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Central Pennsylvania's journey
from enslavement to freedom

Link to Enslavement in Pennsylvania section. Image created with the assistance of AI. Link to the Anti-Slavery and Abolition Section. Image created with the assistance of AI.

Link to the Free Persons of Color -- 19th Century History Section. Image created with the assistance of AI.

Link to the Underground Railroad Section. Image created with the assistance of AI.
link to The Violent Decade Section. Image created with the assistance of AI. Link to the US Colored Troops Section. Image created with the assistance of AI.
Link to Harrisburg's Civil War Section. Image created with the assistance of AI. Link to Century of Change -- the 20th Century Section. Image created with the assistance of AI.
Link to the Letters Archive. Image created with the assistance of AI. Link to Read The Year of Jubilee. Image created with the assistance of AI.
Small image of the cover of The Year of Jubilee, Men of God.

Year of Jubilee back in print

The Afrolumens Project book, The Year of Jubilee (2 volumes), is back in print and available on Amazon. Updated with new covers, the volumes are at the links below.

The Year of Jubilee: Men of God, available here

The Year of Jubilee: Men of Muscle, available here

Site News


Read the amazing story of Enslavement in French Azylum, Pennsylvania..

Maryland Freedom Seekers Fred Fowler and John Shaw read Harrisburg in May 1858: Read their story here
Fred Fowler and John Shaw, 1858..

Captured Black Confederates were imprisoned in Harrisburg during the Civil War. Read the story here:
Black P.O.W.s in Harrisburg, 1862..

Harrisburg's first "Watch Night:" New Year's Eve 1862. Read the story of how this traditional African American church celebration began locally.
A Jubilee of Freedom.

 

 

On This Date

January events important to local African American history (see the whole year)
 

January 1, 1826: African American preacher Jarena Lee preaches at the Methodist Episcopal Church on the southeast corner of Second and South streets in Harrisburg. While in town, she stayed with a Mr. Williams. (Read more here)

January 1, 1831: William Lloyd Garrison publishes his first issue of The Liberator.

January 1 1836: American Anti-Slavery Society lecturer Samuel L. Gould speaks at the Wesley Church in Judystown, an African American neighborhood of Harrisburg, addressing a mostly African American audience. His series of anti-slavery speeches inflames the local town council, which, fearing he is "exciting the colored population of this borough," issues an official resolution calling for him to "desist from his efforts."
Read more about Samuel L. Gould and his activities in Harrisburg.

January 1, 1863: The Emancipation Proclamation is issued. (text here)

January 3, 1816: Stephen Smith becomes a free man as he buys his freedom from Thomas Boude of Columbia with fifty dollars borrowed from a friend. He would rise to become a leader in his community and church, an Underground Railroad activist, and the wealthiest African American businessman in America during his time.

January 7, 1891: Novelist and dramatist Zora Neale Hurston is born in Eatonville, Florida.

January 9, 1861:
Mississippi becomes the second state to secede from the Union.

January 9, 1866: The first classes are held at Fisk University, Nashville, Tennessee. This historic African American college is named for General Clinton B. Fisk of the Tennessee Freedman's Bureau. Graduates include W.E.B. DuBois and John Hope Franklin.

January 10, 1861: Florida becomes the third state to secede from the Union.

January 11, 1861: Alabama becomes the fourth state to secede from the Union.

January 13, 1863: Federal officials formally authorize the raising of African American troops for the South Carolina Volunteer Infantry.

January 14, 1836: Harrisburg Anti-Slavery Society is formed. Its president is Rev. Nathan Stem, of the Episcopal Church. Vice-presidents are William W. Rutherford and Mordecai McKinney. Other notable members are Alexander Graydon and Rev. John Winebrenner.
Read more about how the Harrisburg Anti-Slavery Society was formed

January 15, 1863: Harrisburg's leading African American residents meet in the Bethel A.M.E. Church to form a response to the Emancipation Proclamation. Hailing a "new era in our country's history," they pledge to take up arms alongside white soldiers "if called upon."
Read the proclamation here.

January 15, 1929: Civil rights leader and founder of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Martin Luther King, Jr. is born in Atlanta, Georgia.

January 16, 1838: First statewide meeting of the Pennsylvania Antislavery Society opens in Harrisburg's Shakespeare Hall, a year after its founding in the same place. The three days of meetings are attended by Charles C. Rawn.

January 18, 1856: Dr. Daniel Hale Williams is born in Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania. Dr. Williams performed the first open heart surgery in 1893 when he sutured a knife wound to the pericardium of a stabbing victim.

January 19, 1861: Georgia becomes the fifth state to secede from the Union.

January 20, 1838: At the state Constitutional Convention in Harrisburg, delegates voted 77 to 45 to restrict the vote in Pennsylvania to "white freemen." African American men would not regain the right to vote in Pennsylvania until passage of the 15th Amendment, in 1870.

January 25, 1972: Shirley Chisholm announces her candidacy for the presidency of the U.S.

January 26, 1861: Louisiana becomes the sixth state to secede from the Union.

January 27, 1800: A public auction is held in Lower Paxton Township, at the home of tanner Jacob Awl, to sell enslaved persons Peter and Grace, as well as other possessions.

January 28, 1838: Anti-slavery activist William H. Burleigh speaks in Harrisburg. Burleigh had attended a lecture by Dr. Booth of the Pennsylvania Colonization Society, held at a local church on the same day, and in a letter to The Liberator, denounced Booth as a "pro-slavery man" promoting colonization.

January 29, 1861: Kansas is admitted to the Union as a free state.

January 31, 1837: Shakespeare Hall in Harrisburg is the site of a convention to form a state anti-slavery society. Three hundred people attended and the proceedings were reported to The Liberator by correspondent John Greenleaf Whittier.

January 31, 1845: Attempted kidnapping in Harrisburg of African American resident Peter Hawkins by the notorious slave catcher Thomas Finnegan.

 

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