The Bone and Sinew of the Land

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The Bone and Sinew of the Land Page 33

by Anna-Lisa Cox


  legal case and, 54, 55

  Hawkins, Charner, 175–176, 178

  Hawkins, Eli

  death, 53

  enslaving/indenturing people, 49–50, 51, 54

  widow/remarriage, 53, 54, 55, 182

  Hawkins, Ellen

  church communion bread and, 176–177, 178

  farm/success and, 173, 178

  Hawkins, Jacob

  bondage and, 48–49, 51, 53

  building church and, 173, 175

  Ellen Embry and, 54, 55

  farm land/farming success and, 172–173, 178

  legal case/Isaac and, 54–55

  Hawkins, Jacob/Ellen

  AME and, 175

  harvesting grain and, 177–178

  Quinn and, 174

  son’s wedding and, 175, 176

  Hedgebeth, Thomas, 92

  Hope, Thomas, 114–115

  Hopson, Colonel, 82

  Hunter, Hiram, Reverend, 158

  Illinois

  African Americans gathering/speaking (1856), 199–200

  Alton, antiabolitionist attack, 114–115

  ban on African Americans settling in, 188

  Black Code bonds, 69–70

  denial of voting equality in, 86

  Dred Scott and, 182

  free African Americans moving to, 94

  free African Americans petition and, 115

  Indiana Territory and, 53

  Joseph Spencer/Patrick Henry and, 184–185

  kidnapping/slave hunters and, 188

  Madison County, African Americans in, 115

  Maria Creek Baptist Church, 16–17

  New Philadelphia, 73

  Phoebe as indentured, 52, 53

  population growth, 43

  Renault/mines and, 22

  settlement data, xviii

  settlements map/list, viii–ix (map), xiv–xv

  slavery/indentured servants and, 52, 55, 61, 62–63, 63, 64–65, 66–67, 68, 69, 70

  white violence/prejudice, 146–147, 151

  See also Fort Allison, Illinois; Northwest Territory; specific individuals

  Illinois/salt mines

  description/working conditions, 61–63, 64, 67

  Native Americans and, 63

  workers’ description, 63

  See also specific individuals

  Indentured servants/bonds system in Northwest Territory and states

  corruption and, 11, 49–50, 52

  description, 11, 50

  Indiana

  African American convention, 162–163

  African American pioneers moving to, 91, 92, 95–96

  African Americans leaving, 187–188

  attempted murder of Frederick Douglass, 151

  ban on African Americans taking whites to court, 52, 156, 181, 187–188

  banning African American visiting families and, 176

  banning slavery (1816), 51, 53

  Beech farming settlement, 174

  Black Code bonds, 122

  denial of voting equality in, 89

  Eleutherian Institute, 146

  English pioneers/New Harmony, 42

  Fugitive Slave Law and, 156–157

  Harrison/pro-slavery actions and, 37–38, 49, 50

  Hawkins/Jacob and Isaac legal case, 54–55

  integrated schools, 5

  kidnappings/slave hunters and, 96–97, 158, 188

  Ku Klux Klan/lynchings and, 205

  Lyles family and, 91

  Pitfords and, 88–89

  Polly/legal case, 51–53

  population and, 43

  registration of African Americans, 172

  Resolution 13 (state constitution) and, 161–164

  settlement data, xviii, 3

  settlements map/list, viii–ix (map), xii–xiv

  slavery/indentured servants and, 49–50, 51–55, 57

  state constitution/prejudices, 156, 161–164, 181, 188

  surveyors on settlement, 23

  white violence/prejudice, 146–147, 151

  whites attempting to ban African American settlers, 44

  See also Northwest Territory; schools (integrated), Union Literary Institute, Indiana; specific individuals

  Indiana Conference, AME, 174

  Jackson, Andrew, 91, 112, 117, 124

  Jackson, Reverend, 203

  Jefferson, Thomas, 28

  Jennings, James, 115

  J.G. Esq., 105

  Johnston, Nathan, Reverend, 164, 168, 170

  Jones, Alfred J., 74

  Jones, Alfred T., 68, 70

  Jones, Allan, 196

  Kansas and slavery, 196–197

  Keith, Elizabeth, 176

  Kentucky

  equal voting rights/reversal and, 31, 36, 86

  slavery and, 73, 118

  kidnapping African Americans

  Illinois and, 188

  Indiana and, 96–97, 158, 188

  Indiana couple (1840s), 158

  North Carolina and, 95–96

  Ohio and, 188

  slavery and, 95–97

  while moving, 95–97

  See also slave hunters

  Kimball, George, 140, 141

  Kinney, Amory

  background/threats to, 52, 54, 55

  legal case/Jacob Hawkins and Isaac, 54–55

  legal case/Polly, 52, 54

  Knowles family, 158

  Ku Klux Klan

  lynchings, 205

  Northwest Territory and, 204–205

  resurgence, 205

  violence and, 204–205

  Langston, John

  campaign/election, Ohio, 194, 195

  Caroline Mathilda (wife) and, 193–194

  Cincinnati race wars (1841) and, 129–131, 193, 194

  education/as lawyer, 193–194

  leaving Cincinnati, 131

  Langston, John/Caroline

  as activists, 194

  farm/white couple running, 194

  Lasselle family/Hyacinthe, 51–52

  Lawless, Armistead, 72

  Liberator (newspaper), 1, 116, 119

  Liberia, 3–4, 90

  Linder, Usher F., 114–115

  Litchford, Pleasant/Catherine, 95

  Little, John/Eliza

  backgrounds, 56

  escape from bondage, 56–57

  Littlefield, Edward B., 85–86

  Livingston, Cyrus/Mary, 192

  Loudon, James, 169–170

  Louis XV, 22

  Louisiana Purchase and slavery, 19, 47

  Lovejoy, Elijah

  as abolitionist/white opposition, 114–115

  murder of, 114, 115, 197, 199

  Lundy, Benjamin, 44

  Lyles, Daniel, 78, 78–79, 81, 95, 97–98, 179–180, 183–184, 204

  Lyles family

  arrests/bail, 185–186

  attacks by whites/casualties, 80–81, 179–180, 186, 187, 197

  Daniel/Nancy moving back to Vanderburgh County, 204, 206

  denial of voting rights for, 80, 87

  flyers on attacks, 197

  forced to leave Evansville, 197–198

  as free African Americans/farming in Tennessee, 77–79, 80–82, 83, 84–85, 178

  generations of, 80

  good land/low taxes and, 78, 79, 80

  Griers and, 93

  hogs stolen, 181, 183–184

  Indiana farm/livestock and, 157–158, 178, 180–181

  Indiana restrictions on free African Americans and, 182

  leaving Tennessee, 81, 89–90, 91

  moving to Indiana and, 91, 92, 95, 97–98

  problems in 1823 and, 81, 82

  railroad and, 204

  registries and, 172

  restrictions on African Americans, 80, 86

  seeing enslaved people, 83

  slave hunters/Fugitive Slave Law (1850) and, 156, 157–158, 170

  Tennessee restrictions on free African Americans and, 86, 181, 187

  trial/decision, 198–199

 
; whites wanting them gone, 78

  Lyles, James, 79

  Lyles, John, 183–184

  Lyles, John, Jr., 79

  Lyles, John/Patsy, 78–79, 80, 81

  Lyles, Joshua, 79, 80, 180

  Lyles, Nancy, 77–78, 79, 97, 179, 180, 204

  Lyles, Sanford, 81

  Lyles, Tabitha, 81

  Lyles, Thomas, 183–184

  Lyles, Wesley, 183–184

  Lyles Station, 204, 209

  Lytle, Robert, 112, 113, 192

  Maddox, Alexander, 180, 198

  Madison, Stanley, 209, 210

  Maria Creek Baptist Church, 16–17

  Maryland

  Coker’s boys’ and girls’ school, Baltimore, 137

  excluding African Americans from right to vote in, 36, 86

  laws on slavery and, 31

  people of/from, 48

  Massachusetts

  census of 1840 and, 190

  costs/value and, 65

  Easton family, 126

  Eliza Sanford Emerson and, 182

  end of slavery, 29, 30

  state constitution/equality, 29

  See also Boston

  McKiernan, Bernard

  as enslaver, 169, 171

  Lydia (enslaved) and, 171

  Vina Still/Concklin and, 169, 170–171, 185

  wife of, 171

  McMullen, threats to Wright, 144–145

  McWorter, Frank

  as freedom entrepreneur, 72–73

  Lucy and, 73

  white father/half brothers and, 72–73

  Methodist Church, 46, 119–120

  Michigan

  African American convention (1843), 200–201

  African American population growth (1850–1860), 190, 191

  African American settlement near Somerset, 44

  Black Code bonds, 111–112

  Cass County/African Americans and, 190–191, 207

  Cass County/integrated schools, 207

  denial of voting equality in, 86

  Detroit race war (1833) and repercussions, 111–112

  election of African American township supervisor, 207

  Garrison and, 2

  settlement data, xviii

  settlements map/list, viii–ix (map), xvi

  whites petitioning/end of slavery, 106

  See also Northwest Territory; specific individuals

  Mississippi, denial of voting equality in, 86

  Missouri

  becoming slave state, 47–48

  denial of voting equality in, 86

  Dred Scott and, 182

  free African American burned at stake, 114

  people from, 156

  Missouri Compromise, 53

  mixed-race unions, 104, 105, 192–193

  Mobocrats, 138, 205

  Montesquieu, Baron de, 26–27

  Moore, Charles, as freedom entrepreneur and founder of Carthagena, Ohio, 146

  Morris, John/family, 16

  Morris, Sian/family, 16

  Morris, Thomas, 113

  Morris family, 15–16, 174

  Mumbet, 29

  Napoléon Bonaparte, 38, 39, 189

  New Hampshire

  end of slavery, 30

  enslaved people arguing for freedom, 29

  Noyes Academy (integrated) and, 140–141

  New Jersey

  denial of voting equality in, 36, 86

  people from, 146

  New Lights church, 15, 17–18

  New Madrid Quake (1811), 66

  New Orleans, 103–105

  New Philadelphia, Illinois, 73

  New York

  end of slavery/pace, 30, 40

  New York City African American school (1794), 137

  New York City race riot (1834), 112, 145

  Utica race war (1835), 112

  New York Manumission Society, 137

  Nichols, Christopher, 66

  Nolcox family, 178

  North Carolina

  discrimination and, 92

  equal voting rights denial in, 87, 88–89

  equal voting rights/state constitution, 31

  free African Americans moving from, 92, 94, 96–97

  increase in free African Americans (1790–1810), 30

  kidnapping African Americans and, 95–96

  law on freeing enslaved people, 30

  people from, 134, 147, 148

  school of Chavis, 137

  slavery and, 56

  North Star (newspaper), 150

  Northwest Ordinance (1787)

  education and, 143

  exceptions to bondage, 10–11

  Ohio reversing, 39–40

  provisions/reversing, xvii–xviii, 3, 5, 10, 23, 31, 39–40, 86–87, 143

  Taney on slavery and, 182

  See also Northwest Territory

  Northwest Territory

  African American history in, 22–23

  African Americans betraying refugees, 57

  African Americans leaving, 44, 187–189

  backlash against equality, 39–40

  bondage increase, 48–56

  Civil War/African Americans joining the fight, 200, 203

  English pioneers and, 42, 44

  establishment as slavery-free, xvii, 10–11, 53

  freedom/freedom seekers and, 22, 23, 24–28

  fur trade and, 21

  history, 21–24

  human population growth, 42–43, 43–44

  Native Americans and, 4, 21, 23, 62, 63, 74

  population growth (first fifty years), 24

  prejudice continuing with/after Civil War, 203, 204–205

  pro-slavery whites and, 12

  slavery exceptions/loopholes and, 10–13, 17, 65

  voting equality and, xvii, 31–32

  voting equality backlash/debates and, 39–40, 86–87

  whites’ prejudice/harm to African American pioneers (overview), 43–47

  whites taking African Americans into slavery, 46–47

  See also Northwest Ordinance (1787); specific individuals; specific territories/states

  Noyes Academy (integrated), New Hampshire, 140–141

  Oberlin College, Ohio, 141–142, 193, 204

  Ohio

  abolitionist newspaper report and, 92–93

  African American convention, Columbus (1849), 150

  African American farmers, Mercer County, 146–147

  Black Laws/Black Code and bonds, 15, 130, 131, 169

  census (1850) and African American farms, xviii

  Colored National Convention (1850s), 196

  constitution restricting rights, 39–40

  denial of voting equality in, 86, 87

  free African Americans moving to, 5, 94–95, 147

  Free Soil Party, 193

  Fugitive Slave Law (1850) and, 157

  Garrison and, 2

  H. Ford Douglass speaking at convention, 157

  kidnappings/slave hunters and, 188

  Ku Klux Klan, 204

  Manual Labor Institute, Columbus, 146

  Mercer County schools and, 146

  Mercer County whites’ violence/prejudice, 146–147

  Northwest Territory and, 17

  Oberlin College, 141–142, 193, 204

  overturning/softening prejudiced laws (beginning 1849), 195

  population growth, 43

  reversing Northwest Ordinance (1787), 39–40

  schools, 146

  schools (African American) at Lexington settlement, 108

  settlement data, xviii

  settlement of Lexington, Columbiana County, 108

  settlements map/list, viii–ix (map), xi–xii

  slavery and, 51

  slavery debate and, 36–37

  white violence/prejudice, 146–147, 151

  See also Cincinnati, Ohio; Northwest Territory; schools (African American), Wright/farming community, Ohio; specific individuals

  Ohio Bottoms, 56

  Oliver, Isabella, poetry b
y, 24–25

  Otis, James, 26

  Paine, Thomas, 101

  Parker, Joel, Reverend, 120–121

  Patrick Henry (boat), 184

  Pennsylvania

  advancing inequality/slavery, 121–122

  end of slavery, 30

  state constitution (1838) banning African Americans from voting, 121–122

  See also Philadelphia

  Pettiford family, 15–16

  Philadelphia

  African American convention (1830), 110

  AME Church founding, 46, 110

  Benezet/schools and, 136

  bigoted cartoons, 100

  race war (1834), 112

  race war (1836), 116

  See also abolitionist movement, Revolutionary era

  Philanthropist (newspaper), 118, 145

  Pinkney, William, 48

  pioneering movement

  as integrated, 92

  See also specific individuals; specific locations

  Pitford, Leory/Mary Anne, 88–89

  Plummer, Horace, 186

  Pollock, Carlile, 107

  Polverel, August, 33, 34

  Portee family, 15–16

  prejudice

  as choice, 207

  as threat to all/anyone, 164, 207

  See also specific components; specific events; specific individuals; specific locations

  Presbyterian Church, 29, 120

  Presbyterian Theological Seminary, New York, 120–121

  Prince, Mary, 63–64

  Providence, Rhode Island race wars (1821/1831), 111

  Quakers, 29, 134, 136, 163, 174

  Quinn, Paul, Bishop

  background, 173

  as circuit rider/description, 173–174

  founding churches and, 174

  race wars

  in 1834, 112, 145

  abolitionist movement and, 116, 117, 118

  Boston (1835), 112

  Detroit (1833), 111–112

  New Haven (1834), 112

  New Haven (1836), 126

  New York City (1834), 112

  Philadelphia (1834), 112

  Philadelphia (1838), 116

  Providence, Rhode Island (1821/1831), 111

  situation by 1841, 116

  Utica, New York (1835), 112

  Vanderburgh County, Indiana, 179–201

  Washington, DC (1835), 112

  white views, 109–110, 112–113, 116–118, 124–125

  whites’ attempt to show racial antipathy, 116

  See also Cincinnati, Ohio/race wars

  Randolph, John, 48

  Rariden, James, 162

  Renault, Philip Francois, 22–23, 33

  Revolutionary War era/values, xvii, 6, 26, 28, 29, 31–32, 45, 48, 53, 82, 87, 96, 101, 105, 113, 119, 120, 126, 150, 157, 193, 196, 199, 208

  Rhode Island

  DeWolf family slave trading, 36

  end of slavery/corruption and, 30, 79

  Providence race wars (1821/1831), 111

  Roberts family, 178

  Robinson, Mary, 192

  Robinson, Mather/Emeline, 192

  Roundtree family, 178

  Saint-Domingue (Haiti) enslaved revolt, 33–35, 38, 39, 40, 84

  salt mines. See Illinois/salt mines

 

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