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Field name | Value |
---|---|
Collection Reference Number | GLC04237 |
From Archive Folder | Documents Relating to 1784 |
Title | James Pemberton to James Phillips about anti-slavery activity among the Quakers |
Date | 18 November 1784 |
Author | Pemberton, James (1723-1809) |
Recipient | Phillips, James |
Document Type | Correspondence |
Content Description | Discusses the anti-slavery activities of Quakers in the U.S. and a dispute over admission of blacks to Quaker church due to fears of intermarriage. He requests a copy of Bishop Wilson's bible be sent to him. He mentions other correspondence and the marriage of his second daughter. |
Subjects | Quaker Religion Abolition Slavery African American History Marriage Children and Family Women's History |
People | Pemberton, James (1723-1809) Phillips, James (fl. 1784) |
Place written | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Theme | Religion; African Americans; Slavery & Abolition; Children & Family; Women in American History |
Sub-collection | The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1493-1859 |
Additional Information | The revolution's promise of natural rights and equality carried far-reaching implications for the issue of slavery. In 1777, Vermont adopted the first constitution specifically prohibiting slavery. In 1780, Pennsylvania passed the first gradual emancipation law in the New World. In 1782, Virginia enacted a law (later repealed) allowing voluntary manumission. The 1783 Massachusetts case of Commonwealth v. Jennison removed judicial sanction from slavery in that state, and judicial decisions also eroded slavery in New Hampshire. In 1784, Connecticut and Rhode Island enacted gradual emancipation laws and Congress narrowly rejected Thomas Jefferson's proposal to exclude slavery from all western territories after 1800. In 1787, the Continental Congress prohibited slavery from the territories north of the Ohio and east of the Mississippi rivers. Still, it would be a mistake to underestimate the opposition to slave emancipation in revolutionary America, even in the North. New York did not adopt a gradual emancipation law until 1799 and New Jersey until 1804. Two economists have described the gradual emancipation laws adopted outside of New England as "philanthropy at bargain prices," since the laws required adult slaves to remain in bondage and only freed their children after a period of years, in order to compensate owners for the costs of raising them. Such laws worked extremely slowly. Slavery did not come to a final end in New York until 1827 and, at the beginning of the Civil War, there were still more slaves in the "free" state of New Jersey than in Delaware, a "slave" state. In this letter, a prominent Quaker and early American abolitionist explains to a pioneering British Quaker abolitionist how the American Revolution has created political bodies, such as Congress, to which antislavery petitions could be addressed. The Revolution had interrupted the cooperative antislavery efforts of British and American Quakers. This letter from James Pemberton (1723-1808) to James Phillips represents the first postwar effort to reestablish collective or coordinated action. The letter also raises the issue of whether the Quakers should admit African Americans to membership within their own Society of Friends--an issue that would test the Quaker commitment to full racial equality, including racial intermarriage. |
Copyright | The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History |
Module | Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859 |
Transcript | Show/hide |