HISTORICAL SOCIETY EXAMINES SLAVERY IN CONNECTICUT
In commemoration of Black Heritage Month, the Newtown Historical
Society will present Slavery, Abolition and the Underground Railroad in
Connecticut, Monday, February 12, 7.30PM, in the community room of the
Booth Library, 25 Main Street (route 25) in Newtown center. The program
will be presented in a slide program by photographer and historian Bob
Berthelson.
The first Connecticut law establishing the legality of slavery was
passed in 1650, but slavery had existed in the colony well before that. By
1660, slave codes were passed prohibiting blacks from serving in the
militia and from wandering freely beyond their own communities. However,
things began to change in the next century, with the slave trade being
outlawed in 1771. Following the Revolution, in which 289 Connecticut free
blacks and slaves served in the patriot forces, a plan for gradual
emancipation was enacted. The law called for any slave born after March of
that year to be automatically freed at age 25. From a peak slave
population of 5,100 in 1774, the final end of slavery in Connecticut was
achieved in 1848.
The state also produced some notable abolitionists and supporters of
rights for free blacks, including the militarist John Brown, educator
Prudence Crandall, writer Harriet Beecher Stowe, and preacher Jonathan
Edwards, Jr. In addition to these more famous leaders, Connecticut also
provided active support for the Underground Railroad, the secretive system
designed to help escaped southern slaves reach freedom in Canada. Because
federal law prohibited helping an escaped slave, and bounty hunters were
authorized to recapture the escapees by force if necessary, the northern
“conductors” took every precaution to maintain secrecy; as a result, while
a few “stations” have been documented, most have disappeared without
record. At the same time, the romance of a later period has developed the
mythology of nearly every hidden cubbyhole and cellar being declared a
stop on the great road to freedom!
Bob Berthelson is a Trumbull resident with a lifelong interest in
history. He is a past president of the Civil War Round Table of Southern
Connecticut, and is a recipient of the Award of Merit of the Connecticut
League of Historical Societies, and a Certificate of Commendation of the
American Association of State and Local History. He is also a founder and
past president of the Connecticut Post Card Club. Currently a facilitator
at the Norwalk Community College Lifetime Learners Institute, he has
written for Yankee Magazine, and prepared over 45 historical slide
programs which he has presented over 1,500 times to various groups,
including several prior appearances at the Newtown Historical Society.
All Newtown Historical Society programs are free and open to the
public. Refreshments will be served following the program. For further
information, please call the Society at 203-426-5937.