The Anti-Slavery Movement and the Underground Railroad
by James F. Caccamo
Colonial Era
The first importation of Africans in British North America was in 1619 at Jamestown,
Virginia. (Africans were in French North America by 1606). Massachusetts allowed
chattel slavery in 1641. Chattel slavery was legally recognized in British North
America 1650 although not actively practiced in all colonies.
In 1672, the
British crown endorsed the slave trade and created the Royal African Company to
expedite it.
In 1750,
Georgia permitted slavery, the last of the original colonies to do so.
Rhode Island
abolished slavery within its borders 1774.
Slavery was
abolished 1777 in Vermont and 1780 in Massachusetts. In 1780, gradual
emancipation was started in Pennsylvania. Other states to abolish slavery were
New Hampshire in 1783, Connecticut in 1784, and New York in 1799. New Jersey
instituted gradual emancipation in 1804. Slavery was outlawed in the Northwest
Territory in 1787.
National
The Ordinance of
1787 (Northwest Ordinance) required returning of runaways in the territory.
The U.S.
Constitution (1788) provided for return of fugitive slaves in Article 4, Section
3.
In 1790 Quakers
began lobbying Congress to abolish slavery. No action was taken by Congress.
The first federal
Fugitive Slave Law was enacted in 1793. It gave slave owners the right to pursue
and capture slaves and provided for a $500 fine for those helping runaways. In
that same year, Upper Canada (present Ontario) abolished slavery within its
borders.
France abolishes
slavery in all its territories in 1794.(Napoleon re-institutes slavery in
1802.)
In 1808, Congress
banned the African slave trade. The law was frequently broken. An estimated
quarter of a million Africans were illegally imported as slaves between 1808 and
1865.
Mexico abolished
slavery in 1829, but allowed slavery to continue in its Texas colony.
The 1820 Missouri
Compromise allowed Missouri to be a slave state but kept slavery out of the
north.
In 1831 William Lloyd Garrison sparked the Abolitionist movement when he began publishing the
Liberator. Also in 1831, Nat Turner’s rebellion took place.
In 1832 In the
aftermath of the Liberator, fervent Abolitionists attacked the position of the
American Colonization Society. The controversy was particularly heated in Ohio.
Slavery was
abolished throughout the British Empire, including Canada, in 1833.
In 1842 the
United States Supreme Court ruled in Prigg vs. Pennsylvania that "free" states
couldn’t pass laws negating federal fugitive slave laws within their borders.
The Fugitive
Recovery Bill of 1850 forced legal officials to assist claimants or face a $1000
fine, forbade slaves to testify in court on their own behalf, allowed claimants
to take any black into slavery as long as there was an affidavit issued by any
judge or magistrate, and levied a 6 month jail sentence, a $1000 fine and up to
$1000 in civil damages against anyone assisting a slave. California was admitted
as a free state and slavery was abolished in the District of Columbia. The
western territories were left open to slavery.
The 1854
Kansas-Nebraska Act left issue of slavery in new states up to popular
sovereignty. In fact, though, it produced a civil war, called "Bleeding Kansas",
where pro-slavery and anti-slavery forces engaged in vigilante activities.
In 1857, the
United State Supreme Court’s Dred Scott Decision (Scott vs. Sandford) nullified
anti-slavery advocates’ right to enforce "free" laws in their territories. It
also stated that a slave did not become free by entering a free state, that the
federal government could not bar slavery from any territory, and that blacks
were not and could not be citizens of the United States.
In a rescue of a
fugitive slave who had been captured in Oberlin and taken to Wellington, Ohio,
37 individuals are indicted for violating the Fugitive Recovery Bill of
1850.
John Brown, a
former resident of Franklin Mills, raided Harpers Ferry on October 16, 1859;
Brown was executed on December 2.
In November 1860
Abraham Lincoln was elected President. South Carolina seceded from the Union on
December 24, 1860. Ft. Sumter was attacked on April 12, 1861.
Abraham Lincoln
issued the Emancipation Proclamation Sept. 22, 1862, effective January 1, 1863
which affected only seceded states (not Kentucky, West Virginia, Maryland,
Missouri, or Delaware).
The 13th Amendment
to the Constitution abolished all slavery in the United States December 18,
1865. The 14th Amendment granted blacks citizenship July 28, 1868. The 15th
Amendment gave blacks the vote March 30, 1870.
In Ohio
In 1803 the
first constitution of the state prohibited slavery within its borders.
On January 5,
1804 , Ohio passed the first "Black Laws". All blacks in Ohio had to obtain a
Certificate of Freedom by June of 1804. It had to be renewed every two years.
$50 in fines were levied against those who hired blacks without certificates.
There was a $1000 fine for helping runaways escape.
A January 25,
1807 law said blacks had to pay a $500 per head bond for a certificate of
freedom or leave the state within 20 days. $100 was added on to the fine of
those helping runaways. Blacks were not permitted to testify in any trial
involving whites, nor could they sue whites. Blacks and persons of mixed
ancestry were forbidden to marry whites. Both the 1804 and 1807 laws prohibited
black children from attending public school (These laws were repealed in 1849).
In the summer of
1832, Western Reserve College in Hudson, Ohio was torn asunder by the Abolition
versus Colonization debate.
The first state
anti-slavery convention was in Putnam, Ohio near Zanesville in Muskingum County,
April 23-24, 1835. Portage County's representatives included Asahel Kilborn from
Hudson and Philo Wright from Tallmadge.
On February 28,
1839, Ohio passed new laws which levied a $500 fine for helping fugitive slaves
with a prison term of up to 60 days. The law allowed any black to be taken into
custody based on a warrant issued by any judge, justice of the peace, or
mayor.
During the
1848-1849 legislative season, the Ohio House debated seceding from the Union in
protest over continued slavery in the south.
Separate schools
for blacks were mandated in Ohio in 1853. A new law in 1861 prohibited
interracial marriages again. These two "Black Laws" weren’t repealed until 1887.
Blacks in Ohio
were prohibited from voting until 1870, when the 15th Amendment to the
Constitution was adopted.
Quotes about the UGRR in Northeast Ohio
In the summer
of 1825, a group of fugitive slaves showed up at the Woodard Tavern in Franklin
Mills (now Kent) that stood on the southwest corner of Fairchild Road and Mantua
Street. Joshua Woodard hid the family, fed them, and in the morning arranged for
his son, James, to load them in a wagon and drive them north. The party left
behind a small boy, whom Mrs. Woodard raised.
David Hudson,
Jr. writes in his diary: "Two men came this evening in a sleigh, bringing a
Negro woman, a runaway slave, and her two children." to the David Hudson House,
Hudson, Ohio January 5, 1826.
John Buss
writes in his diary "A runaway slave, his wife, and child..." arrived on the
Western Reserve College campus (in Hudson) November 11, 1834. The boys at the
college scraped up $5.00 to send the family on to Cleveland.
Lora Case
writes in "It was a rare thing that a passenger attempted it [the Underground
Railroad] or got through on our road." July 1859. Case's station was between
Hudson and Streetsboro on State Route 303.
To the west is
the farmhouse in which John Brown's brother, Jeremiah Root Brown, ran a station
and where the guns for the Harpers Ferry raid were stored.
In Franklin
Mills, at the old Cuyahoga House where Diggers Restaurant now stands on Mantua
Street, Jonathan and Eliza James hid slaves in a hollowed-out section of the
barn wall.
To the south of the Western Reserve area, the main helpers on the Underground
Railroad were Quakers. A good example of one of their stations on the
Underground Railroad is Spring Hill in Massillon, Stark County. It was the home
of Thomas and Charity Rotch who were prominent Stark County Quakers.