Pennsylvania: An Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery - Milestone Documents

Pennsylvania: An Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery

( 1780 )

Impact

The Pennsylvania Gradual Abolition Act of 1780 was the first of its kind in the modern world. Never before had a slaveholding jurisdiction taken steps to end human bondage. Never before had slave owners acquiesced in the end of slavery. The law was not passed unanimously, and after it was passed, there was a backlash led by slave owners, who campaigned against those legislators who had supported abolition. In 1781 a new legislature considered a bill to repeal or modify the law. The bill failed, in part because of petitions and protests by blacks, who actively worked to keep their recently acquired freedom. The rapid decline of slaveholding, especially in Philadelphia, guaranteed that the 1780 law would not be undone. On the contrary, in 1788 the legislature passed an elaborate act to close some loopholes in the law and further protect free blacks, indentured blacks, and slaves.

The twenty-eight-year indenture was far too long, and masters profited too much from it, while the children of slave women were forced to give a substantial number of their productive years to their mothers' owners. Otherwise the act was a valiant and mostly successful pioneering effort to dismantle slavery. In 1784 Rhode Island and Connecticut passed similar laws, as did New York in 1799 and New Jersey in 1804. In 1794 Upper Canada also passed a similar law. All of these statutes had shorter indentures for the children of slave women. On the other hand, some did not give blacks as many legal rights as the Pennsylvania law. In the end, these differences were not nearly as important as the general direction of all these laws. Without riots, rebellions, or great social upheaval, these places brought about an end to slavery and started on a path that led to a freed North. All of these states eventually sped up the abolition process by either freeing all slaves or at least (as in New Jersey) turning them into indentured servants with legal protections as rights. On July 4, 1827, New York, having previously passed a gradual abolition act, became the first state to fully end slavery. By 1850 there were no slaves in any of these states, although in New Jersey there were still a few hundred former slaves who had become indentured servants.

Blacks did not gain full legal equality in most of the North, and everywhere they faced social inequality. The Pennsylvania law did not anticipate segregation or the depth of white hostility to freed blacks. For all its flaws, the law was a remarkable first step on the road to fulfilling the promise of the Revolution and the Declaration of Independence, that America would become a nation where all people could exercise their “unalienable rights” to “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”

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The Pennsylvania Gradual Abolition Act (Pennsylvania State Archives)

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