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THE ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY OF CANADA
The Anti-Slavery Society of Canada
was one of the forms in which the abolition sentiment of the
province of Upper Canada made its contribution to the final
settlement of the great issue in the neighboring country. Though
founded comparatively late in the struggle, it was, after all,
rather the union of forces long active than the creation of some new
weapon to aid the battle. The men and women who composed its
membership were abolitionists long before the society was founded.
Its purpose was solely to bring united effort to bear upon the great
task and the great responsibility that fell upon Canada when the
passing of the Fugitive Slave Bill drove the Negroes from the North
into Canada by the hundreds, if not by the thousands. With newcomers
arriving every day, destitute, friendless and more or less dazed by
the experiences through which they had passed, it was no small task
that these Canadian abolitionists had undertaken to care for the
fugitives, give them opportunities for education and social
advancement and enable them to show by their own efforts that they
were capable of becoming useful citizens.
The society had its birth in
Toronto in February, 1851. There had been attempts before this to
found such an organization but they had come to nothing. By 1851,
however, the situation in the United States had changed and the
effect had at once shown itself in Canada, so that the time was ripe
for the bringing into one body of the various individuals who had
been showing themselves the friends of the slave. The Society of
Canada continued active right through the fifties and early sixties,
not resting until the aim for which it had been founded had been
accomplished. With the close of the Civil War there was a large
emigration of Negroes back to their own land where their freedom had
been bought in blood, and the need of any large organization
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to look after their welfare as a race gradually ceased. During
its period of active work, however, the society spread out from
Toronto to all the larger cities and towns where there was a Negro
population, and in both educational and relief work showed itself an
energetic body. Included in its active membership were some of the
best-known men in the province and as its organ it had an
outstanding newspaper, The Globe, of Toronto.
The meeting held in Toronto was
large and enthusiastic. The Globe of Toronto of March 1,
gives almost five columns to the report of the proceedings. The
mayor of the city acted as chairman and the opening prayer was made
by Rev. Dr. Michael Willis, the principal of Knox Presbyterian
Theological College. A series of four resolutions were proposed and
endorsed. The first of these declared as a platform of the society
that “slavery is an outrage on the laws of humanity” and that “its
continued practice demands the best exertions for its extinction.” A
second resolution, proposed by Dr. Willis, declared the United
States slave laws “at at open variance with the best interests of
man, as endowed by our great creator with the privilege of life,
liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” A third resolution expressed
sympathy with the abolitionists in the United States, while the
fourth and concluding resolution proposed the formation of the
Anti-Slavery Society of Canada. “The object,” it declared, “shall be
to aid in the extinction of slavery all over the world by means
exclusively lawful and peaceable, moral and religious, such as by
the diffusing of useful information and argument, by tracts,
newspapers, lectures and correspondence, and by manifesting sympathy
with the houseless and homeless victims of slavery flying to our
soil.”
Rev. Dr. Willis was chosen as the
first president, an office which he filled during the whole of the
period of the struggle. Rev. William McClure, a Methodist clergyman
of the New Connection branch, was named as secretary, with Andrew
Hamilton as treasurer and Captain Charles Stuart, corresponding
secretary. A large committee was also
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named including, among others, George Brown, editor of The Globe,
and Oliver Mowat, later a premier of the province of Ontario.
The aims of the society, as set
forth in the resolution of organization, called for both educational
and relief work. No time was lost in beginning each of these. Within
a month after the founding of the society it was holding public
meetings, both in Toronto and elsewhere throughout the province. The
speakers included George Thompson, the noted English abolitionist;
Fred Douglass, the Negro orator, and Rev. S. J. May, of
Syracuse. Some hostility developed, The Patriot charging
George Thompson with being an abolitionist for sordid motives, while
The Leader called him a “hireling.” Thompson, defending himself,
declared that if he had sold his talents, as charged, he would not
be found fighting the slaves’ battle but would be sitting by the
side of bloated prostitution in Washington.” There were even some
clerical critics of the society and its work. The Church, a
denominational publication, took the ground that Canada was not
bound in any way to denounce “compulsory labor.” It was quite
sufficient to welcome the slave when he came to Canada. To this The
Globe replied that it was “truly melancholy to find men in the
nineteenth century teaching doctrines which are only fit for the
darkest ages.”1
All through these earlier years of
the society’s history the public meetings were continued, much use
being made of men like Rev. S. R. Ward and Rev. J. W.
Loguen, who had known at first hand what slavery meant to their
race. Rev. S. R. Ward was appointed an agent of the society in
1851 and traveled the province over, giving the facts with regard to
slavery to awaken Canadian sentiment against it and asking aid and
kindness for the fugitives then coming to the country in large
numbers. Mr. Ward was instrumental in forming branches and
auxiliaries of the society at a number of places and has left on
record his own impressions
| 1 The Globe,
April 1, 1851. |
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of the efforts that were put forth on behalf of the refugees.
The Globe, under Brown as editor,
was a stout ally. Brown’s personal interest in the fugitives was
marked. His private generosity to the needy has been recorded by one
of his biographers but greater service was rendered through the
columns of his paper. He was outspoken in denunciation of anything
that savored of an alliance with slavery. Canada, he believed,
should stand four square against the whole system of human bondage.
“We, too, are Americans,” he declared on one occasion. “On us, as
well as on them, lies the duty of preserving the honor of the
continent. On us, as on them, rests the noble trust of shielding
free institutions.”3
Relief work in Toronto was looked
after by a Ladies’ Auxiliary, this being the general practice
wherever branches were organized. The wives of the officers of the
general or parent society figured largely in the work at Toronto.
During the first year of the work in that city more than $900 was
raised by the Ladies’ Auxiliary. The report for 1853-5 says: “During
the past inclement winter much suffering was alleviated and many
cases of extreme hardship prevented. Throughout the year the
committee continued to observe the practice of appointing weekly
visitors to examine into the truth of every statement made by
applicants for aid. In this way between 200 and 300 cases have been
attended to, each receiving more or less according to their
circumstances.”4 A night school opened in Toronto gave
to the younger men and women an opportunity to get a little
education.
The Canadian Society, at an early
date in its history, entered into working relations with the
anti-slavery societies of Great Britain and the United States. At
the first anniversary meeting, held in March, 1852, a letter was
presented from Lewis Tappan, secretary of the American and
Foreign
2 Ward,
Autobiography of a Fugitive Slave.
3 Lewis,
George Brown, p. 114.
4 Drew, North
Side View of Slavery, p. 328. |
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Anti-Slavery Society, enclosing a resolution of the executive of
the American society to the effect that the committee had heard of
the formation of the Anti-Slavery Society of Canada at Toronto with
much satisfaction, and that they would be pleased to maintain
correspondence with this society and unite their efforts for the
promotion of the great cause of human freedom on this continent and
throughout the world. At the same meeting there were read messages
of greeting from S. H. Gay, secretary of the American
Anti-Slavery Society, and from John Scoble, secretary of the British
and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society.” At this first anniversary meeting
the society was able to report a change in public sentiment toward
its aims. At the start there had been coldness and some prejudice
but this had largely disappeared and some who had formerly been
hostile were now supporters.
The colonization question was
before the society in its early period. In August, 1851, Toronto was
visited by Rev. S. Oughten, a Jamaican, and later by William Wemyss
Anderson, also of Jamaica. The question was also brought to the
attention of the government of the province and the Governor-General
asked the executive of the society to tender its opinion of the
plan. Their decision was altogether unfavorable to colonization
whether in Trinidad or Jamaica. With regard to Trinidad their
opinion was that slavery in a modified form still existed there.
Jamaica, they thought, had nothing to attract the refugee more than
Canada, and the society was placed on record as approving the
findings of the Great North American convention of colored people,
which had met in Toronto the preceding September, to the effect that
western Canada was the most desirable place of resort for colored
people on the American continent, and that colored people in the
United States should emigrate to Canada rather than to the West
Indies or Africa, since in Canada they would be better able to
assist their brethren flying from slavery. With regard to the
American Colonization Society the finding of the Canadian
| 5 Anti-Slavery
Society of Canada, First Annual Report, p. 10.
|
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Anti-Slavery Society was that its professions of promoting the
abolition of slavery were “altogether delusive.” It had originated
with slaveholders and was protected by them to rid the country of
free Negroes. “A colonization and a bitter, pro-slavery man are
almost convertible terms,” it was stated.6
The attitude taken by the church
bodies in Canada towards this new movement is of interest. In
general there was not much active support. George Brown brought
forward a resolution at the 1852 meeting, deploring the indifference
of some church bodies. Dr. Willis had been instrumental in getting
the Presbyterians in line, a strong stand having been taken by the
synod which declared by resolution that slavery was “inhuman, unjust
and dishonoring to the common creator as it is replete with wrong to
the subjects of such oppression.” A second resolution called upon
churches everywhere to testify against legislation which violated
the commands of God and declared that the .synod must condemn any
alliance between religion and oppression, no matter how the latter
might be bolstered up by the use of Scripture.
At the 1857 meeting the attitude of
the churches was again to the front. Dr. Willis thought it was time
that every church synod and conference in Canada should give up one
day of its sessions to prayer and humiliation over the presence of
human slavery so nearby. It was the duty of all the churches to
remonstrate on this question. Rev. Dr. Dick, who followed, declared
that the church was “the bulwark of the system.” There were churches
in Canada which fraternized with those in the United States that
patronized slavery. He was equally outspoken on the attitude of the
Sons of Temperance in deciding, against his protest, to shut out
Negroes from its membership. There were several protests at this
1857 meeting against some slight evidences of race prejudice. Rev.
Mr. Barrass said that, as the Negroes in Toronto set an example to
the whites in morality, there was the less reason for any
prejudice.
| 6 First Annual
Report, pp. 12-13. |
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Thomas Henning, the secretary of the society, probably put the
matter right when he pointed out that talk of prejudice must not be
understood as general. Negroes were not excluded from the schools,
and the laws were administered to white and black alike. He drew
attention to the dismissal of a magistrate who had been suspected of
conniving at the return of a fugitive, as also to the case of a
member of Parliament who had sought to have Negro immigration
stopped and had been simply laughed at.
Necessity for action along
industrial lines to provide suitable employment for the fugitives
was emphasized by the Canadian Anti-Slavery Society and efforts were
made to give the black man a fair chance in his new home. The
question of cheap land for the immigrants was also kept to the front
with the idea of making the refugees more self-dependent and
preventing them from congregating in the cities and towns. Some idea
of the extent of the relief work being carried on at this time may
be gained from the statement presented at the 1857 meeting which
showed disbursements of more than $2,200, a total of over 400 having
been relieved.
Reference has been made to the
support given the society by The Globe, of Toronto. For this
George Brown was given the credit but it must be said in justice
that no small share of the credit for The Globe’s attitude
should go to the lesser known brother, Gordon Brown, who was
regarded by many as really more zealous for abolition than George
Brown. This was tested during the Civil war period when the turn of
sentiment against the North in Canada brought much criticism upon
The Globe. There was a disposition on the part of George
Brown to grow lukewarm in his support of the North, but Gordon Brown
never wavered and is said to have threatened on one occasion to
leave the paper if there were any more signs of hauling down the
colors. When the war was over American citizens in Toronto presented
Gordon Brown with a gold watch suitably inscribed, an indication
possibly of the opinion of that day with regard to his services.
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One duty of the American
anti-slavery societies which fell but lightly on the Canadian
society was the watching of legislation and the courts to see that
the Negro obtained his rights. It was rare indeed that anything of
this kind called for action in Canada, the only case of any
importance that arose being that of the Negro, Anderson, whose
return to Missouri was sought on a charge of killing his master in
1853. A slave catcher from Missouri recognized him in Canada in 1860
and had him arrested. The case was fought out in the courts, twice
going against the Negro and then being appealed to the English Court
of Queen’s Bench, which granted a writ of habeas corpus. Anderson
was defended by Gerrit Smith and the case attracted great attention
throughout Canada. The executive of the Canadian Anti-Slavery
Society kept the case well under observation and made its position
quite clear by a resolution declaring that principles of right and
humanity should prevail. In the end Anderson was acquitted.
The sentiment that was created in
Canada by the friends of the fugitive in the decade before the Civil
War had its effect when that struggle began. Sir John Macdonald,
premier of Canada, made careful investigation to find out how many
Canadians were in the northern armies and placed the number at
40,000.7 The spirit that animated the youth of the North
in this moral struggle was powerful in the minds of many of these
young Canadians. There was present in Canada not a little of the
feeling of responsibility for the honor of the continent that George
Brown voiced and both by peaceful means and by the sword the people
of the British-American province to the North had their part in
striking off the shackles from the slave in the South.
PUBLIC LIBRARIAN,
LONDON, CANADA
| 7 Letters of
Goldwin Smith, p. 377.
|
|