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Eliza Cooley Story
Eliza Cooley was one of those who settled in
Staten Island. In 1820 she was Eliza Morriss,
a 20-year-old free black woman in Gloucester County,
Virginia. After she purchased a slave, Philip
Cooler age 26, from his owners, they married and
had five children. Through hard work, they accumulated
a fair amount of real and personal property.
Some time after they were married, Eliza decided
to apply for Philips manumission or freedom
papers, but an 1806 law had been passed in Virginia
forcing any slave freed after that date to leave
the state within twelve months. The white slave
holders did not want additional free black people
in the state, because slave rebellions were not
unusual. As each slave insurrection occurred,
white hostility toward free blacks increased because
they would assist the slaves. Philips freedom
was granted, but his petition to the Virginia
State Legislature to remain in the state was refused.
In 1830, the Coolers moved to Staten Island with
their five children: May, Eliza, Rebecca, Betsy
and William. Soon after their arrival, Philip
purchased 22 acres of land for $750.00 from Abraham
Totten of Westfield in Richmond County. It looked
out onto Princes Bay. He built their house
overlooking the bay and immediately entered the
oyster business. Once settled, Philip returned
to Virginia and purchased his brother, Baylor.
While there, he applied for and got his brothers
freedom. When they returned to Staten Island,
Baylor purchased nine acres of land adjacent to
Philips. Working together, their oyster
business rapidly grew.
Two years later, in 1832, Philip sailed his sloop
to New York City with a load of oysters to sell.
It is said that on his return trip, while bringing
back some bricks for his house, he must have run
into a storm, that a sudden squall must have destroyed
his boat. No one could find any trace of it. His
body was found washed up on the shore.
Philips funeral was held at the Rossville
African Methodist Episcopal Church in Sandy Ground.
Eliza, age 32, was now a widow with five children.
Even though Baylor and friends encouraged and
supported Eliza, she mourned and grieved in her
loss in silence. Yet, she went on to bring up
Mary, Eliza, Rebecca, Betsy, and William. At some
point, the name Cooler was changed to Cooley.
Eliza Morriss Cooley died in 1884 at the age
of eighty-four.
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