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New York Manumission Society

The New-York Manumission Society was an American organization founded in 1785 by U.S. Founding Father John Jay, among others, to promote the gradual abolition of slavery and manumission of slaves of African descent within the state of New York. The organization was made up entirely of white men, most of whom were wealthy and held influential positions in society. Throughout its history, which ended in 1849 after the abolition of slavery in New York,[1] the society battled against the slave trade, and for the eventual emancipation of all the slaves in the state. It founded the African Free School for the poor and orphaned children of slaves and free people of color.

Founding edit

The New-York Manumission Society was founded in 1785, under the full name "The New-York Society for Promoting the Manumission of Slaves, and Protecting Such of Them as Have Been, or May be Liberated". The organization originally comprised a few dozen friends, many of whom were themselves slaveholders at the time. The members were motivated in part by the rampant kidnapping of free blacks from the streets of New York, who were then sold into slavery.[2] Several of the members were Quakers.[2]

Robert Troup presided over the first meeting,[3] which was held on January 25, 1785, at the home of John Simmons, who had space for the nineteen men in attendance since he kept an inn. Troup, who owned two slaves, and Melancton Smith were appointed to draw up rules, and John Jay, who owned five slaves, was elected as the Society's first president.[2]

At the second meeting, held on February 4, 1785, the group grew to 31 members, including Alexander Hamilton.[1][2]

The Society formed a ways-and-means committee to deal with the difficulty that more than half of the members, including Troup and Jay, owned slaves (mostly a few domestic servants per household). The committee reported a plan for gradual emancipation: members would free slaves then younger than 28 when they reached the age of 35, slaves between 28 and 38 in seven years' time, and slaves over 45 immediately. This was voted down, and the committee was dissolved.[2]

Activities edit

Lobbying and boycotts edit

John Jay had been a prominent leader in the antislavery cause since 1777, when he drafted a state law to abolish slavery in New York. The draft failed, as did a second attempt in 1785. In 1785, all state legislators except one voted for some form of gradual emancipation. However, they did not agree on what civil rights would be given to the slaves once they were freed.

Jay brought prominent political leaders into the Society, and also worked closely with Aaron Burr, later head of the Democratic-Republicans in New York. The Society started a petition against slavery, which was signed by almost all the politically prominent men in New York, of all parties and led to a bill for gradual emancipation. Burr, in addition to supporting the bill, made an amendment for immediate abolition, which was voted down.

The Society was instrumental in having a state law passed in 1785 prohibiting the sale of slaves imported into the state, and making it easy for slaveholders to manumit slaves either by a registered certificate or by will. In 1788 the purchase of slaves for removal to another state was forbidden; they were allowed trial by jury "in all capital cases;" and the earlier laws about slaves were simplified and restated. The emancipation of slaves by the Quakers was legalized in 1798. At that date, there were still about 33,000 slaves statewide.[4]

The Society organized boycotts against New York merchants and newspaper owners involved in the slave trade. The Society had a special committee of militants who visited newspaper offices to warn publishers against accepting advertisements for the purchase or sale of slaves.

Another committee kept a list of people who were involved in the slave trade, and urged members to boycott anyone listed. According to historian Roger Kennedy:

Those [blacks] who remained in New York soon discovered that until the Manumission Society was organized, things had gotten worse, not better, for blacks. Despite the efforts of Burr, Hamilton, and Jay, the slave importers were busy. There was a 23 percent increase in slaves and a 33 percent increase in slaveholders in New York City in the 1790s.[5]

Helping free Blacks edit

In 1806, the society obtained a court writ forbidding a sloop from leaving the port with three free blacks on board, who had been seized to sell in another state as enslaved.[6]

Accomplishments and legacy edit

African Free School edit

 
Lithograph of second school, 1922

In 1787, the Society founded the African Free School.[7] No other schools in New York were open to Blacks.

Legislation edit

Beginning in 1785, the Society lobbied for a state law to abolish slavery in the state, as all the other northern states (except New Jersey) had done. Considerable opposition came from the Dutch areas upstate (where slavery was still popular),[8] as well as from the many businessmen in New York who profited from the slave trade. The two houses passed different emancipation bills and could not reconcile them. Every member of the New York legislature but one voted for some form of gradual emancipation, but no agreement could be reached on the civil rights of freedmen afterwards.[citation needed]

Some measure of success finally came in 1799[9][page needed] when John Jay, as Governor of New York State, signed the Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery into law; however it still ignored the subject of civil rights[which?] for freed slaves.[9][page needed][10][full citation needed] The resulting legislation declared that, from July 4 of that year, all children born to slave parents would be free. It also outlawed the exportation of current slaves to other states. However, the Act held the caveat that the children would be subject to apprenticeship. These same children would be required to serve their mother's owner until age twenty-eight for males, and age twenty-five for females. The law defined the children of slaves as a type of indentured servant, while scheduling them for eventual freedom.[9][page needed]

Another law was passed in 1817:

Whereas by a law of this State, passed the 31st of March, 1817, all slaves born between the 4th of July, 1799, and the 31st of March, 1817 shall become free, the males at 28, and females at 25 years old, and all slaves born after the 31st of March, 1817, shall be free at 21 years old, and also all slaves born before the 4th day of July, 1799 shall be free on the 4th day of July, 1827[11]

The last slaves in New York were emancipated by July 4, 1827; the process was the largest emancipation in North America before 1861.[12] Although the law as written did not set free those born between 1799 and 1817, many still children, public sentiment in New York had changed between 1817 and 1827, enough so that in practice they were set free as well. The press referred to it as a "General Enancipation". An estimated 10,000 enslaved New Yorkers were freed in 1827.[13]

Thousands of freedmen celebrated with a parade in New York. The parade was deliberately held on July 5, not the 4th.[14]

Contrasts to other anti-slavery efforts edit

The Society was founded to address slavery in the state of New York, while other anti-slavery societies directed their attention to slavery as a national issue. The Quakers of New York petitioned the First Congress (under the Constitution) for the abolition of the slave trade. In addition, Benjamin Franklin and the Pennsylvania Abolition Society petitioned for the abolition of slavery in the new nation, while the New York Manumission Society did not act. Hamilton and others believed that Federal action on slavery would endanger the compromise worked out at the Constitutional Convention, and, by extension, would endanger the new United States.[15]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Davis, Dorothy. "New York's Manumission (Free the Slaves!) Society & Its African Free School, 1785–1849". Education Update Online. from the original on 2017-11-23. Retrieved 2006-12-12.
  2. ^ a b c d e Chernow, Ron (2005). Alexander Hamilton. Penguin Press. pp. 214–215. ISBN 978-0-14-303475-9.
  3. ^ Foner, Eric (2016). "Columbia and Slavery: A Preliminary Report" (PDF). Columbia and Slavery. Columbia University. pp. 22–25. (PDF) from the original on 2018-06-20.
  4. ^ Nelson, Peter (1926). The American Revolution in New York: Its Political, Social and Economic Significance. Albany, The University of the state of New York. p. 237.
  5. ^ Kennedy, Roger G. (2000). Burr, Hamilton, and Jefferson: A Study in Character. Oxford University Press. p. 92. ISBN 978-0-19-513055-3.
  6. ^ White, Shane (1991). Somewhat More Indeoendent: The End of Slavery in New York City, 1770–1810. Cited from p. 174 of the excerpt included in American Slavery, ed. James Miller, San Diego, Greenhaven Press, 2001. University of Georgia Press.
  7. ^ New York Historical Society – Manumission (finding aid). New York University Library.
  8. ^ Parmet, Herbert S.; Hecht, Marie B. (1967). Aaron Burr. New York, Macmillan. p. 76.
  9. ^ a b c McManus, Edgar J. (1968). History of Negro Slavery in New York. Syracuse University Press.
  10. ^ Jay, John; Jay, Sarah Livingston (2005). Selected Letters of John Jay and Sarah Livingston Jay. pp. 297–99. ISBN 9780786419555.
  11. ^ "July 4, 1827.—Jubilee from Domestic Slavery". Evening Post (New York, New York). July 3, 1827. p. 3 – via newspapers.com.
  12. ^ Sudderth, Jake (2002). "John Jay and Slavery". Columbia University.
  13. ^ "General Slave Emancipation in New-zYork". North Star (Danville, Vermont). July 3, 1827. p. 3 – via newspapers.com.
  14. ^ "From the New York Daily Advertiser, July 6". Hartford Courant (Hartford, Connecticut). July 9, 1827. p. 2 – via newspapers.com.
  15. ^ McDonald, Forrest (1982). Alexander Hamilton: A Biography. p. 177. ISBN 9780393300482.

Further reading edit

  • Berlin, Ira; Harris, Leslie M., eds. (2005). Slavery in New York. New Press. ISBN 1-56584-997-3.
  • Gellman, David N. (2006). Emancipating New York: The Politics of Slavery And Freedom, 1777–1827. Louisiana State Univ. Press. ISBN 0-8071-3174-1.
  • Gellman, David N. (2001). "Pirates, Sugar, Debtors, and Slaves: Political Economy and the Case for Gradual Abolition in New York". Slavery & Abolition. 22 (2): 51–68. doi:10.1080/714005193. ISSN 0144-039X. S2CID 143335845.
  • Gellman, David N. (2000). "Race, the Public Sphere, and Abolition in Late Eighteenth-century New York". Journal of the Early Republic. 20 (4): 607–636. doi:10.2307/3125009. ISSN 0275-1275. JSTOR 3125009.
  • Harris, Leslie M. (August 2001). "African-Americans in New York City, 1626–1863". Department of History Newsletter. Emory University. from the original on 2017-12-03. Retrieved 2006-12-11.
  • Harris, Leslie M. (2003). In the Shadow of Slavery: African Americans in New York City, 1626–1863.
  • Horton, James Oliver (2004). "Alexander Hamilton: Slavery and Race in a Revolutionary Generation". New-York Journal of American History. 65 (3): 16–24. ISSN 1551-5486.
  • Littlefield, Daniel C. (2000). "John Jay, the Revolutionary Generation, and Slavery". New York History. 81 (1): 91–132. ISSN 0146-437X.
  • New-York Historical Society (2011). . Examination Days: The New York African Free School Collection. Archived from the original on 2011-05-15.
  • Newman, Richard S. (2002). The Transformation of American Abolitionism: Fighting Slavery in the Early Republic. Univ. of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-2671-5.
  • Schaetzke, E. Anne (1998). "Slavery in the Genesee Country (Also Known as Ontario County) 1789 to 1827". Afro-Americans in New York Life and History. 22 (1): 7–40. ISSN 0364-2437.

External links edit

  • The Records of the New-York Manumission Society 1785–1849 at the New York Historical Society
  • Records of the New-York Manumission Society
  • Jay Heritage Center
  • Memorials of Peter A. Jay

york, manumission, society, further, information, history, slavery, york, york, manumission, society, american, organization, founded, 1785, founding, father, john, among, others, promote, gradual, abolition, slavery, manumission, slaves, african, descent, wit. Further information History of slavery in New York The New York Manumission Society was an American organization founded in 1785 by U S Founding Father John Jay among others to promote the gradual abolition of slavery and manumission of slaves of African descent within the state of New York The organization was made up entirely of white men most of whom were wealthy and held influential positions in society Throughout its history which ended in 1849 after the abolition of slavery in New York 1 the society battled against the slave trade and for the eventual emancipation of all the slaves in the state It founded the African Free School for the poor and orphaned children of slaves and free people of color Contents 1 Founding 2 Activities 2 1 Lobbying and boycotts 2 2 Helping free Blacks 3 Accomplishments and legacy 3 1 African Free School 3 2 Legislation 4 Contrasts to other anti slavery efforts 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Further reading 8 External linksFounding editThe New York Manumission Society was founded in 1785 under the full name The New York Society for Promoting the Manumission of Slaves and Protecting Such of Them as Have Been or May be Liberated The organization originally comprised a few dozen friends many of whom were themselves slaveholders at the time The members were motivated in part by the rampant kidnapping of free blacks from the streets of New York who were then sold into slavery 2 Several of the members were Quakers 2 Robert Troup presided over the first meeting 3 which was held on January 25 1785 at the home of John Simmons who had space for the nineteen men in attendance since he kept an inn Troup who owned two slaves and Melancton Smith were appointed to draw up rules and John Jay who owned five slaves was elected as the Society s first president 2 At the second meeting held on February 4 1785 the group grew to 31 members including Alexander Hamilton 1 2 The Society formed a ways and means committee to deal with the difficulty that more than half of the members including Troup and Jay owned slaves mostly a few domestic servants per household The committee reported a plan for gradual emancipation members would free slaves then younger than 28 when they reached the age of 35 slaves between 28 and 38 in seven years time and slaves over 45 immediately This was voted down and the committee was dissolved 2 Activities editLobbying and boycotts edit John Jay had been a prominent leader in the antislavery cause since 1777 when he drafted a state law to abolish slavery in New York The draft failed as did a second attempt in 1785 In 1785 all state legislators except one voted for some form of gradual emancipation However they did not agree on what civil rights would be given to the slaves once they were freed Jay brought prominent political leaders into the Society and also worked closely with Aaron Burr later head of the Democratic Republicans in New York The Society started a petition against slavery which was signed by almost all the politically prominent men in New York of all parties and led to a bill for gradual emancipation Burr in addition to supporting the bill made an amendment for immediate abolition which was voted down The Society was instrumental in having a state law passed in 1785 prohibiting the sale of slaves imported into the state and making it easy for slaveholders to manumit slaves either by a registered certificate or by will In 1788 the purchase of slaves for removal to another state was forbidden they were allowed trial by jury in all capital cases and the earlier laws about slaves were simplified and restated The emancipation of slaves by the Quakers was legalized in 1798 At that date there were still about 33 000 slaves statewide 4 The Society organized boycotts against New York merchants and newspaper owners involved in the slave trade The Society had a special committee of militants who visited newspaper offices to warn publishers against accepting advertisements for the purchase or sale of slaves Another committee kept a list of people who were involved in the slave trade and urged members to boycott anyone listed According to historian Roger Kennedy Those blacks who remained in New York soon discovered that until the Manumission Society was organized things had gotten worse not better for blacks Despite the efforts of Burr Hamilton and Jay the slave importers were busy There was a 23 percent increase in slaves and a 33 percent increase in slaveholders in New York City in the 1790s 5 Helping free Blacks edit In 1806 the society obtained a court writ forbidding a sloop from leaving the port with three free blacks on board who had been seized to sell in another state as enslaved 6 Accomplishments and legacy editAfrican Free School edit nbsp Lithograph of second school 1922In 1787 the Society founded the African Free School 7 No other schools in New York were open to Blacks Legislation edit Beginning in 1785 the Society lobbied for a state law to abolish slavery in the state as all the other northern states except New Jersey had done Considerable opposition came from the Dutch areas upstate where slavery was still popular 8 as well as from the many businessmen in New York who profited from the slave trade The two houses passed different emancipation bills and could not reconcile them Every member of the New York legislature but one voted for some form of gradual emancipation but no agreement could be reached on the civil rights of freedmen afterwards citation needed Some measure of success finally came in 1799 9 page needed when John Jay as Governor of New York State signed the Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery into law however it still ignored the subject of civil rights which for freed slaves 9 page needed 10 full citation needed The resulting legislation declared that from July 4 of that year all children born to slave parents would be free It also outlawed the exportation of current slaves to other states However the Act held the caveat that the children would be subject to apprenticeship These same children would be required to serve their mother s owner until age twenty eight for males and age twenty five for females The law defined the children of slaves as a type of indentured servant while scheduling them for eventual freedom 9 page needed Another law was passed in 1817 Whereas by a law of this State passed the 31st of March 1817 all slaves born between the 4th of July 1799 and the 31st of March 1817 shall become free the males at 28 and females at 25 years old and all slaves born after the 31st of March 1817 shall be free at 21 years old and also all slaves born before the 4th day of July 1799 shall be free on the 4th day of July 1827 11 The last slaves in New York were emancipated by July 4 1827 the process was the largest emancipation in North America before 1861 12 Although the law as written did not set free those born between 1799 and 1817 many still children public sentiment in New York had changed between 1817 and 1827 enough so that in practice they were set free as well The press referred to it as a General Enancipation An estimated 10 000 enslaved New Yorkers were freed in 1827 13 Thousands of freedmen celebrated with a parade in New York The parade was deliberately held on July 5 not the 4th 14 Contrasts to other anti slavery efforts editThe Society was founded to address slavery in the state of New York while other anti slavery societies directed their attention to slavery as a national issue The Quakers of New York petitioned the First Congress under the Constitution for the abolition of the slave trade In addition Benjamin Franklin and the Pennsylvania Abolition Society petitioned for the abolition of slavery in the new nation while the New York Manumission Society did not act Hamilton and others believed that Federal action on slavery would endanger the compromise worked out at the Constitutional Convention and by extension would endanger the new United States 15 See also editAmerican Colonization Society Category Members of the New York Manumission Society Phoenix Society New York Notes edit a b Davis Dorothy New York s Manumission Free the Slaves Society amp Its African Free School 1785 1849 Education Update Online Archived from the original on 2017 11 23 Retrieved 2006 12 12 a b c d e Chernow Ron 2005 Alexander Hamilton Penguin Press pp 214 215 ISBN 978 0 14 303475 9 Foner Eric 2016 Columbia and Slavery A Preliminary Report PDF Columbia and Slavery Columbia University pp 22 25 Archived PDF from the original on 2018 06 20 Nelson Peter 1926 The American Revolution in New York Its Political Social and Economic Significance Albany The University of the state of New York p 237 Kennedy Roger G 2000 Burr Hamilton and Jefferson A Study in Character Oxford University Press p 92 ISBN 978 0 19 513055 3 White Shane 1991 Somewhat More Indeoendent The End of Slavery in New York City 1770 1810 Cited from p 174 of the excerpt included in American Slavery ed James Miller San Diego Greenhaven Press 2001 University of Georgia Press New York Historical Society Manumission finding aid New York University Library Parmet Herbert S Hecht Marie B 1967 Aaron Burr New York Macmillan p 76 a b c McManus Edgar J 1968 History of Negro Slavery in New York Syracuse University Press Jay John Jay Sarah Livingston 2005 Selected Letters of John Jay and Sarah Livingston Jay pp 297 99 ISBN 9780786419555 July 4 1827 Jubilee from Domestic Slavery Evening Post New York New York July 3 1827 p 3 via newspapers com Sudderth Jake 2002 John Jay and Slavery Columbia University General Slave Emancipation in New zYork North Star Danville Vermont July 3 1827 p 3 via newspapers com From the New York Daily Advertiser July 6 Hartford Courant Hartford Connecticut July 9 1827 p 2 via newspapers com McDonald Forrest 1982 Alexander Hamilton A Biography p 177 ISBN 9780393300482 Further reading editBerlin Ira Harris Leslie M eds 2005 Slavery in New York New Press ISBN 1 56584 997 3 Gellman David N 2006 Emancipating New York The Politics of Slavery And Freedom 1777 1827 Louisiana State Univ Press ISBN 0 8071 3174 1 Gellman David N 2001 Pirates Sugar Debtors and Slaves Political Economy and the Case for Gradual Abolition in New York Slavery amp Abolition 22 2 51 68 doi 10 1080 714005193 ISSN 0144 039X S2CID 143335845 Gellman David N 2000 Race the Public Sphere and Abolition in Late Eighteenth century New York Journal of the Early Republic 20 4 607 636 doi 10 2307 3125009 ISSN 0275 1275 JSTOR 3125009 Harris Leslie M August 2001 African Americans in New York City 1626 1863 Department of History Newsletter Emory University Archived from the original on 2017 12 03 Retrieved 2006 12 11 Harris Leslie M 2003 In the Shadow of Slavery African Americans in New York City 1626 1863 Horton James Oliver 2004 Alexander Hamilton Slavery and Race in a Revolutionary Generation New York Journal of American History 65 3 16 24 ISSN 1551 5486 Littlefield Daniel C 2000 John Jay the Revolutionary Generation and Slavery New York History 81 1 91 132 ISSN 0146 437X New York Historical Society 2011 Race and Antebellum New York City New York Manumission Society Examination Days The New York African Free School Collection Archived from the original on 2011 05 15 Newman Richard S 2002 The Transformation of American Abolitionism Fighting Slavery in the Early Republic Univ of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 2671 5 Schaetzke E Anne 1998 Slavery in the Genesee Country Also Known as Ontario County 1789 to 1827 Afro Americans in New York Life and History 22 1 7 40 ISSN 0364 2437 External links editThe Records of the New York Manumission Society 1785 1849 at the New York Historical Society Records of the New York Manumission Society Jay Heritage Center Memorials of Peter A Jay Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New York Manumission Society amp oldid 1193599276, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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