Central Pennsylvania's journey
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Local InterestRead Joe McClure's PennLive biography of William Howard Day, a prominent African American abolitionist associated with Harrisburg. Read Joyce M. Davis' PennLive article about Hodges Heights, a historic African American development in Lower Paxton Township. Site NewsBaseball season is here. Harrisburg has a wonderful legacy of Negro Leagues baseball teams. Read "Blackball," the detailed article by Ted Knorr and Calobe Jackson, Jr. here: Blackball in Harrisburg. Just uploaded--"1700 and 1726 Acts for the Regulation of Negroes." Full text of the harsh "Black Codes" passed in colonial Pennsylvania to regulate free Blacks and enslaved persons. Check it all out here: 1700 and 1726 Acts for the Regulation of Negroes. New Section--"Former Slaves." News items about formerly enslaved African American residents. Check it out here: Newly restored: Photos and video from Harrisburg's 2010 "Grand Review of Colored Troops." Check it out here: | ||
On This DateSeptember events important to local African American history (see the whole year) September 1, 1780: The first Harrisburg area slave holder to register slaves according the 1780 Gradual Abolition Act is Elizabeth Carson, who registered her “Negro Male,” Pompey, aged fourteen years, as a “slave for life.” September 1, 1780: Revolutionary War commander and escaped slave "Colonel Tye" (Titus Cornelius), leader of the Loyalist Guerrilla unit known as the Black Brigade, is wounded in the attack at Colt's Neck, New Jersey. The wound became infected and he died a few days later. September 1, 1835: A follow-up meeting of Harrisburg anti-abolition supporters is held in a market shed on the square, after being barred from meeting in the county courthouse. Impassioned speeches are delivered by J. J. Clendenin, publisher Henry K. Strong, and attorney Charles C. Rawn. September 2, 1914: Artist Romare Bearden is born in Charlotte, North Carolina. September 3, 1838: With the help of local free Black woman Anna Murray, Frederick Douglass, an enslaved man in Maryland, escapes from slavery in Fells Point, Baltimore. Douglass would become a tireless lifelong campaigner for African American social, political, and legal rights. September 4, 1838: American Anti-slavery Society agent Daniel Alexander Payne visits with William C. Goodridge in York, as part of his lecturing circuit of Pennsylvania. During his trip, he met with anti-slavery leaders in each location and distributed literature. September 18, 1895: Booker T. Washington delivers his Atlanta Compromise speech at the Cotton States and International Exhibition in that city (“Cast Down Your Buckets Where You Are.”) September 22, 1862: President Lincoln declares that all slaves in states in rebellion as of January 1, 1863, would be free. September 25, 1838: AAS agent Daniel Alexander Payne arrives in Carlisle, where he stays with William Webb and visits barber and anti-slavery activist John Peck. September 25, 1851: Harrisburg is panicked as four African American strangers passing through town are rumored to be murderous rioters from Christiana. With the help of local men from Matamoras, the four are arrested and taken back to Harrisburg. There, District Judge John J. Pearson dismisses charges for lack of evidence against the four men accused of having participated in the Christiana Rebellion. To Judge Pearson's dismay, Federal Fugitive Slave Commissioner Richard McAllister immediately seizes the men in the courtroom and remands them south as fugitive slaves, after a short hearing.
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