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The men of the Free African Society engaged in that debate head-on. Heartened by Britain's creation of the colony of Sierra Leone as a refuge for
black loyalists, and disheartened by their own “calamitous state” in America, the men in the Newport African Union contemplated relocating to Africa and asked the Philadelphians what they thought. The Philadelphians wished them well, but they rejected the notion of emigration. They planned on staying in America.
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While they regretted that many whites were choosing to ignore the nation's founding principles of “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” for all Americans, the men of the Free African Society, the leaders of the largest community of free people in the United States, voiced confidence that better times lay ahead. They had been born in America. Some of them had fought for its independence. They
belonged
in America just as white people did. One's ancestry was immaterial. Birth and loyalty and commitment were what mattered. They had no intention of leaving. They were worthy citizens of the new nation, as worthy as white Americans. They would stay and see the promise of the Revolution fulfilled.

CHAPTER THREE

Race, Liberty, and Citizenship in the New Nation, 1790–1820

In 1790, the United States conducted its first census. An army of enumerators trudged or rode on horseback across sixteen states and territories, collected their data, and tabulated the results. They put the total U.S. population at just under four million. Black people accounted for over 757,000, or about one in five Americans. Of that number, less than 8 percent were free. By 1820, the nation and its people were very different. The United States now comprised 27 states and territories and its population was over 9.5 million, a figure that included more than 1.5 million slaves and well over a quarter of a million free blacks. By this point, more than 13 percent of the black population was free.

Within those totals and percentages there were huge regional disparities. More free blacks lived in the slave states of the South than in the Northern “free” states. However, in some Southern states the number of free people
was very small. In 1790, as many free blacks lived in the city of Philadelphia as lived in the entire state of South Carolina. Two states in the Upper South, Maryland and Virginia, accounted for almost 21,000 of the nation's 59,500 free people. By 1820, the demographic patterns were even more marked. The Lower South had slightly more than 20,000 “free colored” residents, but over half of them lived in just one state, Louisiana. Georgia's free black population was on a par with that of Boston. As was the case with the American population as a whole, free blacks were more likely to dwell in rural areas than in towns and cities, but the growth of the urban black population was very significant. New York City's free black community surged from just over a thousand individuals in 1790 to 10,500 by 1820, Philadelphia's went from 1,800 to 10,710, and, most spectacularly of all, Baltimore's leaped from 323 to 10,326—a massive increase in just one generation. In Baltimore, a city in the slave South, more black people were free than were enslaved.

Table 3.1 United States Population, 1790–1860

Year

Total Population

Slaves

Free Blacks

1790

3,929,827

697,897

59,466

1800

5,305,925

893,041

108,395

1810

7,239,814

1,191,364

186,446

1820

9,638,191

1,538,038

233,504

1830

12,866,020

2,009,043

319,599

1840

17,069,453

2,487,043

386,303

1850

23,191,876

3,204,313

434,495

1860

31,443,321

3,953,760

487,970

Source
: Federal Population Schedules for the Years 1790 through 1860

Though freedom came to some black people, the majority of black Americans lived in slavery. The number of free people rose nationwide, but so, too, did the number of slaves. In some states slavery was dead or dying. In others it was thriving, and showing every sign of continuing to do so. In the United States as a whole, the prevailing condition of people of African birth or descent was lifelong servitude, not liberty, and certainly not equality.

Demographics are important in understanding the patterns of freedom and slavery that evolved in the generation after Independence, but it is equally important to look beyond the check marks on the census-takers' tally sheets to see what the numbers tell us about the life of the nation and about individual lives. This is the story of black people securing their freedom, passing that freedom on to their children, and forging new communities based on the principles of liberty and opportunity over the course of three tumultuous decades. It is also the story of the nation as it extended its geographic boundaries and grappled with the issues of freedom, race, and the meaning of “citizenship.”

Scarcely had the census takers completed work on the first census than a wave of immigrants from Haiti pushed upward
the total of free blacks. Their arrival had implications that went far beyond mere statistics. In 1791, the slaves in the French Caribbean colony of Saint Domingue, today's nation of Haiti, rose up under the leadership of the charismatic Toussaint L'Ouverture. The slaughter that ensued as they fought for their liberty and their masters tried to force them back into bondage was truly terrible. White Americans heard of the atrocities and were appalled at the thought that the “contagion of liberty,” as some called it, might spread to America's shores. The responses of black Americans were more complex. While many took heart from the
destruction of Saint Domingue's brutal slave system, spokesmen for the emerging free black communities in the North and Upper South hastened to reassure whites that they would never sanction violence on the part of their own friends and family members who were still enslaved and that the United States could easily avert a bloodbath by abolishing slavery and recognizing black people as citizens. What was happening in the West Indies need not, and hopefully would not, happen on American soil.

The killings on Saint Domingue continued. The rebels made no distinction between their oppressors based upon race, and on Saint Domingue there were both white and “free colored” slaveholders. The
gens de couleur libres
, the mixed-race descendants of French men and African women, had as much to fear as white planters, and they joined them in fleeing to safety in North America. Once in the United States, the white exiles received sympathy and even charitable assistance, since many of them had escaped with little more than the clothes on their backs. The mixed-race newcomers received neither sympathy nor charity. Whites in the United States found the presence of the so-called “French Negroes” very worrying. They did not understand that these free people had actually supported slavery. They persisted in seeing
them
as rebels, as threatening in their way as the forces of Toussaint L'Ouverture. The
gens de couleur libres
were so different from American free blacks—in religion and language and in their sense of themselves. On Saint Domingue they had constituted a separate caste midway between the white planter elite and the slaves, and they had enjoyed certain privileges as a result. Once they set foot in the United States, however, they discovered that their privileges vanished. Whites treated them just as contemptuously as they did American free blacks. Some of the lighter-skinned
gens de c
ouleur
responded by “passing” as white. Some kept to themselves and tried to maintain a separate identity as French-speaking “colored” Catholics. A good many, though, realized that they had no alternative but to ally with American-born free people of color. They forged friendships with them, intermarried with them, and ultimately increased by their presence not only the numbers of free people but the cultural diversity of the free community of color.

Although a few of the Saint Dominguan exiles headed to New England, most ventured no further north than New York City. New England's free black population grew not because of the arrival of immigrants from the Caribbean but because the states in the region had done away with slavery. Abolishing slavery did not mean abandoning the patterns of thought and behavior that had governed the interactions between blacks and whites for generations. Freedom had not come with much in the way of rights. In Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont—and for a time in
Rhode Island and Connecticut—black men could vote, and they made use of that, supporting any candidate they thought would address their concerns, although they learned quickly that politicians had a habit of repudiating campaign promises once they got into office. Even with the chance to participate in the political process, black New Englanders received constant reminders of their second-class status. In 1800, the authorities in Boston expelled 239 out-of-state black people, and there were no doubt similar less well publicized “warnings out” elsewhere. Across the region, many of the repressive colonial-era laws remained in place.

The situation in the Mid-Atlantic states with respect to black freedom was more complicated. Pennsylvania had enacted gradual emancipation during the Revolution, and each year more black people became free. Not surprisingly, blacks from other states flocked to Pennsylvania, and especially to the city of Philadelphia, in search of work and a place of refuge. Some were free, while others were runaway slaves. Whites complained incessantly that the census figures underreported the numbers of black residents of Philadelphia and the surrounding counties because many hid from the census-takers. The 1793 federal Fugitive Slave Law gave them every reason to lie low. The law empowered slave owners and professional slave catchers to cross state lines in search of runaways. In an era before fingerprints and photographs, vague written descriptions sufficed as proof of identity, and the description of one black person could easily fit another of approximately the same age, height, and build. Slave catchers picked up people and hustled them before a magistrate who made an on-the-spot determination as to whether or not they were in fact escaped slaves. In Pennsylvania and throughout the Mid-Atlantic region, free people needed to be constantly on their guard. The enduring legacy of slavery robbed them of any real sense of security.

Pennsylvania had acted in 1780 to phase out slavery. New York took much longer to begin the process. The forces of antislavery, black and white, achieved a partial victory in the legislature in 1799 with the passage of a law that provided for the freeing of children born to enslaved women after July 4 of that year, although not until they were in their twenties. In 1817, lawmakers finally decreed that on July 4, 1827 slavery in New York would officially end and all the remaining slaves in the state would be free.

Long before the state of New York abolished slavery, New York City had an articulate and well-organized free black community. There were also sizable clusters of free people in other urban centers. Lawmakers might envision African Americans as a permanent underclass, even after emancipation, but that was not the future black New Yorkers accepted for themselves. They wanted what they considered their birthright, namely
equality and full citizenship. Affluent free black men were legally entitled to vote in New York, and members of New York City's small but rapidly growing entrepreneurial elite were particularly active in that regard. They favored Alexander Hamilton's Federalists, who were usually antislavery in their sympathies. When Democrats attacked them as mindless tools of the opposition, black New Yorkers responded that they had enough sense to vote for the party that guaranteed them “the blessings of Liberty and Justice.”
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New Jersey took longer than New York to start dismantling the institution of slavery. Not until 1804 did that state pass a gradual abolition law—and it was very gradual. Well into the 1830s, New Jersey had more slaves than any other Northern state, and black freedom was almost a contradiction in terms because the state continued to impose so many limitations on what African Americans could and could not do. However, in freedom as in slavery, black residents of New Jersey banded together, determined not to be marginalized politically or economically.

By 1805, every one of the Northern states had set slavery on the path to extinction. That did not mean that in any of those states black people could expect the same treatment as whites. Dissatisfied though black Northerners were with half-measures, few would have disputed that even limited freedom was preferable to enslavement. Individually and collectively, they struggled to move beyond the lowly status that so many whites thought should be theirs in perpetuity, even when they ceased to be slaves. Black people in the South were equally determined, although the challenges they faced were much greater.

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