Youngest son Tilghman Davis began his work as an enslaved person as a child and became a house servant as an adult, and eventually a driver or coachman for the Ridgely family. This high-status position involved driving the carriages and caring for the carriage and racing horses, as well as the personal horses of the Ridgely family. After Emancipation, Tilghman lived in Baltimore City, where African Americans were establishing schools, churches, and political, civic, charitable, fraternal, and benevolent organizations, all of which supplied support for the recently emancipated. Tilghman had a wife, Elizabeth and they had eight children. The family lived at several residences in Baltimore City neighborhoods including Mount Vernon and Bolton Hill. |
Last updated: February 20, 2023