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Free Black People

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Chapter 7 Free Black People in Antebellum America Demographics Free African Americans in 1860 The North 226,152 The Upper South 224,963 The Deep South 36,955 Total ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Free Black People


1
  • Chapter 7
  • Free Black People
  • in Antebellum America

2
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3
Demographics
  • Free African Americans in 1860
  • The North 226,152
  • The Upper South 224,963
  • The Deep South 36,955
  • Total 488,070
  • Total Population U.S. 26,957,471

4
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5
Free Black Communities
  • Dynamic communities
  • Most free blacks lived in the Upper South
  • Philadelphia, Baltimore, New York, and Boston
  • Established distinctive institutions
  • To avoid inferior status in white-dominated
    organizations
  • Preserve African heritage

6
Free Black community
  • Mutual aid societies-
  • (provided members medical/burial/helped widows)
  • Christian moral character
  • Generally restricted to men
  • Black freemasons
  • Prince Hall

7
Origins of IndependentBlack Churches
  • Core of Afr. Am. Communities
  • -pastors became leaders
  • -buildings housed schools, social org., and
    anti-slavery meetings

8
Origins of IndependentBlack Churches
  • African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church
  • Richard Allen
  • Absalom Jones
  • Benjamin Rush

9
The First Black Schools
  • After Revolution
  • Black people established schools for black
    children
  • Mutual aid societies and churches created and
    sustained
  • Produced a growing class of literate African
    Americans

10
  • How was black freedom limited in the North?

11
Fugitive Slave Laws
  • Endangered freedom of blacks living in the North
  • Escaped slaves could be recaptured
  • Free Blacks were kidnapped into slavery

12
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13
Caption for visual
  • This lithograph, published in 1818 by antislavery
    author Jesse Torrey Jun, depicts a free black man
    still in handcuffs and leg irons after an attempt
    to kidnap him into slavery. He is relating
    details of his experience to a sympathetic white
    man. The sparsely furnished attic room reflects
    the living conditions of many free African
    Americans of the time.

14
Caption
  • Blacks who escaped from slavery lived in fear
    that they might be sought by masters who often
    posted monetary offers for the return of runaway
    slaves

15
Black Laws
  • Limiting ability to vote
  • Segregation of housing, schools, transportation,
    employment

16
Black Laws cont..
  • Most white northerners wanted no contact with
    Blacks
  • Felt Blacks were inferior, dishonest, immoral
    lives
  • Feared Black competition for jobs
  • Contact would degrade Black society

17
Segregation
  • Atmosphere of hate caused African Americans to
    distrust white people
  • Ghettos
  • Boston Nigger Hill
  • Cincinnati Little Africa
  • Southern visitors argued blacks better off as
    slaves

18
Segregation
  • In 1841, the term Jim Crow was used in Mass to
    describe railroad cars
  • Blackface minstrel act

19
Black Communities The Urban North
  • Urban neighborhoods
  • Resilient families
  • Poverty
  • Class divisions
  • Church and volunteer organizations
  • Education

20
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21
Black Communities The Urban North (cont.)
  • Black family
  • Variety
  • Two-parent households common in 1820
  • Single-parent trend became increasingly common
  • Headed by women
  • High male mortality rate
  • Employment opportunities
  • Extended families

22
Black Communities The Urban North (cont.)
  • Employment
  • Rising European immigration filled jobs
  • Young black men excluded from apprenticeships
  • Led to deskilling of blacks
  • Menial labor
  • Low wages
  • Unemployment common

23
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24
Black Communities The Urban North (cont.)
  • Black elite
  • Ministers, doctors, lawyers, and undertakers
  • Carpenters, barbers, waiters, and coachman
  • Black institutions and culture
  • Anti-slavery movement
  • Racial justice
  • Bridge to sympathetic white people

25
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26
African-American Institutions
  • First appeared during the revolutionary era, then
    increased and multiplied.
  • 1. Schools (Lincoln University)
  • 2. Mutual aid organizations (Black Odd Fellows)
  • 3. Benevolent and fraternal organizations
  • 4. Newspapers and journals
  • 5. Theaters

27
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28
Free Blacks The Upper South
  • Greater risk of being enslaved
  • An assumption of slavery in most states
  • Problems traveling, congregating, owning firearms
  • Greater exclusion than northern counterparts
  • Hotels, trains, parks, hospitals, etc.

29
Free Blacks The Upper South (cont.)
  • Employment
  • Urban areas before 1850
  • Less competition from European immigrants
  • Most free black men were unskilled laborers or
    waiters
  • Most free black women washed clothes or worked as
    domestic servants
  • Schools
  • No racial integration and no public funding
  • Most black children received no formal education
  • Churches and individuals provided sporadic
    opportunities

30
Free Blacks The Deep South
  • No revolutionary rhetoric nor changing economy
  • Fewer manumissions
  • Usually mixed-race children
  • Three-caste system in Deep South
  • Whites, free blacks, and slaves
  • Strong ties between free blacks and former
    masters
  • Loans, jobs, and protection cemented this bond
  • Better off economically than free black people in
    other regions
  • Half live in cities
  • Stronger position in skilled trades
  • Increased conflict and tension among white
    skilled workers

31
Conclusion
  • Life for free black people in the Upper and Deep
    South more difficult than in the North
  • Presumption of slavery
  • More restrictive laws
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