*The Fugitive Slave Act or Fugitive Slave Law was passed by the United States Congress on this date in 1850. This was part of the Compromise of 1850 between Southern slave-holding interests and Northern Free-Soilers. The law was one of the most controversial elements of the 1850 compromise and heightened Northern fears of a “slave power conspiracy.” It required that all escaped slaves, upon capture, be returned to their […]
learn more*On this date in 1851, we celebrate Strader v. Graham, 51 U.S. 82 court verdict. This United States Supreme Court decision held that the status of three slaves who went from Kentucky to Indiana and Ohio depended on Kentucky law rather than Ohio law. The original plaintiff was Christopher Graham, whose three slaves had traveled […]
learn more*On this date 1851, Black abolitionists broke into a Boston courthouse and rescued Shadrach Minkins, a fugitive slave. Born in Norfolk in 1800, Minkins was affected by the Nat Turner rebellion and the death of his owners Thomas and Ann Glenn.
learn more*This date from 1851 is celebrated as Afro Colombian Day. It is referred to in Columbia as Día de la Afrocolombianidad and is an annual celebration of the abolition of slavery in Colombia in 1851. Afro Colombian Day was first celebrated in 2001. It hopes to show communities the importance of their Afro population and its effect on Colombia’s history. […]
learn more*On this date in 1851, Sojourner Truth gave her famous “Ain’t I a Woman?” speech for the first time. Though it did not originally have a title and was delivered impromptu, it has inspired the Black feminists’ community since. After gaining her freedom in 1827, Sojourner Truth became a well-known anti-slavery speaker. Her speech was delivered at the […]
learn moreOn this date in 1851, the Christiana Resistance occurred, a race riot that was the first recorded open resistance to the 1850 Fugitive Slave Law.
A group of Blacks routed a band of slave catchers attempting to re-enslave escaped slaves in Christiana, PA. This incident happened at the home of William Parker an escaped slave. One white was killed and one wounded. Afterwards, there was a great public outcry from both the North and South.
learn more*The Gippy Plantation is affirmed on this date in 1852. This is one of the estimated 46,200 American plantations that existed in 1860. This is a historic plantation house near Moncks Corner in Berkeley County, South Carolina. The main house is a 2-1/2 story Greek Revival structure with a four-column gabled pediment at the center of its main facade. A fixture […]
learn moreUncle Toms Cabin, an antislavery novel written in 1852 is celebrated on this date. The story was written about a faithful Black slave killed by a cruel white enslaver.
The book was popular, selling over 300,000 copies within a year; it was written by Harriet Beecher Stowe. By delivering a passionate indictment of slavery, the story intensified antagonism between the North and the South in the pre-Civil War era. While meeting Stowe at the White House in 1863, President Lincoln greeted her as the “little woman who wrote the book that made this Great War.”
learn more*On this date, 1852, the California Fugitive Labor Act was passed. Two years after California entered the union as a free state, this law lasted only three years. Slavery in the territory of California had been a debated issue since Spanish conquistadors explored the region in the 18th century. The California Fugitive Labor Act was passed […]
learn more*On this date in 1852, the Perkins Escapee case was before Judge Wells of the California Supreme Court. The petition and affidavit came from the prisoners Robert, Carter Perkins, and Sandy Jones. They were seized on June 1st, 1852, without process of law. They were taken before B. D. Fry, a justice of the peace […]
learn moreOn this date in 1852, Frederick Douglass gave the speech “The Meaning of July Fourth for the Negro.”
The abolitionist was invited to address an audience in Rochester, New York, at Corinthian Hall. That day, Douglass delivered the following indictment of a nation celebrating “and yet I cannot contemplate their great deeds with less than admiration. They were statesmen, patriots and heroes, and for the good they did, and the principles they contended for, I will unite with you to honor their memory….
learn more*On this date in 1853, the first Black Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) was organized. The YMCA has long been a source for building community spirit and a sense of social responsibility among Black Christian men.
learn more*On this date in 1853, Holmes v. Ford was heard in the territorial court of Oregon. This American court case in the Oregon Territory freed a slave family. The decision reaffirmed that slavery was illegal in the territory outlined in the Organic Laws of Oregon that continued once the region became a U.S. territory. In […]
learn more*On this date in 1853, we celebrate the Stanton Family Cemetery.
In 1853, Nancy and Daniel Stanton headed the Stanton family of Buckingham County, Virginia. They purchased 46.5 acres of land, becoming one of the few free black landholders in the region. Nancy Stanton, who purchased the original holdings on which the cemetery is located, became the first known individual interred in the Stanton Family Cemetery when she died on October 6, 1853.
learn moreThe Steven Spencer Hill Ranch was built on this date in 1853. Located in Tuolumne County (central CA.,) it is northeast of the town of Gold Springs on the slopes next to the Stanislaus River Canyon. Steven Spencer Hill, a Black man, filed a claim for 160 acres of land on this date. Hill came […]
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