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Ladies Antislavery Societies

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The Female Society

Introduction

The Women’s Campaigns

Later Histories and Connections

Directions for Further Learning

 

Introduction

Birmingham was at the centre of one of the earliest, one of the longest running, and one of the most significant of Britain’s numerous nineteenth century women's antislavery societies. "The Female Society for Birmingham, West Bromwich, Wednesbury, Walsall, and their Respective Neighbourhoods, for the Relief of British Negro Slaves" was officially founded in 1825 by Lucy Townsend and Mary Lloyd. This was a year before the all male 'Birmingham Anti-Slavery Society' was established. Like the men, they were indebted to non-conformist religious views such as Quakerism. Unlike the men however, their official position was to raise charity funds to relive suffering, rather than to exist as a ‘political’ organisation. Undermining this distinction, some of the women’s views on slavery were often highly radical, as can be seen by Elizabeth Heyricks’ call for ‘immediate abolition’ expressed as early as 1824.

Despite the creation of separate men’s and women’s antislavery societies in Birmingham, a large degree of interconnectivity does appear to have existed between the two. Male and female antislavery activists were often married or part of the same family, as for instance with the Sturge family whose women were prominent campaigners in their own right. Both genders shared intellectual ideas and argued over the best way to aid slaves and end slavery. But without the leading role that the women took in finding money and raising petitions, it is unlikely that the antislavery cause would have been supported for long. The men may have gone to argue with Parliament, but the women took to the antislavery argument to people’s doorsteps.

Later, the women’s network would more simply become known as The 'Ladies’ Negro’s Friend Society'. Again, perhaps this title implied that the women were not a radical political movement, but, more modestly, a system of support that would help those in most distress. Certainly, it is clear that in most cases, the actual knowledge that the women had of conditions faced by slaves came second hand, and that their perceptions of black women in victimised distress led them to see themselves as the privileged ‘emancipators’ of inequality. At the same time, the stratagies of the women, which stressed the need to boycott the sale of sugar and other products produced through oppression, become a powerful tool in promoting justice and have since remained influential in transforming ideas about how to promote a fair trade society without slaves.

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The Women’s Campaigns

Central to the women's campaigns were the concepts of abolishing those trades linked to slavery, creating local and national petitions of support and raising financial donations from families and businesses. In turn, society members chose to especially highlight the case of the oppressed female slaves to whom they sent relief. For it was, they rightly argued, female slaves and mothers who were often subject some to of the most barbaric treatment of the trade. Mothers were constantly at risk of being separated from their children and families, sold to new masters. Daughters were subjected to sexual abuse by their owners, against whom they had no legal or social defence.

Birmingham women wanted to challenge this situation. They sought to establish a new public awareness of the female slave’s plight, and collected substantial amounts of money over nearly a century of campaigning. They sent donations to help individuals whom they had learned to be at risk, orphaned by the trade, scarred by the plantations, or left destitute without homes after escaping. For example, their minute books reveal an involvement in the famous case of ‘Mary Prince’ who published the first example of a text from the female viewpoint of a West Indian ex-plantation slave.

As the 'Ladies’ Negro’s Friend Society' grew older, they turned their activities to support a long involvement in missionary work in Africa, as well as educational schemes in the United States. Here, the society gave financial aid to the African-American Amanda Smith, head of a school for African-American children. They also sought to support the important Tuskegee schools created by Booker T. Washington. In these examples, we see a focus on aiding youths left without education and in crippling povery across the American South.

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Later Histories and Connections

The history of women’s antislavery in Birmingham has passed down to us a significant social legacy. The enduring practical and evangelical spirit of their campaigning ensured they continued to function for almost a hundred years. The 'Ladies Negro’s Friend Society' only produced its final reports in 1919. During this timespan, many of these women were also involved in other local social reform movements involving education and the relief of poverty. Meanwhile, the daughters of the women who were once such a central part of Birmingham antislavery circles, would often become involved in providing shelter for refugees in the next century during the outbreak of two world wars.

It is also interstesting to note how the call for the ‘freedom for slaves’ and the crusade for ‘women’s rights’ both became increasingly vital issues in the nineteenth century. This might lead us to explore how the 'Ladies Negro’s Friend Society' could be reconsidered as both an anti-racist and an anti-sexist campaigning group. Does the existence of the Birmingham women's antislavery network allow us to make an early connection between campaigns against the oppression of slavery abroad, and the growing sense that female oppression in the home also needed to be challenged?

There may be no straightforward answer to this issue. Certainly, some of the society's more radical members did rebel against the dominant wisdom of the day stating women were simply to be guardians of the family and domestic spheres. At the same time however, it is also true that for others, embracing fierce antislavery convictions did not mean they were ready to abandon traditional gender roles within the home for the arena of politics that was hostile to female interference.

If women’s convictions about gender perhaps had to remain ambiguous, their approach to antislavery always remained one of clear conviction. Throughout their lifespan, they not only supplied intellectual arguments and a powerful moral conviction against slavery, but also a highly practical and extended fund raising network. Their records and archives show how Birmingham women have a proud and long history of campaigning for social justice alongside men.

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Directions for Further Learning

Starting points for further discussion, or your own archive research, might include:

What different kinds of strategies were needed by men and women in Birmingham on behalf of the antislavery cause? And how effective were they?

What is the relationship between the quest for women’s rights and antislavery activism?

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Image Reference:

Birmingham City Archives: Women’s Antislavery Collection IIR62.

 

 

Campaign Records

Campaign Records

Harriet Beecher Stowe

Birmingham and 'Uncle Tom's Cabin'

 

 

 

 

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