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| Jerry Boyd and his wife were offered a good paying job in Iowa City |
How does that old saying go? If it’s too good to be true, it probably is.
Jerry Boyd learned that lesson the hard way back in 1860. Boyd, a free man of color, and his wife, Mary, lived in Galena, Illinois. From all accounts, Jerry was a hardworking man. Twenty years before that, he saved his money and purchased Mary from her previous owner, a man named Vandeventer in St. Louis.
Two men, George
Goodwin (also known as Wilder) and Peter Boulton offered them good paying jobs
if they would move to Iowa City.
A few days later,
Jerry and Mary Boyd, a fourteen-year-old mulatto girl who lived with them, a
younger white girl whom Mrs. Boyd was nursing, and Goodwin and Boulton were
headed west in a covered wagon.



