Just after the settlement of the question of
holding the western posts by the British and the adjustment
of the trouble arising from their capture of slaves during
our second war with England, there started a movement of the
blacks to this frontier territory. But, as there were few
towns or cities in the Northwest during the first decades of
the new republic, the flight of the Negro into that
territory was like that of a fugitive taking his chances in
the wilderness. Having lost their pioneering spirit in
passing through the ordeal of slavery, not many of the
bondmen took flight in that direction and few free Negroes
ventured to seek their fortunes in those wilds during the
period of the frontier conditions, especially when the
country had not then undergone a thorough reaction against
the Negro.
The migration of the Negroes, however, received an impetus
early in the nineteenth century. This came from the Quakers,
who by the middle of the eighteenth century had taken the
position that all members of their sect should free their
slaves.1 The Quakers of North Carolina and Virginia had as
early as 1740 taken up the serious question of humanely
treating their Negroes. The North Carolina Quakers advised
Friends to emancipate their slaves, later prohibited traffic
in them, forbade their members from even hiring the blacks
out in 1780 and by 1818 had exterminated the institution
among their communicants.2 After healing themselves of the
sin, they had before the close of the eighteenth century
militantly addressed themselves to the task of abolishing
slavery and the slave trade throughout the world. Differing
in their scheme from that of most anti-slavery leaders, they
were advocating the establishment of the freedmen in society
as good citizens and to that end had provided for the
religious and mental instruction of their slaves prior to
emancipating them.3
Despite the fact that the Quakers were not free to extend
their operations throughout the colonies, they did much to
enable the Negroes to reach free soil. As the Quakers
believed in the freedom of the will, human brotherhood, and
equality before God, they did not, like the Puritans, find
difficulties in solving the problem of elevating the
Negroes. Whereas certain Puritans were afraid that
conversion might lead to the destruction of caste and the
incorporation of undesirable persons into the "Body
Politick," the Quakers proceeded on the principle that all
men are brethren and, being equal before God, should be
considered equal before the law. On account of unduly
emphasizing the relation of man to God, the Puritans
"atrophied their social humanitarian instinct" and developed
into a race of self-conscious saints. Believing in human
nature and laying stress upon the relation between man and
man, the Quakers became the friends of all humanity.4
In 1693 George Keith, a leading Quaker of his day, came
forward as a promoter of the religious training of the
slaves as a preparation for emancipation. William Penn
advocated the emancipation of slaves, that they might have
every opportunity for improvement. In 1695 the Quakers while
protesting against the slave trade denounced also the policy
of neglecting their moral and spiritual welfare.5 The
growing interest of this sect in the Negroes was shown later
by the development in 1713 of a definite scheme for freeing
and returning them to Africa after having been educated and
trained to serve as missionaries on that continent.
When the manumission of the slaves was checked by the
reaction against that class and it became more of a problem
to establish them in a hostile environment, certain Quakers
of North Carolina and Virginia adopted the scheme of
settling them in Northern States.6 At first, they sent
such freedmen to Pennsylvania. But for various reasons this
did not prove to be the best asylum. In the first place,
Pennsylvania bordered on the slave States, Maryland and
Virginia, from which agents came to kidnap free Negroes.
Furthermore, too many Negroes were already rushing to that
commonwealth as the Negroes' heaven and there was the chance
that the Negroes might be settled elsewhere in the North,
where they might have better economic opportunities.7 A
committee of forty was accordingly appointed by North
Carolina Quakers in 1822 to examine the laws of other free
States with a view to determining what section would be most
suitable for colonizing these blacks. This committee
recommended in its report that the blacks be colonized in
Ohio, Indiana and Illinois.
The yearly meeting, therefore, ordered the removal of such
Negroes as fast as they were willing or as might be
consistent with the profession of their sect, and instructed
the agents effecting the removal to draw on the treasury for
any sum not exceeding two hundred dollars to defray
expenses. An increasing number reached these States every
year but, owing to the inducements offered by the American
Colonization Society, some of them went to Liberia. When
Liberia, however, developed into every thing but a haven of
rest, the number sent to the settlements in the Northwest
greatly increased.
The quarterly meeting succeeded in sending to the West 133
Negroes, including 23 free blacks and slaves given up
because they were connected by marriage with those to be
transplanted.8 The Negro colonists seemed to prefer
Indiana.9 They went in three companies and with suitable
young Friends to whom were executed powers of attorney to
manumit, set free, settle and bind them out.10 Thirteen
carts and wagons were bought for these three companies;
$1,250 was furnished for their traveling expenses and
clothing, the whole cost amounting to $2,490. It was planned
to send forty or fifty to Long Island and twenty to the
interior of Pennsylvania, but they failed to prosper and
reports concerning them stamped them as destitute and
deplorably ignorant. Those who went to Ohio and Indiana,
however, did well.11
Later we receive another interesting account of this exodus.
David White led a company of fifty-three into the West,
thirty-eight of whom belonged to Friends, five to a member
who had ordered that they be taken West at his expense. Six
of these slaves belonged to Samuel Lawrence, a Negro
slaveholder, who had purchased himself and family. White
pathetically reports the case of four of the women who had
married slave husbands and had twenty children for the
possession of whom the Friends had to stand a lawsuit in the
courts. The women had decided to leave their husbands behind
but the thought of separation so tormented them that they
made an effort to secure their liberty. Upon appealing to
their masters for terms the owners, somewhat moved by
compassion, sold them for one half of their value. White
then went West and left four in Chillicothe, twenty-three in
Leesburg and twenty-six in Wayne County, Indiana, without
encountering any material difficulty.12
Others had thought of this plan but the Quakers actually
carried it out on a small scale. Here we see again not only
their desire to have the Negroes emancipated but the vital
interest of the Quakers in success of the blacks, for
members of this sect not only liberated their slaves but
sold out their own holdings in the South and moved with
these freedmen into the North. Quakers who then lived in
free States offered fugitives material assistance by open
and clandestine methods.13 The most prominent leader
developed by the movement was Levi Coffin, whose daring
deeds in behalf of the fugitives made him the reputed
President of the Underground Railroad. Most of the Quaker
settlements of Negroes with which he was connected were made
in what is now Hamilton, Howard, Wayne, Randolph, Vigo,
Gibson, Grant, Rush, and Tipton Counties, Indiana, and Darke
County, Ohio.
The promotion of this movement by the Quakers was well on
its way by 1815 and was not materially checked until the
fifties when the operations of the drastic fugitive slave
law interfered, and even then the movement had gained such
momentum and the execution of that mischievous measure had
produced in the North so much reaction like that expressed
in the personal liberty laws, that it could not be stopped.
The Negroes found homes in Western New York, Western
Pennsylvania and throughout the Northwest Territory. The
Negro population of York, Harrisburg and Philadelphia
rapidly increased. A settlement of Negroes developed at
Sandy Lake in Northwestern Pennsylvania14 and there was
another near Berlin Cross Roads in Ohio.15 A group of
Negroes migrating to this same State found homes in the Van
Buren Township of Shelby County.16 A more significant
settlement in the State was made by Samuel Gist, an
Englishman possessing extensive plantations in Hanover,
Amherst, and Henrico Counties, Virginia. He provided in his
will that his slaves should be freed and sent to the North.
He further provided that the revenue from his plantation the
last year of his life be applied in building schoolhouses
and churches for their accommodation, and "that all money
coming to him in Virginia be set aside for the employment of
ministers and teachers to instruct them." In 1818, Wickham,
the executor of his estate, purchased land and established
these Negroes in what was called the Upper and Lower Camps
of Brown County.17
Augustus Wattles, a Quaker from Connecticut, made a
settlement in Mercer County, Ohio, early in the nineteenth
century. In the winter of 1833-4, he providentially became
acquainted with the colored people of Cincinnati, finding
there about "4,000 totally ignorant of every thing
calculated to make good citizens." As most of them had been
slaves, excluded from every avenue of moral and mental
improvement, he established for them a school which he
maintained for two years. He then proposed to these Negroes
to go into the country and purchase land to remove them
"from those contaminating influences which had so long
crushed them in our cities and villages."18 They consented
on the condition that he would accompany them and teach
school. He travelled through Canada, Michigan and Indiana,
looking for a suitable location, and finally selected for
settlement a place in Mercer County, Ohio. In 1835, he made
the first purchase of land there for this purpose and before
1838 Negroes had bought there about 30,000 acres, at the
earnest appeal of this benefactor, who had travelled into
almost every neighborhood of the blacks in the State, and
laid before them the benefits of a permanent home for
themselves and of education for their children.19
This settlement was further increased in 1858 by the
manumitted slaves of John Harper of North Carolina.20 John
Randolph of Roanoke endeavored to establish his slaves as
freemen in this county but the Germans who had settled in
that community a little ahead of them started such a
disturbance that Randolph's executor could not carry out his
plan, although he had purchased a large tract of land
there.21 It was necessary to send these freemen to Miami
County. Theodoric H. Gregg of Dinwiddie County, Virginia,
liberated his slaves in 1854 and sent them to Ohio.22
Nearer to the Civil War, when public opinion was proscribing
the uplift of Negroes in Kentucky, Noah Spears secured near
Xenia, Greene County, Ohio, a small parcel of land for
sixteen of his former bondsmen in 1856.23 Other freedmen
found their way to this community in later years and it
became so prosperous that it was selected as the site of
Wilberforce University.
This transplantation extended into Michigan. With the help
of persons philanthropically inclined there sprang up a
flourishing group of Negroes in Detroit. Early in the
nineteenth century they began to acquire property and to
provide for the education of their children. Their record
was such as to merit the encomiums of their fellow white
citizens. In later years this group in Detroit was increased
by the operation of laws hostile to free Negroes in the
South in that life for this class not only became
intolerable but necessitated their expatriation. Because of
the Virginia drastic laws and especially that of 1838
prohibiting the return to that State of such Negro students
as had been accustomed to go North to attend school, after
they were denied this privilege at home, the father of
Richard DeBaptiste and Marie Louis More, the mother of
Fannie M. Richards, led a colony of free Negroes from
Fredericksburg to Detroit.24 And for about similar reasons
the father of Robert A. Pelham conducted others from
Petersburg, Virginia, in 1859.25 One Saunders, a planter
of Cabell County, West Virginia, liberated his slaves some
years later and furnished them homes among the Negroes
settled in Cass County, Michigan, about ninety miles east of
Chicago, and ninety-five miles west of Detroit.
This settlement had become attractive to fugitive slaves and
freedmen because the Quakers settled there welcomed them on
their way to freedom and in some cases encouraged them to
remain among them. When the increase of fugitives was
rendered impossible during the fifties when the Fugitive
Slave Law was being enforced, there was still a steady
growth due to the manumission of slaves by sympathetic and
benevolent masters in the South.26 Most of these Negroes
settled in Calvin Township, in that county, so that of the
1,376 residing there in 1860, 795 were established in this
district, there being only 580 whites dispersed among them.
The Negro settlers did not then obtain control of the
government but they early purchased land to the extent of
several thousand acres and developed into successful small
farmers. Being a little more prosperous than the average
Negro community in the North, the Cass County settlement not
only attracted Negroes fleeing from hardships in the South
but also those who had for some years unsuccessfully
endeavored to establish themselves in other communities on
free soil.27
These settlements were duplicated a little farther west in
Illinois. Edward Coles, a Virginian, who in 1818 emigrated
to Illinois, of which he later served as Governor and as
liberator from slavery, settled his slaves in that
commonwealth. He brought them to Edwardsville, where they
constituted a community known as "Coles' Negroes."28 There
was another community of Negroes in Illinois in what is now
called Brooklyn situated north of East St. Louis. This town
was a center of some consequence in the thirties. It became
a station of the Underground Railroad on the route to Alton
and to Canada. As all of the Negroes who emerged from the
South did not go farther into the North, the black
population of the town gradually grew despite the fact that
slave hunters captured and reenslaved many of the Negroes
who settled there.29
These settlements together with favorable communities of
sympathetic whites promoted the migration of the free
Negroes and fugitives from the South by serving as centers
offering assistance to those fleeing to the free States and
to Canada. The fugitives usually found friends in
Philadelphia, Columbia, Pittsburgh, Elmira, Rochester,
Buffalo, Gallipolis, Portsmouth, Akron, Cincinnati, and
Detroit. They passed on the way to freedom through Columbia,
Philadelphia, Elizabethtown and by way of sea to New York
and Boston, from which they proceeded to permanent
settlements in the North.30
In the West, the migration of the blacks was further
facilitated by the peculiar geographic condition in that the
Appalachian highland, extending like a peninsula into the
South, had a natural endowment which produced a class of
white citizens hostile to the institution of slavery. These
mountaineers coming later to the colonies had to go to the
hills and mountains because the first comers from Europe had
taken up the land near the sea. Being of the German and
Scotch-Irish Presbyterian stock, they had ideals differing
widely from those of the seaboard slaveholders.31 The
mountaineers believed in "civil liberty in fee simple, and
an open road to civil honors, secured to the poorest and
feeblest members of society." The eastern element had for
their ideal a government of interests for the people. They
believed in liberty but that of kings, lords, and commons,
not of all the people.32
Settled along the Appalachian highland, these new stocks
continued to differ from those dwelling near the sea,
especially on the slavery question.33 The natural
endowment of the mountainous section made slavery there
unprofitable and the mountaineers bore it grievously that
they were attached to commonwealths dominated by the radical
pro-slavery element of the South, who sacrificed all other
interests to safeguard those of the peculiar institution.
There developed a number of clashes in all of the
legislatures and constitutional conventions of the Southern
States along the Atlantic, but in every case the defenders
of the interests of slavery won. When, therefore, slaves
with the assistance of anti-slavery mountaineers began to
escape to the free States, they had little difficulty in
making their way through the Appalachian region, where the
love of freedom had so set the people against slavery that
although some of them yielded to the inevitable sin, they
never made any systematic effort to protect it.34
The development of the movement in these mountains was more
than interesting. During the first quarter of the nineteenth
century there were many ardent anti-slavery leaders in the
mountains. These were not particularly interested in the
Negro but were determined to keep that soil for freedom that
the settlers might there realize the ideals for which they
had left their homes in Europe. When the industrial
revolution with the attendant rise of the plantation cotton
culture made abolition in the South improbable, some of them
became colonizationists, hoping to destroy the institution
through deportation, which would remove the objection of
certain masters who would free their slaves provided they
were not left in the States to become a public charge.35
Some of this sentiment continued in the mountains even until
the Civil War. The highlanders, therefore, found themselves
involved in a continuous embroglio because they were not
moved by reactionary influences which were unifying the
South for its bold effort to make slavery a national
institution.36 The other members of the mountaineer
anti-slavery group became attached to the Underground
Railroad system, endeavoring by secret methods to place on
free soil a sufficiently large number of fugitives to show a
decided diminution in the South.37 John Brown, who
communicated with the South through these mountains, thought
that his work would be a success, if he could change the
situation in one county in each of these States.
The lines along which these Underground Railroad operators
moved connected naturally with the Quaker settlements
established in free States and the favorable sections in the
Appalachian region. Many of these workers were Quakers who
had already established settlements of slaves on estates
which they had purchased in the Northwest Territory. Among
these were John Rankin, James Gilliland, Jesse Lockehart,
Robert Dobbins, Samuel Crothers, Hugh L. Fullerton, and
William Dickey. Thus they connected the heart of the South
with the avenues to freedom in the North.38 There were
routes extending from this section into Ohio, Indiana,
Illinois and Pennsylvania. Over the Ohio and Kentucky route
culminating chiefly in Cleveland, Sandusky and Detroit,
however, more fugitives made their way to freedom than
through any other avenue,39 partly too because they found
the limestone caves very helpful for hiding by day. These
operations extended even through Tennessee into northern
Georgia and Alabama. Dillingham, Josiah Henson and Harriet
Tubman used these routes to deliver many a Negro from
slavery.
The opportunity thus offered to help the oppressed brought
forward a class of anti-slavery men, who went beyond the
limit of merely expressing their horror of the evil. They
believed that something should be done "to deliver the poor
that cry and to direct the wanderer in the right way."40
Translating into action what had long been restricted to
academic discussion, these philanthropic workers ushered in
a new era in the uplift of the blacks, making abolition more
of a reality. The abolition element of the North then could
no longer be considered an insignificant minority advocating
a hopeless cause but a factor in drawing from the South a
part of its slave population and at the same time offering
asylum to the free Negroes whom the southerners considered
undesirable.4l Prominent among those who aided this
migration in various ways were Benjamin Lundy of Tennessee
and James G. Birney, a former slaveholder of Huntsville,
Alabama, who manumitted his slaves and apprenticed and
educated some of them in Ohio.
This exodus of the Negroes to the free States promoted the
migration of others of their race to Canada, a more
congenial part beyond the borders of the United States. The
movement from the free States into Canada, moreover, was
contemporary with that from the South to the free States as
will be evidenced by the fact that 15,000 of the 60,000
Negroes in Canada in 1860 were free born. As Detroit was the
chief gateway for them to Canada, most of these refugees
settled in towns of Southern Ontario not far from that city.
These were Dawn, Colchester, Elgin, Dresden, Windsor,
Sandwich, Bush, Wilberforce, Hamilton, St. Catherines,
Chatham, Riley, Anderton, London, Malden and Gonfield.42
And their coming to Canada was not checked even by request
from their enemies that they be turned away from that
country as undesirables, for some of the white people there
welcomed and assisted them. Canadians later experienced a
change in their attitude toward these refugees but these
British Americans never made the life of the Negro there so
intolerable as was the case in some of the free States.
It should be observed here that this movement, unlike the
exodus of the Negroes of today, affected an unequal
distribution of the enlightened Negroes.43 Those who are
fleeing from the South today are largely laborers seeking
economic opportunities. The motive at work in the mind of
the antebellum refugee was higher. In 1840 there were more
intelligent blacks in the South than in the North but not so
after 1850, despite the vigorous execution of the Fugitive
Slave Law in some parts of the North. While the free Negro
population of the slave States increased only 23,736 from
1850 to 1860, that of the free States increased 29,839. In
the South, only Delaware, Maryland and North Carolina showed
a noticeable increase in the number of free persons of color
during the decade immediately preceding the Civil War. This
element of the population had only slightly increased in
Alabama, Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee, Virginia, Louisiana,
South Carolina and the District of Columbia. The number of
free Negroes of Florida remained constant. Those of
Arkansas, Mississippi and Texas diminished. In the North, of
course, the migration had caused the tendency to be in the
other direction. With the exception of Maine, New Hampshire,
Vermont and New York which had about the same free colored
population in 1860 as they had in 1850 there was a general
increase in the number of Negroes in the free States. Ohio
led in this respect, having had during this period an
increase of 11,394.44 A glance at the table on the
accompanying page will show in detail the results of this
migration.
Statistics Of The Free Colored Population Of The United
States
| State | 1850 | 1860 |
| Alabama | 2,265 | 2,690 |
| Arkansas | 608 | 144 |
| California | 962 | 4,086 |
| Connecticut | 7,693 | 8,627 |
| Delaware | 18,073 | 19,829 |
| Florida | 932 | 932 |
| Georgia | 2,931 | 3,500 |
| Illinois | 5,436 | 7,628 |
| Indiana | 11,262 | 11,428 |
| Iowa | 333 | 1,069 |
| Kentucky | 10,011 | 10,684 |
| Louisiana | 17,462 | 18,647 |
| Maine | 1,356 | 1,327 |
| Kansas | 625 | |
| Maryland | 74,723 | 83,942 |
| Massachusetts | 9,064 | 9,602 |
| Michigan. | 2,583 | 6,797 |
| Minnesota | ||
| Mississippi | 930 | |
| Missouri | 2,618 | 3,572 |
| New Hampshire | 520 | 494 |
| New Jersey | 23,810 | 25,318 |
| New York | 49,069 | 49,005 |
| North Carolina | 27,463 | 30,463 |
| Ohio | 25,279 | 36,673 |
| Oregon | 128 | |
| Pennsylvania | 53,626 | 56,949 |
| Rhode Island | 3,670 | 3,952 |
| South Carolina | 8,960 | 9,914 |
| Tennessee | 6,422 | 7,300 |
| Texas | 397 | 355 |
| Vermont | 718 | 709 |
| Virginia | 54,333 | 58,042 |
| Wisconsin | 635 | 1,171 |
| Territories: | ||
| Colorado | 46 | |
| Dakota | 0 | |
| District of Columbia | 10,059 | 11,131 |
| Minnesota | 39 | |
| Nebraska | 67 | |
| Nevada | 45 | |
| New Mexico | 207 | 85 |
| Oregon | 24 | |
| Utah | 22 | 30 |
| Washington | 30 | |
| Total | 434,495 | 488,070 |
A Century of Negro Migration, March 31, 1918