cast them.
They reported that the temperature in the house remained unnaturally cold despite the late summer heat.
And they reported that Eliza seemed to grow stronger and more present, that her movements became more deliberate, that her staring became more intense, as if she were drawing power from Bowmont’s absence.
News came from New Orleans.
After 2 weeks, Richard Bowmont had died in the facility where he was being treated.
The physicians reported that his final days had been consumed by terrified ravings about a woman and a child who were coming for him, about crimes he insisted he had committed, but that no one could identify, about debts that had to be paid.
He had died from what physicians described as exhaustion and cardiac arrest brought on by extreme psychological stress.
His final words, according to the attending physician’s notes, were she got what she wanted.
Bowman’s widow, now facing financial ruin and desperate to escape what she believed was a cursed property, made arrangements to sell the plantation.
Before leaving, she called together all the enslaved workers and demanded to know what had happened, what had killed her husband.
The enslaved workers were reluctant to speak.
But eventually Moses, the elderly man who had warned the others about Eliza, told the widow what they all knew.
That Eliza Ward was not what she appeared to be.
That she carried something with her that destroyed the men who owned her.
That she had killed or driven mad at least six plantation owners before Bumont.
And that the widow needed to get rid of Eliza immediately before anyone else died.
The widow confronted Eliza directly, demanding to know what she had done to Bowmont, threatening to have her whipped or sold to the most brutal plantation in Louisiana if she did not explain herself.
For the first time since arriving at the plantation, Eliza spoke more than a few words.
According to multiple witnesses who were present, Eliza said that she had done nothing to Bowmont except exist in his presence and allow him to see what he was.
She said that men who built their wealth on stealing children from mothers, who profited from families torn apart, who participated in a system of deliberate cruelty, could not endure being watched by someone who held them accountable.
She said that she had lost her daughter 5 years earlier and that the grief had transformed her into something that reflected back to enslavers the truth of what they were doing and that this reflection was unbearable to guilty consciences.
The widow, terrified by this explanation and by the calm way Eliza delivered it, arranged to have Eliza sold immediately to a slave trader from Texas who was pᴀssing through Louisiana, buying enslaved people for transport west.
The trader, unfamiliar with Eliza’s reputation, purchased her for $15 along with several other enslaved people.
Eliza was placed in a coff and marched west toward Texas.
What happened to her after she left Louisiana is unknown because the documentary trail disappears at that point.
But stories circulated through enslaved communities in Texas about a woman who had been brought from Louisiana and whose owners kept dying or going mad.
Stories that suggested Eliza’s pattern continued in new locations.
Story of Eliza Ward became a legend in Louisiana’s slavery folklore.
Pᴀssed down through generations in both white and black communities, but interpreted very differently by each.
White plantation owners told the story as a cautionary tale about the dangers of not properly investigating the history of enslaved people before purchase, about the need to avoid buying people who had unstable work histories.
But they struggled to explain what exactly Eliza had done because by all accounts she never poisoned anyone, never physically attacked anyone, never broke any rules or disobeyed orders.
She simply existed in ways that created psychological effects in her owners that drove them to madness or death.
The enslaved community interpreted the story differently.
They saw Eliza as a manifestation of accumulated grief and rage.
A woman who had been so thoroughly broken by the system that something inside her had transformed into a force that could destroy enslavers without ever lifting a hand against them.
They believed that her presence carried the weight of all the mothers who had lost children.
All the families that had been torn apart, all the suffering that slavery inflicted, and that this accumulated weight became visible to guilty men who could not escape their own complicity.
In some versions of the story pᴀssed down through oral tradition, Eliza was described as having made a bargain with spirits or ancestors, trading her own humanity for the power to avenge not just her own daughter but all the children stolen by slavery.
Modern psychologists and historians who have studied the sever fragmentaryary historical records of Eliza Wards case have proposed various explanations for what actually occurred.
Some suggest that Eliza may have been using subtle forms of psychological manipulation, creating atmospheric effects through barely perceptible actions that would not have been documented or noticed, but that could have accumulated into profound psychological effects on her owners.
Others suggest that the pattern of deaths and madness might have been coincidental or might have resulted from poisons or other physical causes that were not detected by primitive 19th century medical examinations.
Still others propose that Eliza may have actually done nothing at all.
That the deaths and madness were caused by other factors and that Eliza simply became a convenient scapegoat for plantation owners looking for explanations for inexplicable tragedies.
But the most compelling interpretation and the one that best accounts for the consistent pattern across multiple owners in different locations is that Eliza Ward had discovered a profound truth about the psychology of enslavers.
She had learned that men who built their lives on violence and cruelty, who participated daily in the torture and separation of families, who treated human beings as property, carried enormous guilt that they suppressed through various psychological defense mechanisms.
Eliza’s transformed state, her flat affect, her relentless staring, her knowing presence, her refusal to show fear or submission.
All of these behaviors penetrated the psychological defenses that allowed enslavers to function despite their actions.
By simply existing as a witness who would not look away, who would not pretend that slavery was normal or acceptable, who carried visible evidence of what the system destroyed.
Eliza made it impossible for her owners to maintain the lies they told themselves about being good.
Christian men who happen to hone slaves.
question of whether Eliza’s presence actually caused the deaths and madness or whether guilty men simply could not bear to be observed by their victims and destroyed themselves remains unanswerable from the historical record.
What is clear is that Elisa Ward became the most feared enslaved woman in Louisiana, that she was sold repeatedly for declining prices because no one wanted her.
And that the men who owned her died or went mad with remarkable consistency.
Whether this makes her a victim, a psychological warrior, a supernatural avenger, or simply an extremely unlucky person depends on one’s interpretation of extremely ambiguous evidence.
Broader significance of Eliza’s story lies in what it reveals about the psychological costs of slavery for everyone trapped in the system.
Enslavers carried enormous guilt that they could only manage through psychological defenses including denial, rationalization, and dehumanization of enslaved people.
When those defenses were penetrated, when enslavers were forced to confront the reality of what they were doing, the psychological consequences could be catastrophic.
Eliza seemed to have become, whether deliberately or unconsciously, a force that destroyed those defenses simply by existing and witnessing the fact that Eliza never had to do anything violent or illegal.
that she simply had to be present and watching suggests that slavery’s maintenance depended not just on physical violence but on psychological mechanisms that allowed participants to avoid confronting the moral reality of what they were doing.
When those mechanisms failed, the systems participants could not function.
This may explain why Elisa was so feared.
She represented the possibility that enslaved people could resist, not through physical rebellion, but through psychological and spiritual presence that undermine the mental structures slavery required.
What do you think about the story of Eliza Ward? Was she a woman who developed supernatural power to destroy her oppressors? Or was she simply someone whose trauma and grief created a psychological presence that guilty men could not endure? Do you believe that witnessing and presence can be forms of resistance as powerful as physical rebellion? These questions challenge us to think about the many ways enslaved people fought back against their oppression and about the psychological costs of participating in systems of cruelty.
If this story has moved you, inspired you, or made you think about the hidden forms of resistance that enslaved people practiced, show your support by liking this video right now.
Tell us in the comment section what part of the story struck you the most and what lessons you are taking away from the life of Elisa Ward.
And if you have not subscribed to Crypt Liturgy, do so now and turn on all notifications so you never miss another powerful history that the world tried to erase.
Share this video with someone who needs to hear it.
Share it with someone who loves deep stories, hidden truths, and forgotten history.
The more we share, the louder these lost voices become.
Until our next episode, stay curious, stay watchful, and remember that the past is never truly gone.
It speaks, it warns, it teaches.
And here on Liturgy, we will keep bringing you the stories they never wanted you to hear.