Thursday, February 8, 2018

How Negroes in Early Springfield, Illinois Influenced Abraham Lincoln's Views on Race and Society.


In historical writing and analysis, PRESENTISM introduces present-day ideas and perspectives into depictions or interpretations of the past. Presentism is a form of cultural bias that creates a distorted understanding of the subject matter. Reading modern notions of morality into the past is committing the error of presentism. Historical accounts are written by people and can be slanted, so I try my hardest to present fact-based and well-researched articles.

Facts don't require one's approval or acceptance.

I present [PG-13] articles without regard to race, color, political party, or religious beliefs, including Atheism, national origin, citizenship status, gender, LGBTQ+ status, disability, military status, or educational level. What I present are facts — NOT Alternative Facts — about the subject. You won't find articles or readers' comments that spread rumors, lies, hateful statements, and people instigating arguments or fights.

FOR HISTORICAL CLARITY
When I write about the INDIGENOUS PEOPLE, I follow this historical terminology:
  • The use of old commonly used terms, disrespectful today, i.e., REDMAN or REDMEN, SAVAGES, and HALF-BREED are explained in this article.
Writing about AFRICAN-AMERICAN history, I follow these race terms:
  • "NEGRO" was the term used until the mid-1960s.
  • "BLACK" started being used in the mid-1960s.
  • "AFRICAN-AMERICAN" [Afro-American] began usage in the late 1980s.

— PLEASE PRACTICE HISTORICISM 
THE INTERPRETATION OF THE PAST IN ITS OWN CONTEXT.
 


Negroes were a significant part of Abraham Lincoln's Springfield community. At the time of his arrival in 1837, Springfield had a Negro population of twenty-six, about one percent of the total population of 1,500. Six of those twenty-six were slaves. By the time of Lincoln's departure in 1861, the population had grown to 234, about 5 percent of the total population of approximately 5,000. These few Springfield Negroes had an impact on Lincoln that was far greater than their numbers imply.
This daguerreotype photograph is the earliest confirmed picture of Abraham Lincoln, reportedly shot in 1846 by Nicholas H. Shepherd shortly after Lincoln was elected to the United States House of Representatives.
Nevertheless, the presence of Negroes in early Springfield and their relationships with and influence on Lincoln have been largely ignored or minimized by historians. Why?

The simple answer is that most Negroes, as well as whites, were illiterate and therefore left little personal written evidence of their existence. As one Springfield Negro historian put it more than 90 years ago: “The history of the colored people of Sangamon County, like the sources of the common law, is shrouded in some mystery. The writer is confronted with an embarrassing lack of available data and must draw his material from the memories of such of the older settlers as remain and, to a still larger extent, from their descendants.”

Even at this late date, the shroud of mystery surrounding Springfield Negroes has not been removed by Lincoln historians. They have either overlooked or failed to examine what meager primary evidence does exist. Instead, most have relied upon secondary sources, predecessor historians who often recorded incomplete or incorrect information or were silent about the presence of Negroes in Lincoln's Springfield.

Nineteenth-century Springfield historians probably judged Negroes as unimportant when recording the people and events of Springfield, an attitude that reflected the time and bore a conscious or unconscious prejudice toward Negroes as a class or race. Contemporary historians who have relied upon these earlier chroniclers have unintentionally mythologized and romanticized Lincoln and Springfield, painting a city almost devoid of color. That flawed history is based upon four myths:

THE FIRST MYTH: William Fleurville, who arrived in Springfield in 1831, was Springfield's first Negro resident and Lincoln's sole Negro personal acquaintance prior to his becoming President.

THE SECOND MYTH: Neither Negro slavery nor indentured servitude existed in Lincoln's Springfield.

THE THIRD MYTH: Prior to becoming President, Lincoln knew little of Negro life.

THE FOURTH MYTH: Springfield Negroes were passive servants and menials and either incapable of or not interested in speaking out on issues of colonization or racial justice.

To understand the influence of Springfield Negroes on the political and social education of the pre-presidential Lincoln, we must first debunk these myths.

THE MYTH OF THE HAITIAN BARBER
The first myth is the incorrect focus on William Fleurville as Springfield's first Negro resident and as Lincoln's exclusive Springfield Negro personal acquaintance. He was neither.

Fleurville arrived in Springfield in the fall of 1831, thirteen years after the arrival of at least thirty-two Negro predecessors. He was not Springfield's first Negro resident.

Mark Neely's Lincoln Encyclopedia compared Lincoln's Negro "personal acquaintances" in Springfield vs. Washington, D.C., and concluded that Lincoln's personal acquaintance" with Negroes increased when he moved from Springfield to Washington. To support his conclusion, Neely named one Springfield Negro, William Fleurville, and three Washington Negroes who were servants at the White House as examples of Lincoln's "personal acquaintances." True, Fleurville was a personal acquaintance of Lincoln, but Lincoln's Springfield Negro acquaintances during his twenty-four-year residency included others who were at least as well known to the future president as were those Negro White House servants cited by Neely.

These may seem to be trivial points of contention, and they would be if the sole point were competition over the claim to "first-ness" or "personal acquaintanceship." But they have greater significance. Historical acceptance of Fleurville as the city's first Negro and Lincoln's only Negro friend in Springfield has made it unnecessary for historians to look for evidence of the presence of other Negroes in Springfield either prior to 1831, the date of Fleurville's arrival or after Lincoln's arrival in 1837. Fleurville has become the historian's token ante-bellum[1], Springfield Negroes, whereas other Negroes have remained largely faceless and nameless. As a result, an important component of Lincoln's Springfield environment has been ignored.

THE MYTH OF A “FREE” SPRINGFIELD
The second myth is that Negro slavery and indentured servitude didn't exist in Lincoln's Springfield. W. T. Casey, a Springfield Negro, made this erroneous assertion in his 1926 History of the Colored People. However, slavery and indentured servitude existed in Springfield, both before and during Lincoln's residency.

Henry Kelly, the patriarch of the first family to settle at what became Springfield, brought at least one slave with him: "Negro Jack." On March 18, 1822, Henry and his wife, Mary, sold eight-year-old Negro Jack for $300. Jack was probably Springfield's first Negro resident and slave.

Two of the four original proprietors of the town of Springfield, John Taylor and Thomas Cox, owned Negro slaves while living in Springfield. Cox, who moved to Springfield in 1823 to become the first Registrar of the Land Office, owned at least two female slaves, Nance and Dice, and most probably a young male slave, Reuben. Nance and Dice were sold by the Sheriff of Sangamon County at a public auction in 1827 in order to satisfy Cox's debts. Later, Nance would be the subject of two Illinois Supreme Court cases involving the issue of slavery and the ownership of slaves by Illinois residents. One of the cases, Bailey vs. Cromwell, was argued by Lincoln.

In 1827 the Sangamon County Commissioners' Court levied a tax "on slaves and indentures or registered Negro or mulatto servants," which offers evidence that Springfield slaves were considered personal property."

The 1830 census, the last taken before Lincoln's arrival, listed Negroes in two categories: "free colored" and "slaves." The Springfield portion of the census lists nineteen Negroes, nine of whom were categorized as "slaves" under the names of their masters: John Taylor is listed as owning three slaves. Dr. John Todd, Mary Lincoln's uncle, is listed as owning five slaves. Temperance Watson, who lived on the land where Oak Ridge Cemetery is now situated, is listed as owning one slave.

The evidence is clear that slavery was still a part of Springfield's life at the time of Lincoln's arrival in 1837. It continued for some time thereafter. The 1840 census revealed that Springfield's population of 2,579 included 115 Negroes, about 4.4 percent of the total population. Six were "slaves," and the remaining 109 were "free colored." Lincoln knew and had significant personal contacts with at least three of the slave owners, James Bell, Ninian Edwards, and William May. James Bell, listed as owning one young female slave, was a member of the trading firm of James Bell and Joshua Speed. Lincoln represented Bell in at least three legal cases, one each in 1838, 1839, and 1842.

Ninian Edwards, Mary Lincoln’s brother-in-law, was listed as owning one young male slave.

William May was listed as owning one young female slave. May had emigrated from Kentucky to Springfield around 1829 when he was appointed the third Registrar of the Springfield Land Office. He was a lawyer and a partner of Stephen T. Logan. He was also a surveyor and a minister. He was the first County Clerk/Recorder of Sangamon County. From 1834 to 1839, May was a Congressman for whom Lincoln voted on October 27, 1834. In 1842, May was elected mayor of Springfield.

Slavery did exist in Lincoln’s Springfield, and Lincoln was aware of its existence.

As an adjunct to slavery, a system of voluntary or indentured servitude flourished in Springfield both prior to and after Lincoln's arrival. The system was legally permitted by the "Black Laws" adopted by Illinois' first legislature in 1819 and existed until February 7, 1865. Legally, an indenture is a contract. Indentured servitude was evidenced by a written contract between two persons providing that one person was to perform services for another person for a given period. "Voluntary or indentured servitude" became a euphemism for Illinois slavery, and it is often difficult to distinguish between the status of a Negro characterized as a slave and one characterized as an indentured servant.

Many of Lincoln's Springfield friends and acquaintances, including his in-laws, the Edwards and Todds, participated in the indenture system. This author has found seven Springfield written contracts of service indentures dated during the period from 1835 to 1845. The earliest, twenty-six-year-old Ninian Edwards, then a new resident of Springfield, and Hepsey, an eleven-year-old mulatto orphan girl. The terms of Hepsey's indenture were typical, providing that she was "...to learn the art and mystery of domestic housewifery and serve Edwards until the age of eighteen." In turn, Edwards was to provide Hepsey with sufficient meat, drink, washing, lodging, proper apparel for such an apprentice, and needful medical attention. He was to "cause her to read," at the end of her term, he was to give her a new Bible and two new suits of suitable and proper for summer and winter wear.

Hepsey’s indenture was in force on the evening of November 4, 1842, when Reverend Charles Dresser performed the marriage of Mary Todd and Abraham Lincoln in the Edwards' home at the southwest corner of Charles and Second Streets. Hepsey was probably present in the household at the time of their marriage.

Dr. John Todd, Mary Lincoln's uncle, had both a slave and an indentured servant. On April 18, 1836, he entered into an indenture with Elizabeth, an eight-year-old Negro girl, with the consent of her mother, Phoebe, one of Todd’s slaves.

In April of 1838, Reverend Charles Dresser moved to Springfield to become Rector of the Episcopal Church. Dresser was a New Englander born in Pomfret, Connecticut, in 1800. He graduated from Brown University in 1823.

A month after Dresser's arrival in Springfield, he entered into an indenture for the domestic labor of Rhoda Jane, a fifteen-year-old Negro girl. In the spring of 1839, he purchased a lot at Eighth and Jackson Streets and constructed a house for his family. Rhoda probably lived in this house. Six years later, Lincoln purchased the house and moved his family there.

There are four other indentures in the period 1841 to 1843: Nine-year-old Sidney Mclntry, a mulatto girl, to Nathanial A. Rankin; eight-year-old Josephine to James F. Owings, Clerk of the United States District Court at Springfield; sixteen-year-old James to William Hickman, a justice of the peace who in 1860 lived at the northwest corner of Eighth and Cook streets, two blocks south of Lincoln's residence; and seventeen-year-old Elizabeth Jones to Robert Irwin, Lincoln's banker.

Although these indentures are interesting, they provide no insight into how indentured servants were treated by their masters. One can glimpse Springfield's mid-Nineteenth-Century community standard for acceptable discipline of Negro servants, however, from an entry in the May 1843 Session minutes of the First Presbyterian Church, Mary Lincoln's church.

The Session considered the case of church member Dorothea Grant, a young, single mother or widow with two young children. Dorothea was cited for "Unchristian conduct in the treatment of a colored girl bound to her." She had whipped the girl with a cowhide.

Dorothea defended her conduct by explaining that:
"...She had been in the habit of correcting the girl when she thought her conduct required it, and did not think that she was correcting her any more severely than she had done at other times; she was not aware at the time that any marks were caused on her body by this whipping & can account for it only from its being done with a different instrument from what she had formerly used." (The instrument formerly used is not revealed.)
The Session committee reported that Dorothea "acknowledged that the whipping was too severe and not accompanied by that mercy which the Christian should exercise, and she was sincerely sorry for the reproach she had brought into the church." The Session meeting concluded with prayer.

The second example of ecclesiastical discipline is that imposed by the Second Presbyterian Church, sometimes called the abolitionist church. That church dealt severely with its members who purchased or dealt in "human beings," as evidenced by the 1843 ex-communication of member George Day for such activity.

In addition to slaves and indentured servants, there were a number of free Negroes living in the homes of Springfield white families where they acted as servants. Edward D. Baker, Richard F. Barrett, Jacob Bunn, William Butler, John Calhoun, Levi Davis, Benjamin Edwards, William Grimsley, Virgil Hickox, Lawrason Levering, John A. McClernand, Edmund Roberts, David Spear, and Samuel H. Treat all had Negro servants living in their homes.

The evidence is clear. The 1830 and 1840 census slave entries, the indentures, and the ecclesiastical discipline of church members substantiate that slavery and indentured servitude existed in Lincoln's Springfield.

THE THIRD MYTH; YOUR OBEDIENT SERVANTS
The third myth is that the Lincoln of 1860 knew little of Negro life. This assertion was made by Benjamin Quarles in his 1962 book Lincoln and the Negro. Quarles was the first historian to attempt to assess Lincoln's personal relationship with Negroes, but his conclusions about Lincoln's relationship with Springfield's Negroes were flawed. After making a cursory review of Lincoln's twenty-four Springfield years and briefly noting his relationships with Negroes, Quarles concluded that:
"The Lincoln of 1860 knew the Negro of dialect story, minstrel stage, and sea chantey' and did not have a "rounded knowledge of the colored people." Lincoln "knew little of Negro life" or "John Doe, colored."
Quarles' observations could lead one to incorrectly conclude that either Springfield's Negroes had little to do with Lincoln or that they were not representative of Negroes elsewhere in America, the amorphous John Doe, colored. There is little, if any, evidence to support either conclusion.

As pointed out earlier, some of Lincoln's closest associates possessed Negro slaves and indentured servants. It is reasonable to conclude that Lincoln observed, talked to, and knew the slaves and indentured servants of Ninian Edwards, the Negro slaves of Dr. John Todd, the indentured servants of Reverend Dresser and Robert Irwin, and the servants in the homes of Edward D. Baker (for whom the Lincoln's named their second son, Edward Wallace), and William Butler. The Lincoln household itself was served by Negroes. Two Negro women, "Aunt" Ruth Stanton and Maria Vance, worked in the Lincoln home. Maria, or "Aunt Maria" as she was called, served as cook, laundress, and maid for the Lincolns from 1850 to 1860, a longer period than any other servant who was known to have been employed by the Lincolns either in Springfield or Washington.

By late Twentieth-Century standards, the Lincolns lived in an integrated neighborhood. In 1860, at least twenty-one Negroes, about 10 percent of Springfield's Negro population, lived within a three-block radius of the Lincoln home.

Jameson Jenkins, a fifty-year-old North Carolina native who drove Lincoln's carriage from the Chenery House to the Great Western Railroad Station when Lincoln left Springfield for Washington, was a neighbor, along with his family of two, and boarders Aunt Jane Pelham, a seventy-five-year-old I mulatto washerwoman, and Quintan Watkins.

John Jackson, a fifty-two-year-old white washer and Virginia native, his wife Jenny, and their five children, as well as a lady named Diana Tyler, were also Lincoln's neighbors. On February 13, 1854, Jenny was received into membership in the First Presbyterian Church Mary Lincoln's church. David King, a twenty-six-year-old Virginia native, and his family of five were also neighbors of the Lincoln family.

Three Negro servant women lived in the homes of their employers within three blocks of the Lincoln home. Lucy Butcher, a twenty-six-year-old Virginia native, was a servant in at the residence of Issac A. Hawley. Rebecca Smith, an eighteen-year-old mulatto, was a servant at the Jacob Bunn residence. Charlotte Sims was a servant at the John A. McClernand residence.

Lincoln certainly knew of the day-to-day life of Springfield slaves, indentured servants, and free Negroes. His experiences and knowledge of Springfield Negroes were much broader than Quarles' conclusions.

A corollary to the third myth is that Lincoln's observations of Negroes while visiting friends and relatives in Kentucky and while residing at the White House were more significant than his observations of and relationships with Springfield's Negroes during his residency in the capital city.

Quarles found particular importance in Lincoln's two visits to Kentucky, one of the twenty-one days in August of 1841 at the Farmington plantation of his most intimate friend, Joshua F. Speed; and a second of about twenty-three days in November of 1847 to Mary's family, the Todds, in Lexington. Quarles speculated that Lincoln viewed the slave pens at Lexington and asserted that Lincoln was served by Negro servants at the Speed plantation and saw slavery in operation. Quarles further speculated that the Speeds may have assigned a slave to Lincoln for his personal needs.

Lincoln spent a total of forty-four days making these Kentucky visits. In contrast, there are 8,698 days in Lincoln's Springfield years. Quarles, however, made little mention of them and nothing of the presence of either slaves or indentured servants in Springfield. He speculated not at all about Lincoln's relationship with Springfield Negroes, who were certainly more impressionable on Lincoln than the slaves he observed hypothetically in Kentucky.

THE FOURTH MYTH OF NEGROES ACQUIESCENCE
The fourth myth is that Springfield Negroes were menials and servants incapable of activism on issues of racial justice. David Donald's Lincoln, published in 1995, made this claim:

"Of nearly 5,000 inhabitants of Springfield in 1850, only 171 were Negroes, most of whom labored in menial or domestic occupations. These were not people who could speak out boldly to say that they were as American as any whites, that they had no African roots and that they did not want to leave the United States."

There are at least three examples of Springfield Negro activism that contradict Donald's passive characterization of Springfield Negroes. The first is that of Springfield Negroes annually celebrating the anniversary of the 1834 emancipation of 800,000 slaves in the British West Indies. One such celebration was held on August 2, 1858, and the Springfield Journal reported that "the colored people of our city...celebrated the twenty-fourth anniversary of the British West Indies emancipation. They formed a procession and marched through the principal streets with music and banners. Then they proceeded to Kelly's Grove, where they had a number of speeches."

Lincoln was present in Springfield on the date of this celebration.

The following year on August 1st, a Monday and presumably a workday, the Journal reported that "They [Springfield Negroes] went out to the Fairground, where speeches were delivered," and P. L. Donnegan spoke on "West India Emancipation," and Reverend Myers spoke on "Sabbath Schools."

"After this, the audience was dismissed till after refreshment. Seeing everyone take their baskets and retire on the bluegrass to partake in their picnic dinner was amusing. Afterward, the audience was called on to rally around the stand to hear more speeches… A young man from Belleville, John W. Menard, Jr., came to the stand. His voice is very strong, and his manner is impressive. Subject 'American Slavery," which he painted in its darkest hues, and gave able remarks in defense of Liberty and equality. His speech was truly the best of the day, after which all retired with hearty cheers for Menard, Fred [Erick] Douglass, and others."

Lincoln was present in Springfield on this date.

The second example is that of thirty-five-year-old Springfield barber and Baptist elder Samuel S. Ball, a Negro who, in 1848, traveled to the African Republic of Liberia. Upon his return, Ball made a written report of the country's advantages as a place for Negroes to relocate. The plan of relocation, known as colonization, was considered a possible solution to the racism and legal discrimination experienced by Illinois Negroes.

Ball's adventure began in August 1847 when he attended the annual meeting of the Colored Baptist Association in Madison County, Illinois. The Association reviewed reports on the "condition of the Republic of Liberia favorable to us in America" and resolved to "...send Elder S.S. Ball to Liberia, as an agent to inquire into the conditions of the aforesaid country, and to report to this Association on his return, provided means can be raised and procured to defray his expenses."

In preparation for his visit to Liberia, Ball accepted the mission and obtained a letter of introduction from Illinois Governor August C. French supported the colonization movement, as did Lincoln at once. Governor French's letter stated that he had known Mr. Ball for some time and regarded him as a man of strictest integrity and veracity and "worthy of the encouragement and confidence of all friends of colonization."

Ball's April 11, 1848 departure from Baltimore for Liberia was reported by the Springfield Journal: "S.S. Ball, a very respectable colored man, late of this city, left Baltimore in a schooner on the April 11th for Liberia, for the purposes of examining that country as an asylum for free Negroes."

Ball arrived in Liberia on May 16, 1848. By August 24, 1848, he had returned to America, and his homecoming appearance before the annual meeting of the Colored Baptist Association was reported as follows:

"Friday morning, August 25, intelligence being brought to the Association of the arrival... of Elder Samuel S. Ball, our missionary to Africa, whereupon the Association immediately adjourned to receive him... and conduct him to the preaching stand... Elder Ball responded with much feeling, after which, with the shaking of hands, many tears were shed for joy, and praises were offered to God for his kind providence. Saturday at 3 p.m., Elder Ball was appointed to make his report to the Association... After hearing it, it was ordered printed, and it came out in pamphlet form and was sold to defray expenses and to remunerate Elder Ball for his services on the trip. Elder Ball exhibited numerous African curiosities."

Ball's report was published in a thirteen-page pamphlet entitled Liberia, The Condition and Prospects of that Republic; Made from Actual Observation. The report is well-organized and well-written, describing Liberia's climate, geography, government, agriculture, and religion. One cannot read Ball's report without concluding that he was a literate and sophisticated observer entitled to more than the patronizing characterization of "servant" or "menial." At the age of thirty-five, this Virginia-born Negro left his young family and 3,912 fellow Springfield residents and ventured across the Atlantic to an unknown country for the purpose of determining if it would be suitable for settlement by Negroes. He was obviously disturbed by the condition of Negro life and concluded there might be a better life elsewhere. He took affirmative steps to investigate one alternative.

Back in Springfield, Ball went about his daily life, which included earning a living as a barber, cleaner, and bathroom operator, a Springfield niche for Negro males discovered by Ball and his business competitor, William Fleurville. Ball's business was located on the south side of the square and was in close proximity to Lincoln's law office on Sixth and Adams Streets. During the period 1849 through 1851, the Springfield Illinois State Journal printed a number of advertisements for Ball's barbershop. One such advertisement on March 28, 1849, stated that his shop would be open at all times from Monday morning until Saturday night and would have on hand "Ball's celebrated Restorative, so famous for the restoration of hair, and to prevent."

Ball continued to advocate colonization. In 1851, he spoke at Springfield and St. Louis, declaring: "I am the warm friend and enthusiastic admirer of Liberia." He described Liberia as "the brightest spot on this earth to the colored man. Liberia not only protects the colored man in the enjoyment of equal rights but... its institutions fostered merit, developed the moral and intellectual faculties of its citizens and produced great men."

That same year. Ball drew up a bill for the Illinois State Legislature proposing that the state provide financial support to free Illinois Negroes wishing to migrate to Liberia. The Springfield Journal supported Ball's efforts.

On September 16, 1852, at age forty-two, Ball died of typhoid fever. He left a widow and six children, and real estate valued at $1,018.59.

THE ANTI-COLONIZATION MOVEMENT
Not all Springfield Negroes favored Ball's colonization efforts. In fact, Ball's opinion was probably in the minority among his fellow Springfield Negroes. On February 12, 1858, Lincoln's forty-ninth birthday, the "colored citizens of Springfield" held a public meeting to protest the Dred Scott Decision and to express opposition to the colonization movement.

The meeting was prompted by the Illinois State Colonization Society's request of the State Legislature for money to assist in the resettlement of Negroes to Africa and the representation that "some of the most intelligent and enterprising of the people of color in the State of Illinois desire the assistance of the Colonization Society, to enable them to remove to Liberia or some other part of Africa."

Landen C. Coleman, a twenty-eight-year-old Springfield Negro shoemaker, acted as chairman of the meeting that, by its existence and adoption of a Forman resolution, contradicts Donald's assertion that Springfield Negroes "...were not people who could speak out boldly to say that they were as American as any whites, that they had no African roots, and that they did not want to leave the United States." While the entire resolution deserves study, in the interest of space, I will quote only a portion:

“After careful inquiry, we have been unable to ascertain that any intelligent man of color either desires to Africa or requires aid for such an enterprise.

"We have no desire to exchange the broad prairies, fertile soil, healthful climate, and Christian civilization of Illinois, for the dangerous navigation of the wide ocean, the tangled forests, savage beasts, heathen people, and miasmatic shores of Africa."

"We believe that the operations of the Colonization Society is calculated to excite prejudices against us and to impel ignorant or ill-disposed persons to take measures for our expulsion from the land of our nativity, from our country and from our homes."

"We do for ourselves, and in behalf of our colored brethren throughout the United States, most earnestly protest against the recent decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Dred Scott, not only because... Scott and his family were by that decision most unjustly doomed to slavery, but also because the... decision misrepresents the greater charter of American liberty, the Declaration of Independence, and the spirit of the American people, as well as the Constitution of the United States."

"We take the Declaration as the Gospel of freedom; we believe in its great truth, 'that all men are created equal, endowed with certain inalienable rights, among which are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.' We know ourselves to be men, and we claim our rights as such under this '...The declaration' of the Old Thirteen [colonies]. We also claim the right of citizenship in this, the country of our birth. We were born here, and where we desire to die and to be buried. We are not African. The best blood of Virginia, Maryland, Kentucky, and other State, where our brethren are still held in bondage by their brothers, flows in our veins. We are not, therefore, aliens, either in blood or in race, to the people of the country in which we were born. Why then should we be disenfranchised and denied the rights of citizenship in the north, and those of human nature itself in the south?"

There is no hard evidence to link Lincoln to these three examples of Springfield's Negro activism. But Lincoln's Springfield was a small town. Did these activities influence Lincoln? If he was influenced by brief glimpses of slavery on visits to Kentucky, as Quarles asserted, then without question, the influences of Springfield s Negro population engaged in the daily routine of life during Lincoln's residency were even more significant.

In reaching conclusions about Negroes in Lincoln's Springfield, contemporary Lincoln historians have largely relied upon secondary sources and have thereby unknowingly acquiesced in the omissions and prejudices of the past. Each generation of Lincoln historians has repeated and thereby perpetuated the myth, giving us an incomplete picture of Lincoln's Springfield.

It is time to put these myths aside. Historians should take a fresh look at Lincoln and reconsider some equally entrenched views about the origins, nature, and evolution of his mature views on race, slavery, colonization, abolitionism, emancipation, and Negro civil rights. Only then will we have a true picture of the significance of Negroes as part of Lincoln's Springfield community.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.
Illinois State Library


[1] Antebellum: occurring or existing before the Civil War.

Tuesday, February 6, 2018

The History of the Hyperbolic Paraboloid Edens Theater in Northbrook, Illinois. (1963-1994)

This futuristic-looking classic 60s-era movie house was a long-time landmark in suburban Northbrook, visible along the Edens Expressway (for which the theater was named) and Lake-Cook Road, both of which ran past the Edens. It was designed by the Chicago-based firm Perkins and Will.
The Hyperbolic Paraboloid Edens Theater in Northbrook, Illinois.




Built in 1963 and opened with the movie, "Divorce Italian Style," the large Edens was inside a traditional movie theater with a giant screen, red curtains and a small stage area. The original color scheme was gold and off-white, with teak paneling. However, the Edens' exterior was a real stunner, like something from a 1950s sci-fi movie.

It was called the largest "hyperbolic paraboloid" building ever constructed when it opened. 
The theater's concrete roof curved sharply upwards on either end, rising dramatically skyward at each point. Its corrugated concrete walls were broken up by long, undulating swaths of glass along the entrance areas. The sunken main lobby was reached by stairs and featured ultra-modern "living room" furniture and artwork.
On November 14, 1969, a slightly smaller, ordinary-looking second theater was built and opened adjacent to the original theater. The theaters were renamed the Edens I & II.
The once enormously popular Edens was shuttered by its last operator, Cineplex Odeon, in 1994, stating that the cost of refurbishing the aging twin was too prohibitive. The theater lacked a state-of-the-art sound and projection system. The Hyperbolic Paraboloid Edens Theater was razed in 1994. 
When Star Wars was released on Wednesday, May 25, 1977 half of the people waiting in line were disappointed that the movie was sold out and they were turned away. A friend and I waited over 2 hours that Saturday, the 27th, to get in to see Star Wars. We got in... and great seats, smack-dab in the middle of the theater too.
"The Life of a Beautiful Bird"
A 5-PART EDENS THEATER VIDEO

(1/5) Edens Theater  [runtime 12:11]

(2/5) Edens Theater  [runtime 11:06]

(3/5) Edens Theater [runtime 9:20]

(4/5) Edens Theater [runtime 14:15]

(5/5) Edens Theater [runtime 9:11]

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D. 

James Ford, Leader of Ford's Ferry Gang - River Pirates.

James N. Ford (1775-1833), also known as James N. Ford, Sr. the "N" possibly for Neal, was an American civic leader and business owner in western Kentucky and southern Illinois in the late 1790s to mid-1830s
This is an early 19th-century horse-powered ferry boat, the kind used by James Ford.
Ford was a powerful and scheming leader of a ruthless gang of outlaws, owned a ferry that crossed the Ohio River near Cave-in-Rock, Illinois from 1823 to 1833. "Ford's Ferry Gang" helped him acquire a fortune in land, money, slaves, and livestock by robbing and murdering travelers.
Ford was an Illinois associate of Isaiah L. Potts and the Potts Hill Gang, highway robbers, of the infamous Potts Tavern. Ford's Ferry Road was a ten-mile wooded trail from the ferry to Pott's Tavern, where weary settlers who had escaped Ford's gang were victims of the same fate at the hands of owner Bill Potts.

James Ford also had an association with illegal slaver trader and kidnapper of free blacks, John Hart Crenshaw, and may have taken part in the Illinois version of the Reverse Underground Railroad. At one point, they used the Cave-in-Rock as their headquarters, on the Illinois side of the lower Ohio River, which is approximately 85 miles below Evansville, Indiana.

The Ford and Potts era at Cave-in-Rock ended with the murder of Ford in 1833 by another gang member.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D. 

Sunday, February 4, 2018

John Crenshaw's Hickory Hill Plantation "Old Slave House" on the Reverse Underground Railroad in Equality, Illinois.


In historical writing and analysis, PRESENTISM introduces present-day ideas and perspectives into depictions or interpretations of the past. Presentism is a form of cultural bias that creates a distorted understanding of the subject matter. Reading modern notions of morality into the past is committing the error of presentism. Historical accounts are written by people and can be slanted, so I try my hardest to present fact-based and well-researched articles.

Facts don't require one's approval or acceptance.

I present [PG-13] articles without regard to race, color, political party, or religious beliefs, including Atheism, national origin, citizenship status, gender, LGBTQ+ status, disability, military status, or educational level. What I present are facts — NOT Alternative Facts — about the subject. You won't find articles or readers' comments that spread rumors, lies, hateful statements, and people instigating arguments or fights.

FOR HISTORICAL CLARITY
When I write about the INDIGENOUS PEOPLE, I follow this historical terminology:
  • The use of old commonly used terms, disrespectful today, i.e., REDMAN or REDMEN, SAVAGES, and HALF-BREED are explained in this article.
Writing about AFRICAN-AMERICAN history, I follow these race terms:
  • "NEGRO" was the term used until the mid-1960s.
  • "BLACK" started being used in the mid-1960s.
  • "AFRICAN-AMERICAN" [Afro-American] began usage in the late 1980s.

— PLEASE PRACTICE HISTORICISM 
THE INTERPRETATION OF THE PAST IN ITS OWN CONTEXT.
 


The Crenshaw House (also known as the Crenshaw Mansion, Hickory Hill or, most commonly, The Old Slave House) is a historic former residence located in Gallatin County, Village of Equality, Illinois. The house was constructed in the 1830s and was the primary residence of John Hart Crenshaw, his wife, and their five children.
Landowner and illegal slave trader John H. Crenshaw leased the state-owned salt works located at the Illinois Salines, two saline springs along the Saline River near Equality, Illinois, which had been important sources of salt since prehistory. Salt was vital to the early American frontier economy as a nutrient and a means to preserve food.

Illinois was a free state, and the Illinois State Constitution banned slavery. However, the law permitted the use of slaves at the salt works since the labor was so arduous that no free men could be found to do it. As the lessee of the salt works, Crenshaw was one of a small minority of Illinois residents legally entitled to keep slaves, and Crenshaw became remarkably wealthy. At one point, Crenshaw's taxes amounted to one-seventh of the revenue of the entire state. Crenshaw owned thousands of acres of land, in addition to the 30,000 acres he leased from the state and more than 700 slaves. In 1838, Crenshaw and his brother Abraham used this wealth to build the mansion on Hickory Hill in Equality, a few miles from the salt works near the town of Junction.

In September 1840, Abraham Lincoln, a state representative, was in Gallatin County for over a week, attending debates in Shawneetown and Equality. The Crenshaws hosted a ball in honor of the debates.

The ball was held on the second floor. The house's second floor was designed to be easily converted into a ballroom because the hall and two of the rooms were made from moveable partitions, particularly for such events. 

Mr. Lincoln and other male guests spent the night in the Southeast bedroom of the Crenshaw House. The furniture in the room consisted of one bed and two chairs. Lincoln either slept on the bed, which was shorter than he was, or he could have spread out over the two chairs or slept on the floor.

The Crenshaw House was a "station" on the Reverse Underground Railroad that transported escaped slaves and kidnapped free blacks back to servitude in slave states. The home's third-floor attic contains 12 rooms long believed to be where Crenshaw operated a secret slave jail for kidnapped free black and captured runaway slaves.
In 2004, the National Park Service named the mansion a "station" on the Reverse Underground Railroad to acknowledge Crenshaw's practice of kidnapping free blacks in Illinois and selling them to buyers from the Slave States.

AN IN-DEPTH LOOK AT CRENSHAW'S REVERSE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD

The key to proving whether blacks were held against their will on the third floor of the Old Slave House lies in discovering the character of the home's original owner, John Hart Crenshaw. Rediscovered documents show that Crenshaw was a slave-holder of indentured servants and was at least twice indicted as a kidnapper of free blacks. Crenshaw was a conductor of an Underground Railroad that operated in reverse, from north to south, from freedom to slavery.

According to the Complete History of Illinois, published in 1874, "the crime of seizing free blacks, running them south and selling them into slavery from this State, for a long time was quite common. Portions of southern Illinois for many years afforded a safe retreat to those kidnapping outlaws. We cannot cite the numerous cases of kidnapping." The book also tells how it was done. "In the majority of cases, the poor ignorant blacks, by fraud and deceit, were inveigled (tricked) into a trip south on a flat boat or other errands, and at some pre-arranged point on the river, they would be turned over to confederates, forcibly and rapidly taken to the interior and there sold into slavery... Another mode was to seize a black and forcibly convey him to a rendezvous either on the Ohio or Mississippi river, but not out of the State, where a confederate would appear and carry him beyond."

A letter in the Henry Eddy manuscript collection tells how John Forrester stole one woman from Hamilton County and took her to Union County, Kentucky. In it, the letter writer relates the woman's story of being taken to that state and moved from "house to house" in an attempt to keep her hidden. This implies an organized network of kidnappers, an effort apparently more organized than the legitimate Underground Railway. The letter also proves that the victims were held in homes. In Gallatin County, legend identifies at least two such houses: Crenshaw's Hickory Hill plantation home and a mansion on Sandy Ridge south of Shawneetown, Illinois. In the second house, the victims were kept in cells in the basement and likely chained to large iron rings that were set into the basement walls in each cell.
Although Illinois was a free state, slavery was legal in two forms. Not until 1846 did the Illinois Supreme Court finally rule that all slavery in the state must end. Illinois' first constitution, approved by Congress in 1818, allowed the leasing of slaves for the salt works near Equality, Illinois. It also kept intact the form of slavery known as indentured servitude. Slavery in Illinois didn't end until just 15 years before the Civil War.

The main body of evidence discovered about Crenshaw dealt with the 1842 kidnapping of Maria Adams and her children. The case has been studied before, but we only know the victims' names. Another case is an 1825 case where Crenshaw was one of three defendants. We don't know the outcome of this one, let alone who the victims were. The Adams case is covered by both a newspaper editorial immediately following the trial and letters from legislators to the governor four years later. The writings tell how Crenshaw kidnapped the family as charged and sold them to a slave trader named Lewis Kuykendall. Crenshaw was acquitted of that crime by a Gallatin County jury in 1842, but kidnapping was hard to prove. The prosecutor, Willis Allen of Marion, Illinois, had to prove that the victims had been taken out of state. Although it was known that Crenshaw kidnapped Maria and her children, Allen could not prove that they had left the state. Thus, the jury could do nothing but acquit Crenshaw and Kuykendall.

George Flower, a leader of the English Settlement in Edwards County, wrote about how hard it was to legally find a kidnapper guilty. He compared it to finding a common thief guilty. At the time, a thief could be whipped, but a kidnapper was simply fined. "A kidnapper, who would steal a free man and plunge him and his posterity into everlasting slavery, could not be brought to trial. A murderer was sure to escape. But the poor creature who had not stolen to the value of a dime was thus unmercifully dealt with."

The kidnapping of free blacks had long been a problem in Illinois. The Black Code of 1819 allowed a fine of $1,000 to be levied on behalf of the victim but did not provide for any criminal convictions. Coupled with the fact that blacks could not testify against a white man in court, the two made any legal remedy almost useless. Only in a few counties where the pro-slavery sentiment wasn't so strong did free blacks win cases against white kidnappers. Usually, it was for the crime of trespassing, and only with the help of friendly whites did they convince juries.

An early reference to the kidnapping problem came in 1822, during Gov. Edward Coles' inaugural address, when he asked the legislature to investigate the problem. That same message also showed Coles' hostility towards slavery and opened up a two-year battle between pro-slavery and anti-slavery forces in an effort to change the state constitution. In August 1824, Illinois residents voted against holding a constitutional convention and thus slavery. However, the pro-slavery question passed in the southern counties, with Gallatin County being the strongest for a convention.

During this time, Crenshaw operated a salt well supplying water to the salt works of Guard, Choisser & Company and his own. In 1825, Crenshaw, John Forrester and Preston W. Davis were indicted for kidnapping. We know because Crenshaw sued Davis four years later to get him to pay his part of the defense attorney's fees. However, no more is known. In 1827 or 1828, the Illinois Spectator newspaper of Edwardsville may have referred to the trial because they hinted at Crenshaw's involvement in the kidnapping. 

The newspaper reference comes as a footnote in Norman Dwight Harris' 1904 book "The History of Negro Servitude in Illinois and of Slavery Agitation in that State, 1719-1864. The book paraphrases from the newspaper a list of three men from Illinoistown (what's now East St. Louis) as being kidnappers. It also mentioned a "prominent resident of Shawneetown, Mr. John C," as being a kidnapper. The footnote also indicated that "Mr. John C" kept the slaves in a cave on the Wabash River near his home. There is no major cave on the Wabash in Gallatin County, but there is a major cave near Crenshaw's home and salt works along the Saline River. (It should also be noted that the Salines, although along the Saline River, were often described as being along the Ohio River near the mouth of the Wabash.) Equality Cave on Cave Hill is just a few miles from both the salt works and the land where Crenshaw lived as a teen.

In 1828, a black woman named Lucinda was kidnapped and taken to Kentucky. She identified her attacker as "John Granger." She also mentioned William and Abraham Granger. Henry Eddy did not get the letter until 1843. Yet, when he wrote the legal brief in the Davis vs. Crenshaw case in 1829, he first wrote "John Granger." He drew a line across "Granger" and then wrote "Crenshaw." Since Abraham and William are two of John Crenshaw's brothers, was John Crenshaw also known as John Granger? Also, Eddy was the state's attorney who prosecuted Crenshaw in 1825.

Another kidnapping of that time showed the type of harassment that existed against free blacks. The Shawneetown newspaper carried an item on July 27, 1829, about the kidnapping of Maria, an 8-year-old. She had been freed the year before by the heirs of John McAlister of Montgomery County, Tennessee. Because freed slaves could not remain in that state, 62 of the slaves were brought to Illinois and freed. Prior to the kidnapping, someone stole two horses from the family, preventing them from making a crop. Harassment of free blacks continued to worsen. To the north, in the English Settlement, Flower organized passage and permission for 30 free blacks to move to Haiti. At that time, Haiti was the only independent black country in the Western Hemisphere.
By 1830, Crenshaw's wealth had increased, and he was the owner of a steam mill near Equality, Illinois and three of the nine salt works in the area. During the 1830s, the harassment of blacks increased to include murdering whites who interfered. Benjamin Hardin died in 1834 or 1835. Although killed by a black who was hired by another black, it was strongly believed that a white businessman was behind the murder. Sometime in late 1835 or early 1836, James Lynch was on his way from Shawneetown to Equality to file emancipation papers for a family slave when he disappeared. He had tried to file them earlier but was discouraged because he was not yet 21.
While kidnapping continued to be a growing problem throughout Southern Illinois, Crenshaw's wealth increased. In 1833, he first hired a German contractor to start on Hickory Hill Plantation, the three-story home locals later knew as the Old Slave House. During this time, southeast Illinois was plagued by more than kidnappers. The region was home to a sizable criminal element, including counterfeiters and highwaymen. The leaders of these groups were some of the same outlaws that had been at Cave-in-Rock at the turn of the century. In his history of Illinois, Gov. Thomas Ford described the outlaws as "an ancient colony of horse thieves, counterfeiters and robbers."

The leader, or one of the main leaders, was James Ford of Ford's Ferry fame. A minor leader when the outlaws were still based in Cave-in-Rock prior to 1806, he was still leading his group when he was assassinated by the Regulators in 1833. Ford lived at times on Hurricane Island opposite Elizabethtown, Illinois, and at times at his plantation in Livingston County, Kentucky. Because Ford was a civic leader, even sheriff at one time, he either remained above suspicion or beyond the reach of the law. On the Illinois side in Hardin County, the legendary outlaw Billy Potts was the real-life Isaiah Potts, a justice of the peace.

In Pope County, known kidnapper Caleb Slankard operated a gang that abducted blacks. At one time, his boss, or partner, was William H. Vaughn, a Bay City storekeeper. Vaughn was believed to have been a pirate on the Gulf Coast before moving to his store boat in the Ohio River. He was tied to at least two kidnappings involving a total of seven children. After he testified at a grand jury that Slankard and others had actually done the abduction, he died from an unexpected seizure. It was believed someone poisoned his whiskey.

As Crenshaw grew richer, his reputation became mixed. The children of one of Crenshaw's brothers claimed that he cheated his nieces and nephews out of their share of their father's estate. The Illinois Republican newspaper in Shawneetown described public attitude toward Crenshaw this way in March 1842, "although he is a member of the church, and may be considered a saint by those who are in the church, is not considered very much of a saint by those who are out of the church" (italics are from the original).

Not until the 1842 Maria Adams case do we start getting details about the kidnappings. Crenshaw purchased the indenture contracts for Maria Adams and her husband Charles in late 1829 or early 1830. He purchased the contracts from Col. A. G. S. Wight, who was moving to Galena. Also included in the sale was a son named Nelson, a daughter named Ellen, and possibly some younger children. In October 1829, Maria gave birth to another daughter, Nancy Jane. Charles had less time on his contract and filed his freedom papers on April 29, 1834.

Maria was born in 1790. She was indentured in Randolph County, Illinois, on July 14, 1810, for 45 years when she was 15 years old. Charles was born in about 1794. In late 1813 or early 1814, he moved from Maryland to Illinois with his owners. On March 19, 1814, he was indentured to Dr. Conrad Will, who had moved to the Big Muddy River the year before. Charles was lucky, and his indenture was only for 20 years. Sometime during the next four years, Illinois Territorial Gov. Ninian Edwards purchased Charles' contract. During this time Charles also married Maria. Possibly as a wedding present, on March 6, 1818, Edwards filed a statement in Randolph County Court at Kaskaskia pledging that he would let Maria go free when Charles' contract expired.

Ellen Adams was born in 1823. Nelson is believed to have been born earlier, but definitely prior to 1825. That year, Edwards talked with Col. Wight in Vandalia and mentioned that he was considering selling them. Later that summer, Wight sent an agent to Edwards to arrange the purchase of Charles and Maria. Either the parents, the children, or both threw such a fit over being separated that Edwards agreed to send the children with the agent for a short time. Edwards spent the next four years writing letters to Wight to get the children back or at least some type of payment for them. Maria cooked for Edwards for nearly eight years and at least started as a cook with Wight. She probably continued as a cook in Crenshaw's employ. After Charles had received his freedom, Crenshaw refused to follow Edwards' statement filed in Randolph County since the governor had never filed an amended indenture with the court. That left Maria still in the service of Crenshaw. Nelson also received his freedom sometime during the 1830s, or at least by 1842. By that year, Ellen was also still working as an indentured servant, but likely in Michael K. Lawler's household, where she was freed in 1845. Crenshaw likely gave Ellen to his daughter and son-in-law Lawler as a wedding present in 1837.

Early in 1842, Crenshaw kidnapped Maria and her children while Charles and Nelson were away from their home. According to the Illinois Republican newspaper in Shawneetown, Crenshaw kept them hidden for several days until Kuykendall arrived for them in the middle of the night. In an editorial, Publisher Samuel D. Marshall wrote that the "aged mother" and her children were handcuffed or tied, then placed into a wagon and driven out of the state by Kuykendall. Crenshaw and Kuykendall were acquitted because the state's attorney could not prove what everyone knew.

Shawneetown attorney Henry Eddy fleshed out Marshall's story with more details in an 1846 letter to Gov. Ford. After the kidnapping, Nelson Adams and another black man named Fox stopped Crenshaw on the road as he returned from the ironworks in Hardin County. With Fox holding a rifle, Nelson demanded to know where Crenshaw had taken his family. We don't know if they got an answer, but Crenshaw quickly had Nelson, Fox and Charles Adams, who wasn't even present, arrested and convicted of assault with the intent to murder. They were sentenced to either four or five years in the state penitentiary in Alton, Illinois.

After Ellen receives her freedom from Lawler, she likely works with sympathetic whites like Eddy to find her family. Eddy Wright and the two sons of late Gov. Edwards, one of whom was a former attorney-general for the state, petitioned Gov. Ford to pardon the Adamses so they could help rescue their family. Both the letters and the pardon were dated Dec. 8, 1846, the last day of Ford's administration. Eddy's letters stated that Maria and the children were in Texas. Regrettably, we don't know if they were ever saved. The 1850 Census of Gallatin County shows only Charles Adams. He is listed as living with a white family at the time.

Two years after the Adams' kidnapping, a group of men kidnapped 10-year-old Peter White of Equality, Illinois and three other younger children and sold him into slavery. Walter White, a nephew of Gen. Leonard White, rescued the children. The two may have been related, although Walter was white and Peter was black. Later, census records show at least three Whites whose race was listed as mulatto.

The black White family was likely the freed slaves of the Whites that lived in Gallatin County. Southern Illinois historian G. W. Smith interviewed White in 1903 when he was 70. White was living in Equality, Illinois, at that time. Although Smith wrote that White provided him with a lot of information, Smith never told who kidnapped White and the other children. By 1934, when White's descendants were still living in Equality, James Lyle Sisk designed signs for the Old Slave House stating that Peter and the children were kept in a third-floor cell for a time. Sisk, an uncle to the current owner, George Sisk, was the long-time principal of Champaign's Franklin Junior High School.

In 1846, Crenshaw was involved in what was known as the Prather case. Martha Prather had moved from either South Carolina or Tennessee to Gallatin County in 1826. On Feb. 7, 1827, she signed emancipation papers for her 23 slaves and put up a $23,000 bond to the county. Sometime later, a group from Tennessee followed the slaves and tried to prosecute them as "fugitive runaways." Newton E. Wright and others filed a federal lawsuit. From the Eddy collection, there are summaries of the depositions filed by Eddy on behalf of the freed slaves. An eighth deposition, that of John Crenshaw, was mentioned but not summarized. From the letter, researchers can infer that Crenshaw was testifying on behalf of Wright or may have even been a party to the lawsuit. The U.S. District Court ruled against Wright. Not much is known about Wright other than how he is described in the 1876 state history as a "shrewd bad man" living on Wolf Island "who had long been engaged in the kidnapping."

Wolf Island was a 15,000-acre island in the Mississippi River. It was the fifth island south of the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. Early descriptions of the island dating back to 1808 tell of dense woods with a prairie on a hill in the center. Its owner at the time was a professional gambler named James Hunter.

Also, in 1846, another Crenshaw was connected with a kidnapper. This time it was the eldest daughter, Mary Hart Crenshaw, the wife of John E. Hall. On July 12, 1846, Mary held a "frolic" during the afternoon at her home and a dance that evening. According to her sister-in-law Ada, who was married to Crenshaw's eldest son William T. Crenshaw, one of the guests at the dance was "kidnapper Sands." John E. Hall served as the circuit clerk of Gallatin County from 1848 to 1856, and during his last year in office, he was assassinated in his office and shot in the back. The jury acquitted his killer, Robert C. Sloo, on the grounds of temporary emotional insanity.

Kidnapping continued in Southern Illinois up through the Civil War. At least one kidnapping occurred near Marion in 1857, and kidnappers were named in Union County in 1859. Not until after the war did the practice stop. During the 1840s and 1850s, Crenshaw became more involved in farming his thousands of acres of land. He also diversified into other industries, such as lumber, railroads, banks and distilling. As he grew older, he likely gave up his secret life of crime. He might have possibly even become the "good Methodist" people claimed him to be.

The role of slavery played a much greater part in our Illinois history than we like to admit. Very few sites remain today from that era. Crenshaw's Hickory Hill Plantation, which is known as the Old Slave House, is one of the few, if not the last, left.

Many believe Illinois was a free state, even before joining the Union in 1818. But both Indians and Negros were slaves or indentured servants beginning from the French colonial period and continuing during the American period, at least in five southern counties.


Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.
Some historical accounts by Jon Musgrave 

 
GALLATIN COUNTY REGISTER OF SLAVES (INDENTURES) AND RECORDS OF EMANCIPATED SLAVES

These records were found in the Gallatin County Clerk's office at the Courthouse in Shawneetown, Illinois, in a very old book that is not indexed, but the pages are numbered. Fully one-half of the slaves had not been residents of Illinois prior to their freedom but were brought by their masters from Tennessee, South Carolina, etc., to be freed. Each record has been summarized. This is Deed Book "A" and begins in 1814.

INDENTURES OF GALLATIN COUNTY, ILLINOIS TERRITORY AND STATE
NOTE: The records do not begin until page #27 in this book, and the first one is incomplete.

p.27) (Name not listed on this page) for cash and necessities of life for 40 years. HANNAH to Jepthah HARDIN. Wit: Jos. M. STREET.

p.28) 12/12/1815. PETE, Negro man about age 34 of Gallatin County, Territory of Illinois and Jepthah HARDIN. For boarding, clothing and necessities for a natural lifetime or 50 years from the date. Wit: Jos. M. STREET, Gallatin County Clerk

p.30-1) 3/4/1816. JENNY Negro woman about age 33, Gallatin County, Territory of Illinois, and Jepthah HARDIN for $400 and keep for 40 years. Wit: Jos. M. STREET.

p.32-3) 7/25/1815. WINNEY, Negro woman aged about 35 years, Gallatin County, Terr. Ill. And William RILLEY for $300 and keep for 15 years from this date. Wit: Jos. M. STREET, Gallatin County Clerk.

p.34-5) 8/22/1818. DAN, Negro man about age 19, of Gallatin County, Illinois Territory, and Cornelius LAFFERTY for $600 and keep, for 16 years from this date. Wit: Jos. M. STREET, Gallatin County Clerk.

p.35-6) 8/22/1818. JIM, a free Negro man aged about 30 years of Gallatin County, Illinois Territory and Cornelius LAFFERTY for $500 and keep for 30 years from date. Wit: Jos. M. STREET, Gallatin County Clerk.

p.36-8) 8/22/1818. PHILLIS, a Negro girl about age 15 years, of Gallatin County, Illinois Territory and John POSEY, for $1 and board, clothing, and maintenance for 60 years from this date. No witness. Phillis agrees to move any place in the U.S. and Territories of the U.S.

p.38-9) 8/2/1818. WINNEY, free Negro girl age about 15 years of Gallatin County, Territory of Illinois and William BOWLES for $1 and board, clothing, maintenance and kind treatment for 25 years from date. Wit: Jos. M. STREET.

p.40-3) 8/18/1818. DICK, free man of color, age about 20, of Gallatin County, Illinois Territory and John FORESTER, for $1 board, clothing, maintenance and kind treatment for 60 years from date. Wit: Jos. M. STREET.

p.43-7} 8/18/1818. LONDON, a free man of color, age about !6 years, of Gallatin County, Illinois Territory and Joseph M. STREET for $1, board, clothing, maintenance and kind treatment for 60 years from date. Wit: John FORESTER.

p.47-50) 8/24/1818. REUBIN, a Negro man, age about 27 years, of Gallatin County, Illinois Territory, and John POSEY for $1, board, lodging, clothing and maintenance for 50 years from date. Agrees to go with Posey anywhere. Wit: Jos. M. STREET.

p.50-4) 8/18/1818. PATSEY, a free Negro girl, age about 17 years, of Gallatin County, Illinois Territory, and Joseph M. STREET, for $1, board, clothing, maintenance and good-kind treatment for natural life. Wit: John FORESTER.

p.54-5) 8-22-1818. JUDY, a free Negro woman, age 30, of Gallatin Co., Illinois Territory, and Moses M. RAWLINGS, for board, clothing, good and kind treatment for 40 years from this date. Not signed by Moses M. RAWLINGS. Wit: Jos. M. STREET.

p.68-9) 8/22/1818. DANIEL, a free Negro, age about 21 years, of Gallatin County, Illinois Territory, for $660 in hand and agrees to serve Oliver C. VANLANDINGHAM or heirs for 40 years, binding in a penalty of $1000. Wit: Joseph M. STREET, Clerk of Circuit Court, Gallatin County.

p.70-1) Indenture made 8/22/1818. LUCINDA, a Negro woman, age about 30 years, of Gallatin County, Illinois Territory, for the sum of $350 in hand, agrees to serve Oliver C. VANLANDINGHAM for 30 years. Wit: Joseph M. STREET, Clerk of Gallatin County. 

EMANCIPATION OF SLAVES AND AFFIDAVITS

p.55-6) James DUNCAN of Logan County, KY, discharges EDMOND (purchased of Major John ROBERTS of Culpeper Co., VA, and brought to KY by me) and his wife, PHILLIS, (belonging to my father's estate) from my services and the claims of my heirs, etc. Dated 20 Oct. 1819. Wit: Henry MAURY and J. M . DUNCAN. Recorded 1/3/1820 in Deed Book A, p. 69, Gallatin County, Illinois, by Jos. M. STREET.

p.56-7) Joshua SCOTT (Clerk of Pope Co. Circuit Court), acquainted with Elizabeth CARTER, now known as Elizabeth NORRINGTON, who has lived near the Saline Saltworks since about 1800. She was called free by General John CALDWELL (with whom she came to Livingston Co., KY, and had as a husband, ABRAHAM, the property of CALDWELL). I further certify she held a headright of land in her name on Livingston Creek. Dated 7/27/1820. Signed by Joshua SCOTT and recorded 7/29/1820.

The above Elizabeth NORRINGTON, formerly Elizabeth CARTER, enters her son, a free man of color, age about 21 years, called Samuel CALDWELL, in compliance with the Act of General Assembly as of March 30, 1819.

p.57-9) Bethaniah CREASY of Butler Co., KY, do free YORK, my black man from my service and claims of my heirs. Dated 8/4/1818. Wit: William DAVIS, James COHSON, and Temple DAVIS. State of KY, Butler Co., September County Court. Proven the emancipation of said YORK. Signed by Robert MORRISON, Clerk of Court, and dated 9/14/1818. Recorded in Gallatin Co., IL on 8/8/1820 (age given about 32 or 33 years) by Joseph M. STREET.

p.59-60) JOEL and wife Mary DAVIS, of Butler Co., KY, in consideration of $600 from SAMPSON (their slave), do emancipate and liberate SAMPSON from slavery and claims of their heirs. Dated 1/7/1818. Test: Rob. MORRISON and Daniel WILSON. Proven in Court 1/12/1818, signed by Robert MORRISON. Recorded in Gallatin County, IL, on 7/30/1821 by J. M. STREET. (Handed in by SAMPSON, about 5'11" tall and age 28.)

p.60-1) Milledgeville, GA, Baldwin Co., Feb. 1, 1819. "We do hereby certify that we have known a free man of color by the name of OBEDIAH MIFLIN for several years as a boat hand, and since that time, he had conducted himself honestly and faithfully to his work. Signed: William BARROW, Jacob BARROW, Thos. B. STUBBS, Thompson BIRD, William H. CRENSHAW, and Henry DARNELL." Georgia, Baldwin County: duly recorded in the clerk's office of the Superior Court Book "F" Folio 267 and 268 this 2nd day of Feb. 1819. Signed by Thomas H. KEMAN, Clerk.

State of Tennessee, Knox Co.: The foregoing certificate is recorded and in the clerk's office of the County Court of Knox Co. and truly copied therefrom. Given under my hand the 10th day of Aug. 1819. Signed: Wm. SWAN, Clerk.

State of Kentucky, Fayette County: Dec. 8, 1819, the foregoing certificate was this day produced to me, the clerk of said County, and the same with the names thereto signed is truly recorded in my office. Signed: J. C. RODES, Clerk Fayette County. Recorded in Book "F", p. 99. Examined att. J. C. RODES, Clerk.

Recorded in my office in Evansville, Indiana, in Book "A," p. 161, this 11th day May 1820 and signed J. ZIMMERMAN, DRVC.

The foregoing was produced to me in my office on the 1st day of March 1821 by a man of color named OBEDIAH MIFLIN, a light-colored Negro about 27 or 28 years of age, about 5'4" high, well set. To be entered of record agreeably to law. Signed Jos. M. STREET, Clerk Circuit Court.

p.61) Arthur J. JONES, a free man of color, plans to travel in the West and requested a statement about character, etc. He was certified of good character, having lived on the Frontier during the last war (1812) and suffered considerably from Indians. Dated 31 Jan. 1819. Signed Ed. N. CULLOW, J.P., Palestine, State of Illinois.

p.62) State of Illinois, Gallatin County, Samuel R. CAMPBELL of Mullenburg, KY, with CORNELIUS, a colored man who was willed to him by his father, William CAMPBELL, to be freed at age 30 years. CORNELIUS reached the age of 30 years on the 10th of this month and is now free. Signed: Samuel R. CAMPBELL and sworn and subscribed before me this 3 day of April 1821. Signed: John MARSHALL, J. P. Gallatin County, Illinois.

p.63-4) State of Illinois, Gallatin County. Samuel R. CAMPBELL stated that JACOB, a man of color, received by last will and testament of Wm. CAMPBELL, to receive his freedom at the age of 30 years of Muhlenburg Co., KY. He will soon be age 30 and be entitled to his freedom. Signed: Samual R. CAMPBELL and sworn and subscribed before me this 30th day of April 1821. Signed: Jno. MARSHALL, J.P. Recorded 5/10/1821 by J.M. STREET.

p.64-5) I, SAMUEL (SAM) FORD, an African-born freeman of color of Gallatin Co., IL, did purchase from Ephraim HUBBARD of Shawneetown and the State of Illinois a woman of color named NELLY, age about 40 years. She is now free. Signed by Samuel FORD. Sworn before me Jan. 8, 1825, signed J.M. STREET.

p.66-7.      
Samuel FORD appeared manumitting NELLY, a woman of color. Dated 1/12/1825. Signed Thos. F. VAUGHT, JP. We, the undersigned, certify that Sam FORD did purchase NELLY (his wife) from E. HUBBARD, and they have lived as man and wife in a reputable, honest, prudent and industrious manner. Signed: M.L. DAVEWORT, JP; Jno. MARSHALL, J.P.

p.72) State of Illinois, County of Gallatin. I, Thomas L. POSEY, Clerk of County Commissioners, certify that JOHN CHOSIER has entered this date a Negro child named MARY, born of an indentured woman named NANCY, in conformance with the Section of the State, #6 of the constitution. Dated April 27, 1827. Thomas L. POSEY, Clerk.

p.72-3) I, Martha PRATER of Gallatin County, Illinois, bind myself for $23,000. the penal sum for surety of 23 emancipated slaves to the County Commissioners. Wit: H. EDDY, and D. VINYARD. Signed by X Martha PROCTOR. Commissioners: Charles MICK, John SHEARER and Andrew SLACK or their successors.

p.73-5) I, Martha PRATER of Gallatin County, Illinois, to carry out the will of my late husband, Price PRATER, of the State of South Carolina and of my own will do emancipate the following Negro slaves:

LUCY, about 35 years of age and her 9 children: (1) CUBA, about age 20 years, (2) MALINDA, about age 19 years, (3) NOAH, about age 16 years, (4) POLLY, about age 14 years, (5) PATSY, about age 12 years, (6) LIZZA, about age 10 years, (7) HARRIET, age about 7 years, (8) DOCIA, age about 5 years, and (9) LUCINDA, age about 2 years.

REBECCA, about age 33 years and her 7 children: (1) BETSY, about age 15 years, (2) ANNA, about age 13 years, (3) HERCULES, age about 13 years, (4) MARTHA, about age 9 years, (5) ELIAS, about age 7 years, (6) ZACHARIAH, about age 5 years, and (7) BECCA, about age 1 year. 

JACK (or JOHN), about age 28 years and daughter ELSY ANN, age about 1 year: JESSEE, age about 21 years, JOHNSON, age about 18 years, and SPENCER, age about 15 years.

Dated 20 Feb. 1827. Wit: Daniel VINYARD. State of Illinois, Gallatin County. A statement of action before Thos. F. VAUGHT, JP dated Feb. 7, 1827. Recorded May 25, 1827, by Thos. L. POSEY, Clerk by D.H. CAMPBELL, D. Clerk.

p.76-80) Joseph STREET of Gallatin County, IL, makes a statement re: Grace CLARK, a Negro woman, light complexion, 4' 6" height, age about 44 years, scar on arm and temple. Samuel CLARK came to the clerk's office to make a statement regarding Negroes under the age of 15 years as per law and indicated that GRACE was to be free. This was later agreed to as his intention by his wife and neighbor. GRACE has remained at Wabash-Saline in Gallatin County, IL, before and since Mr . CLARK's death. She has a good reputation and is now living at the residence of Timothy GUARD. Dated 3 Sept. 1825. Jos. M. STKEET. Grace CLARK has two children born since her title to freedom (Constitution 1818): (1) MILETHNA, born Aug. 1821, and (2) MAY, born in May 1824. Children now living with their mothers and entered as per law. Signed: J.M. STREET. (Fall of 1825) The undersigned knows GRACE CLARK residing at T. GUARD's Salt Works. Signed: Henry BELT, Michael JONES, Robert R. FUNKHOUSER and Reuben YOUNG. The foregoing was recorded on 11/17/1825 by Joseph M. STREET. Note: Leo WHITE recorded the same on 11/1/1827 as he could not find the record of Joseph M. STREET of Gallatin County, Illinois.

p.80-2) William MCCOY of Gallatin County, Illinois, does manumit and free a mulatto girl, ESTER, age about 23 years. Dated 11/21/1826. Sworn before Thos. F. VAUGHT, JP.

p.82-92) Martin BARKER, a man of color, produced the following papers to be admitted to the record of 11 Nov. 1827, Randolph County, state of Illinois. (summary) Martin BARKER, a man of color, was brought in by Wm. C. GREENUP, Esq. as a runaway slave, as he had no papers proving he was a free man, although he claimed to be free. He said his freedom papers had been forcibly taken from him at Rocking Cave on the Ohio River. Since he had no papers, he was committed to the sheriff's custody as per state law of 3/20/1819. Dated 12/11/1826. M. HOTCHKISS, JP.

Affidavits made in Dearborn Co., Indiana, by the following were submitted: Jacob BLASDELL, Sr, and Jacob BLASDELL, Jr.; also James DILL, stating that the courthouse records had burned in Dearborn County, Indiana and no copies of the papers of Martin BARKER could be submitted showing that he was a free man.

Martin BARKER was supposed to be about age 40, 5' 6" tall, middle-sized, with scars on his face, and was hired by the BLASDELLS, who were manufacturers of salt at the U.S. Saline below the Wabash River. He worked there in 1808 and 1809 with the consent of his master, Lewis BARKER, who lived at Rocking Cave and received the money earned by Martin BARKER. James ESTILL swore in Dearborn Co., Indiana, that John ROBINSON of Missouri sold said Martin BARKER to Isaac VANBIBER as a slave. Later the two BLASDELLS were in Missouri working the lead mines, and again Lewis BARKER hired Martin BARKER to work for the BLASDELLS. This was in 1810. Lewis BARKER asked the BLASDELLS to give security amounting to about $400 for Martin BARKER. This was the amount agreed upon at one time between the slave and his master for his freedom. BLASDELL refused, and Lewis BARKER took Martin BARKER away in chains forcibly. Sometime in 1813, the BLASDELLS were called upon to give details of the foregoing facts. James DILL states he, as recorder of Dearborn Co., Indiana, gave the said Martin BARKER a copy of his freedom papers as required by law and that due to the fire, he cannot give a transcript of papers at this time.

p.93) 2/17/1817. Jonathan RAMSEY sets free from this date a Negro woman named JUDE. The deed of emancipation was acknowledged in Court in February term 1817 in Livingston County, KY; recorded in Book "C", p. 249. Test.: Enoch PRINCE, Clerk; received 12/3/1827 in Gallatin Co., IL and certified that the copy was a true copy.

p.94-5) State of Illinois, Gallatin County. "The bearer Henry BROADY, a dark mulatto about age 26 years, is to work on a flatboat descending the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers to Natchez or New Orleans. He has lived here for 10 years, and I have no doubt he is a free man. Respected as such and seems honest and industrious." Signed Jno. MARSHALL, Alex. KIRKPATRICK and Samuel MARSHALL. Dated Shawneetown, IL 2/19/1824. Henry BROADY was brought to the Saline by Jonathan BROADY (said to be an uncle), a free colored man, in 1811, to my knowledge. Dated 11/28/1827. Signed by Leo White.

p.95-6) Francis PORTER of Butler Co., KY, emancipates BOBB on 7/18/1816. Papers reviewed and ordered recorded by Court as certified by Robert MORRISON, Clerk of Butler Co., KY, on 7/18/1816.

SOURCE: Mr. and Mrs. H. Obert Anderson, "Register of Slaves (Indentures) and Emancipation of Slaves," Illinois State Genealogical Society Quarterly Vol. 10, No. 1 (Spring 1978).