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Black Abolitionists in Birmingham

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Narrative of James Watkins

Background

Abolitionist Interactions

Birmingham: The Land of Freedom?

Directions for Learning

 

Background

In the 18th and 19th century, antislavery debate in Birmingham could be heard from people of different racial origins and class backgrounds. The important history of black antislavery activists in the area can first be traced back to the visit of Olaudah Equiano in 1790, who came to sell copies of 'The Interesting Narrative' which told the story of his personal escape from slavery, his life in the navy, business ventures, religious conversions and development as an author. However, the history of other black antislavery activists in Birmingham has only just started to be recovered.

Whilst local abolitionist groups such as the 'Birmingham Anti-Slavery Society', or the 'Ladies' Negro's Friend Society' inevitably remained white middle class organizations, it is important to remember that it would be Africans, West Indians and African-Americans who first led the resistance against their own enslavement. It was their voices that provided first hand evidence against slavery; it was their physical, intellectual and creative spark of rebellion that lit the fuse of the most striking campaigns. Black mutinies and uprising were frequent.

Black activists who came into contact with Birmingham gave dramatic accounts of their experiences and often sold copies of autobiographical 'slave narratives'. In this context, Olaudah Equiano, Frederick Douglass, Moses Roper, William Wells Brown, Henry Highland Garnet, Samuel Ringgold Ward, J.W.C. Pennington, Alexander Crummell, James Watkins and the Rev. Peter Stanford all made a connection with Birmingham and its surrounding areas, and influenced local views on slavery. Other names may yet be discovered.

For more information on Frederick Douglass and James Watkins, click on the two right hand icons. For a short exhibition on other black abolitionists with connections to Birmingham, click here: Black Abolition in Birmingham

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Abolitionist Interactions

Black activists pursuing antislavery agendas arrived Birmingham for a variety of reasons. In 19th century America, a 'Fugitive Slave Law' meant that nowhere was safe for an escaped slave. Slave-catchers could be legally employed to return the 'human property' to his or her owner in the South. Faced with this crisis, many slaves fled to Britain, where industrial towns like Birmingham might offer work and refuge.

Not all 'fugitive' slaves were illiterate. Some were well-educated antislavery speakers, lecturers and authors, intent on promoting radical ideas of freedom among local audiences. Some black people may have already 'bought' their own freedom. Others were religious leaders, who communicated with local churches. Other may simply have sought work as labourers: ex-slaves who arrived in Birmingham alongside the great cosmopolitan influx of people from all around the globe, a trend that allowed the town’s development into a major site of labour and industry from the mid 18th century onwards.

If most of the 'fugitives' or 'activists' would visit Birmingham termporarily, it is likely that some probably ended up settling in the area. Yet while partial accounts of a small number of ex-slaves in Birmingham exist in their 'slave narratives', the majority were unable to leave a record. We can often only reconstruct such stories from fragments. Nevertheless, the current picture we have of the relationship between black and white antislavery campaigners in Birmingham is characterised by a range of experiences: co-operation, argument, disagreement and, ultimately, a sense of shared struggle in the fight to end the so-called gentlemen’s trade.

For example, the local abolitionist Joseph Sturge saw it as vital to gain information and to practically support those that had experienced slavery first hand. On his visit to the West Indies in 1837, Sturge provided funds to emancipate a young black labourer named James Williams; he also helped him to publish ‘A Narrative of Events since the First of August, 1834, by James Williams, An Apprenticed Labourer in Jamaica’. Yet the relationship between many ex-slaves and white abolitionists appear not to have been easy; and whether or not Williams ever visited Birmingham, we do not yet know.

We do know with more certainty about other black activists who came into contact with Birmingham in the nineteenth century (a town known for production of goods that were often used in the slave trade). A good example of this is the case of the African-American orator and intellectual Frederick Douglass who visited Birmingham in 1846; or James Watkins, who came to Birmingham in 1852. You will find more details on their lives in the following pages.

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Birmingham: The Land of Freedom?

After the emancipation acts of 1807, 1833 and 1838, England seemed to promise a new home of liberty for those who still remained slaves in America and the West Indies. In reality, those who did manage to make the perilous escape to England away from their plantations or owners faced new problems. It is certain that the ex-slave, black immigrant and abolitionist alike did not always find it to be the ‘land of freedom’ they might have imagined (see the story of John Thompson, for example). Once here, they would still have experienced racism and danger. In this, black ex-slaves confronted social barriers that also affected the town's early Irish and Jewish communities.

At the same time, Birmingham’s history of nonconformist ideas meant it was often sensitive to the stories of black experience; and the rise of mid-nineteenth century interest in 'abolition' meant that black speakers could often find a willing audience. Birmingham had already been drawing in different people from around the world in search of a chance to work and settle. It was a town of religious diversity. It was the town of the entrepreneur. From the 18th to the 19th century, its culture changed and diversified. For example, from the ex-slave ‘jubilee singers’ in 1874, to Paul Robeson in 1949, many black musicians would appear here to great popular acclaim.

Set against this rapidly tranforming backdrop, the complicated and still emerging details of the lives of black slaves in Britain and Birmingham suggests they were not here merely as passive victims of great historical injustice, but as powerful agents of their own fortune, vital sources of activism in the global struggle for social justice, campaigners, artists and workers who vitally contributed to British culture and political freedoms. They are a crucial, and often overlooked, part of Birmingham's story.

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Directions for Learning

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

Why is so little evidence left of black antislavery campaigning in Birmingham, and how can we find new ways of using archives and other sources to recover their lost histories?

How does the work of these 19th century black activists anticipate later 20th century campaigns by people and communities from a wide range of racial and ethnic backgrounds in Birmingham?

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Image Reference:

Local Studies and History: 'The James Watkins Narrative', Aston X, 310, Birmngham Vol 26.

 

 

Frederick Douglass

Frederick Douglass

James Watkins Lecture

James Watkins

 

 

 

 

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