^M^^ M'xmr Ja?! ■"'■:>^,| M- THE NEGRO IN MARYLAND A Study of the Institution of Slavery Bv JEFFREY R. BRACKETT, Ph d BALTIMORE 1889 .fA3"B7 CoPYRiGHT, 18S9, BY N. Murray. JOHN MURPHY A CO., PRINTERS. HALTIMORE. CONTENTS. CHAP. PAGE. I. — Introduction, - 1 II. — Indians and White Servants, 11 III.— Slaves, 26 IV. — Manumission, 148 V. — The Free Negro, - - 175 THE NEGRO IN MARYLAND. CHAPTER I. Introduction. We are not called on, happily, to bring up from our past politics those questions of slavery over which so many lances were broken — until arguments were ended by the sword. The object of this study is simply to trace, as clearly as possible, the growth of African slavery, as an institution, in Maryland.^ Nor will it be necessary to study the institution of slavery ^A residence of several years in Maryland has not alone fixed this limited field of inquiry. It is true, no doubt, that the lot of the slaves in Maryland was, as a rule, much better than that of those on the large plantations in the thinly settled portions of the Southern States. Thus, for instance, the system of special magistrates' courts, for trial of slaves for serious offences, was not known in Maryland. But Maryland was settled early; its slave code was rigorous ; becoming a Border State, its slave property became less secure ; the number of slaves remained large, while the free blacks became more numerous than in any other slave State ; and earnest efforts were made for colonization. A study of the growth of slavery in detail, with reference to these conditions, may be of more value to the student, to-day, than a more general, and necessarily less accurate, study in a wider field, or one directed more to the severities to which slavery made the blacks liable — which are already well known. Any work of such a nature must be very imperfect. The writer can give only what he has gathered, and asks any person who may be interested in the subject, to communicate to him any further facts. Baltimore, Md., 1889. 2 The Negro in Maryland. among the ancients, for the presumption is that the planters on the Chesapeake acted by their own impulses and for their own interests, with little knowledge of, or regard to, what other men had done, two thousand years before. But to begin with the settlement of Maryland, without noticing the ideas of the age concerning slavery — ideas which the settlers brought with them — would be as unfair as to begin a history of the United States without notice of the Thirteen Colonies. The slavery of antiquity, the right to hold a person for debt, or as a captive taken in war, was based on no strict race or religious grounds. Romans enslaved captive Germans, as Germans, afterwards, in their turn, enslaved Romans. But this slavery died out in Western Europe early in the Middle Ages; and Christians ceased to enslave Christian captives. The semi-servile condition of villeinage which grew up at that time, declined quickly with the decline of the feudal system, long before the settlement of America. ^ It is signifi- cant, that just at the time when Columbus turned to the court of Spain, to become the discoverer of America, Ferdinand of Arragon had succeeded with some difficulty in bringing cer- ^ Villeinage varied somewhat in different parts of Europe, and has sur- vived in some countries almost to our own day. In general, to all others but his lord, the serf was as a freeman. In England, villeinage died out early, the Peasants' Wars of the fourteenth century giving the death blow. The last case, we are told, in which it was pleaded in the courts was in 1618. That class distinctions may have accustomed men easily to the existence of any form of servitude is worthy of consideration, but villeinage cannot be said to have had any vital inliuence on the rise of African slavery. The only case in which we find mention, in the early records of ^Maryland, of the laws or customs of England on villeinage, as affecting slavery, is the answer of Lord Baltimore to the Lords of Trade, in 1678 (Md. Arch.,V., 267), on the subject of conversion of the blacks. A law was made, he says, to encourage baptism of slaves, "by which it was and is declared That as in former times The IJaptizeing of Villaynes in England was not taken by the Lawe of England To be a Manumission or Infranchiseing of the Vil- laynes Koe neither shall it be in this Provynce as to Negroes or Mulattoes," &c. See cliapter on Slaves. The Court of Appeals declared, afterwards, that slavery and vilU'inage were ciitirclv different. Introduction. 3 tain nobles to grant freedom to their serfs, of European race and Christian faith, and was also pushing vigorously the conquest of Grenada, by which thousands of Saracens were scattered as slaves in Southern Europe. Christians had ceased the enslavement of Christian captives, as a rule ; but the custom of ransom, of which we read in the chronicles, was a survival of slavery. The beaten warrior became subject to the terms of the victor. At the battle of Poitiers, in 1356, the English — so the old chronicler Frois- sart tells us — had French prisoners twice as many in number as themselves, and deemed it advisable to ransom them on the spot. Many were set at liberty and others kept ; " for who- soever made any prisoners, they were solely at his disposal, to ransom or not, as he pleased." Several of the English archers had four or six prisoners, and a number of those who could give no ransom were put to death. One Sir Edward de Roucy felled to the ground an English knight who was following him from the field. Dismounting and placing his lance on the Englishman's breast, he called on him to sur- render under penalty of death, as his prisoner, rescued or not. The defeated knight surrendered, accompanied Sir Edward, and afterwards ransomed himself. At the battle of Chevy Chace, in 1388, one Sir Matthew Redman surrendered to a Scotch knight. " Rescued or not?" cried the Scot. " I con- sent," answered Sir Matthew, "you will take good care of me ? " " That I will," said the Scot. Then Sir Matlhew, putting up his sword, said ; *' now, what do you require of me, for I am your prisoner by fair conquest ? " "And what is it you would wish me to do," replied the Scot. " I should like," said Sir Matthew, " to return to Newcastle ; and, within fifteen days, I will come to you in any part of Scotland you shall appoint." "I agree," said his captor, "on your pledging yourself, that within three weeks you be in Edinburgh ; and wherever you may go, you acknowledge yourself as my prisoner." So they parted, and in a few moments, the Scot himself was captured by the Bishop of Durham. He philo- 4 The Negro in Maryland. sophically exclaimed : " I have made a prisoner, and am now one myself: such is the chance of war."^ In 1441, Charles VII. of France brought a number of English prisoners to Paris. After suffering shocking treatment, those who could not pay their ransom, by far the largest number, were bound hand and foot, and thrown into the Seine. Not till the sev- enteenth century were agreements entered into by the nations of Europe for the regulation and exchange of prisoners.^ But it was in Christ only that all men were brethren. The captive heathen or infidel became usually the slave of his Christian conqueror. It was due chiefly to the conquest of the Spaniards over the Moors and to the rising trade of the Spaniards and Portuguese with Africa, that there grew up for Europe a new form of chattel slavery. And if the zeal of the earlier church had helped the fall of the old slavery, the zeal and bigotry of good churchmen of this age certainly had a part, conscious or unconscious, in tlie rise of the new. "Whole droves of slaves," wrote Bodin, in 1576, "are sold and that openly in all parts of Portugal, as if they were beasts."^ By the trade with Africa, negro slaves wore brought, to a limited extent, to Portugal and Spain. Prince Henry of Portugal, in 1442, insisted that negroes should be brought there; " for whatever number he should get, he would gain souls, because they might be converted to the faith, which could not be managed with the Moors."* "And certainly," adds the old chronicler, " his thought was not vain, for as soon as they had knowledge of our language, they readily became Christians." It is not necessary to dwell on the extreme zeal of the Church in that age — so well seen in the Inquisition. " It was the received opinion," says Prescott, » Froissart, Johnes' Trans., Vol. I, 219, &c. ; II, 373. "^ For mucli of interest on this subject see Ward's Inquiry into the Law of Nations (R. Ward, London, 1795). ^ Coinmonweale, Knolles' Translation, p. 43. *The Conquerors of The New World: Sir A. Helps, pp. 28, 36. Introduction. 5 " among good Catholics of that period, that heathen and bar- barous nations were placed by the circumstance of their infi- delity without the pale both of spiritual and civil rights." ^ By the discovery of America, Europeans met a people, the Indians, not akin to them in race or religion. Columbus, in his diary, speaks thus of Ferdinand and Isabella : " Your highnesses as Catholic Christians and princes, lovers and furtherers of the Christian faith, and enemies of the sect of Mahomet, and of all idolatries and heresies, thought to send me, Christopher Columbus, to the aforesaid provinces of India to see the aforesaid princes, the cities and lands, and the dis- position of them and of everything about them, and the way that should be taken to convert them to the sacred faith," ^ It is true, indeed, that the conversion of the natives was steadfastly enjoined by the sovereigns, and carried out by cer- tain of their subjects. But in the treatment of the Indians by the Spaniards we see plainly the spirit of the times. A number of Indian slaves were soon sent to Spain, some of them by Columbus. Isabella ordered back those who had not been taken in just war. The Spaniards were little suited to work the mines in the Indies. They had gone out expect- ing largely to pick up precious metals ; they found by expe- rience that riches were to be won only by toil. The natives were soon impressed into their service. The matter was carried to Spain, and the right to enslave the unoifending heathen was debated there by learned men. It was finally determined that a qualified servitude would be beneficial to both Spaniard and Indian ; the former might the better work his plantation or his mine, the latter might gain from the religious and social influences of his employer. The rights 1 Ferdinand and. Isabella, Part II, ch. 8. The Mahometans enslaved captives of another faith ; Capt. John Smith was a slave among the Turks. Europe felt the converse working of her old rule, later, when the Barbary States exacted tribute, as ransoms. 2 The Conquerors of The New World, p. 102. 6 The Negro in Maryland. thus granted were terribly abused ; in a few years, from over- work and ill-treatment, the numerous populations, of men unaccustomed to toil, had dwindled away. At first, the cap- ture of cannibal Indians had been forbidden, but as they persisted in idolatry, they too were enslaved.^ At the very beginning of the sixteenth century, permission had been given to carry to the Indies such negro slaves as had been " born in the power of Christians " — that is, negroes from Southern Europe. The rapid decrease of the Indians, and the cruelties practised on them, had roused a number of zealous friends to them, among the Spaniards. About 1511, says the chronicler Herrera, " the King of Spain issued fresh Orders for promoting the Conversion of the Indians, and their being well instructed in the Christian Religion. Nor did he take less care of the civil Government, directing among other things, that those People should not be oppressed, and that for easing of them, numbers of blacks should be carry^d ^A proclamation Avas addressed to the Indians not under the Spanish rule. They were called on to acknowledge the grant of the new world by the Pope to the Crown — a grant made in certain writings which they might see if they wished. They were to acknowledge the Churcli, the Crown, and to receive the ministration of the priests. Due time was given them to consider this. If they came under the Spanish rule, His Majesty would greet them with all love and affection and leave them their wives and children free, and give them many privileges and exemptions. But if they did not, "by the help of God I will enter with power into your land," reads the threat, " and will subdue you, and will take your wives and chil- dren and make slaves of them, and sell them as such, and take all your goods and do all the mischief I can, as to vassals that do not obey and will not receive their Lord, and I protest that all the deatli and destruction which may come from this is your fault, and not liis Majesty's or mine or that of my men." And we are told in the old chronicle, how the Spaniards would Konietiines lialt in the dark before an Indian village, and the com- mander would read tliis to his men and the trees of tlie forest, as a prelude to pillage and slaughter. An oflicer was afterward cmi)loyed by the King to rej)ort which of the Indians were cannibals, " barbarous People, ICnemies to ("liristiaus, and Man Eaters." Certain ones could not be determined, but it wii-s declared that those named as cannibals might be attacked, taken, and sold as slaves. (Herrera, Stevens' Trans., I, 1, 14; II, 8, G). Introduction. 7 over to work in the Mines, because one of them (i. e. one negro slave) did more than four of the Natives." ^ The pro- duction of sugar increased the desire for negroes. Soon, with the entire sympathy of the court and by the advice of those friendly to the Indians, negroes were extensively introduced. The service of Indians was thus supplanted by African slaves. With the demand for negro labor in the New World, the slave trade increased, and soon extended from the Portu- guese and Spaniards to the Dutch and English. "Although servitude in these latter times was left off," wrote Bodin in 1576, "for about three or four hundred years, yet is it now again approved, by the great agreement and consent of almost all nations." The early treatises on war reflect plainly, no doubt, the spirit of the times. The Spaniard Victoria, professor at Salamanca, writes, a few years before Bodin, that in wars between Christians — although, by the law of nature, warriors who surrender or are captured might be slain — the usage and custom of war, which had become a part of the law of nations, had ordered that prisoners might be redeemed by ransom. But this mitigation of the extreme rights of war was not applicable to infidels. It was not lawful to kill or carry into captivity innocent persons, and women and children were presumed to be innocent, even in wars with the Turks ; but in a war against pagans, which might be said to be perpetual and without hope of obtaining satisfaction, doubtless the women and children captured from the Saracens could be detained as slaves.^ So Ayala, the Judge Advocate of the Spanish army in the Netherlands, says in his Treatise on War, in 1581, that an ancient and laudable custom had sub- stituted for enslavement the practice of ransoming prisoners of war ; but that the older usage still existed between Chris- tians and such infidel nations as Turks and Saracens.^ ^Herrera, Stevens' Trans., I, 9, 3. ^ Wheaton's Law of Nations, Introduction. 8 The Negro in Maryland. Albericus Gentilis, called from the continent in 1587 to be professor of civil law at Oxford, wrote that there was no slavery in wars of Christians, for such were civil wars, as all men were brothers in Christ. I do not hesitate, he adds, to say that the law of slavery is just, for it is the agreement of the law of nations. ^ Grotius, the historiographer of Holland, states in his famous work on the Rights of War and Peace, published in 1625, that even among Christians the custom still continued of keeping captives till their ransom was paid — it being generally agreed that Christian prisoners taken in war were not to be " made Slaves, so as to sell them or force them to hard Labours, or to such Miseries as are common to Slaves." And what Christians, he adds, in this case observe among themselves, the Mahometans likewise do among them- selves.^ Bynkershoek, an advocate and judge at the Hague, stated in his Public Law, in 1737, that prisoners were often released even without ransom. As slavery had fallen entirely into disuse among Christians, he says, " we do not inflict it upon our prisoners. We may however, if we please, and indeed we do sometimes still exercise that right upon those who enforce it against us. Therefore the Dutch are in the habit of selling to the Spanish as slaves, the Algerians, Tuni- sians and Tripolitans, whom they take prisoners in the Atlan- tic or in the Mediterranean ; for the Dutch themselves have no slaves, except in Asia, Africa and America."^ ' Thomas Aquinas pleases me, says Gentilis, in saying that slavery is natural ; not, indeed, according to first intentions by which we have all been created free, but from second intention, since nature allowed delin- quents to be punished. (Albericus Gentilis: De Jure Belli, Holland's Ed., ch. IX, p. 314, &c.) ^ The right to enslave captives, says Grotius, taken in solemn war, was granted by the Law of nations for no otlier reason, tlian that the captors might be tempted to forbear the rigor allowed tliem, of killing their pris- oners either in, or after, the fight. Among Christians it was generally agreed that prisoners were not to be enslaved, and that with reason, " for they arc, or should be, better instructed by the great liecomniender of every act of ciiarity." (Grotius: De Jure Belli, Barbeyrac's Trans.) ^ Bynkershoek : Quaes. Juris. Pub., Du I'onceau's Trans., Book I, ch. 3. Introduction. 9 While scholars were writing thus in their studies, the African trade was increasing. From time immemorial, in- deed, the Africans, in their inter-tribal warfare, had been accustomed to enslave their prisoners ; but the native traders must have caught from the Europeans something of the greed for riches that so strongly marked that age. It was an age of great activity and discovery. Marvellous reports came to Europe of the riches of the New World. In Florida, the Spaniards sought for the fountain of youth. Theatre-goers in London, at the beginning of the seventeenth century, heard that gold was to be had for the picking up, in America. " Why man," says one fellow, " all their dripping-pans are pure golde ... all the prisoners they take are fettered in golde; and for rubies and diamonds, they goes forth in holy-days, and gather 'hem by the sea-shore." ^ An old Spanish historian — who softens, says Prescott, the excesses of his countrymen — tells us of an Indian chief of Cuba, who, having carefully watched the Spaniards in the neighboring islands, and hearing that they were coming to Cuba to settle, called together his people. And putting them in mind of their many sufferings at the hands of the Spaniards, he told them that the Spaniards acted for a great and beloved lord, whom he would show them. Then he took from a little palm-tree basket a lump In 1661 and 1664, the States-General ordered their admiral to sell as slaves all the pirates he might take. Pufendorf says, in 1672, that the ownership of acquisitions by capture in war was then a subject of dispute. "The idea that captives in war are slaves," wrote John Adams to Granville Sharp, the English philanthropist, in 1786, " is the foundation of the misfortunes of the negroes. This prin- ciple is honored and admitted by all the powers of Europe, who pay tributes to the States of Barbary." Memoirs of Sharp, I, 374. ^Marston's Eastward Ho; 1605. The excesses of the Spaniards were, doubtless, far greater than those of the English, who cannot, however, in their part in the slave-trade, be exonerated from avarice. Sir Henry Maine says, in his Ancient Law, ch. V, " The simple wish to use the bodily powers of another person as a means of ministering to one's own ease or pleasure is doubtless the foundation of Slavery, and as old as human nature." 10 The Negro in Maryland. of gold, saying, this is the lord of the Spaniards. Then they danced around the basket, and " when they were spent with Singing and Dancing before the little Basket of God," he bade them not keep " the Lord of the Christians in any Place whatsoever, for tho' he were in their Bowels, they would fetch him out, and therefore they should cast him into the River, under Water where they would not find him ; and so they did." ^ > Herrera, I, 9, 3. CHAPTER II. Indians and White Servants. The Colony of Maryland was settled in 1634, under the proprietary government of Lord Baltimore. The royal char- ter, we may mention as passing, spoke not only of the spread of English territory, but, as charters usually did, of the zeal of the founder for spreading religion among a savage people who knew not God. The right to initiate all laws was soon secured to the Assembly by the Proprietor, and, although legislation remained subject to veto, the authorities in Eng- land interfered little in those internal affairs of the Colony which interest us most. Several cases of this interference we shall have to note, later. We begin with the little settlement, of some few hundred persons, about St. Mary's, on a penin- sula by the lower Potomac. There met the Governor, the appointee and representative of the Proprietor, the half dozen councilmen, and the freemen or their representatives, in assembly. The colonists at once, on landing, met with the Indians, a heathen race unknown to them in England. These pagans, as the white men called them, seemed friendly, and intercourse between the races began auspiciously. But the Indian saw with aversion the spread of the settlement, and the whites lost property and finally even a few lives at their hands. In 1639, it was declared a penal offence for anyone, without the consent of the government, to leave the English plantations 11 12 The Negro in Maryland. to live among any Indians who were not christened.^ Some of the Indians were soon open enemies. The commission issued by the Governor, in 1640, to the commander of an expedition planned against a certain tribe, which had refused to make satisfaction for sundry insolences and rapines, auth- orized him to attack these Indians, with any company of Englishmen that would be willing to go, " and against them and their Lands and goods to execute and Inflict what may be inflicted by the Law of warr and the pillage and booty therein gotton to part and divide among the Company, that Shall perform the Service." " We find another proclamation, dated a few days later, forbidding all Englishmen, under penalty, from doing any injury to a neighboring tribe which, in peace and amity, the Colony had taken under its protection. The commission to the leader of an expedition against the unfriendly Sesquihanowes, in 1643, expresses the confidence of the authorities in his forwardness to vindicate the honor of God and of the Christian and English name upon those bar- barous and inhuman pagans, and bids him do all things needed for training his men, vanquishing the enemy, and "disposing of the spoils," and all things that any general might do by the law of war.^ In 1652, an expedition was planned against the Indians of the Eastern Shore, who had committed serious depredations and murder. It was ordered that one man out of every seven men in the Colony should be armed and equip[)ed by the six remaining at home, and that all the Indian prisoners brought back, unless otherwise disposed of by the Provincial Court, should be divided, according to their value, in a general division among those who had armed and sent forth the fighting men — who, in turn, were to share the other plunder. The captain was ordered to "make Warr upon and through God's Assistance by all possible raeanes to 1 Bozman's Md., 11, 134. ^Md. Arch., 111,87. »Md. Arc-h., Ill, 133. Indians and White Servants, 13 Vanquish, destroy, plunder, kill or take prisoners at yo' dis- cretion all or any the s*^ Indians either by Sea or land, and being Soe taken to put them to Death by the Law of warr or to Save them at your pleasure." ^ An act of 1715, when the Southern Colonies were involved in an Indian war, provided — among permanent regulations for the militia — that any booty, plunder or Indian prisoners should be given by the commander to the soldier who took the same — to encourage men to enlist in such service.^ Indian slaves are occasionally mentioned in the old records. About 1660, one Indian was sold, as a punishment for petty larceny, and brought one thousand pounds of tobacco.^ But, while Indians taken in war might be enslaved, kidnapping of friendly Indians was early and always forbidden. It was declared felony, in 1649, to take or sell any friend Indian, without license from the Governor — and felony might then be punished with death. At the end of the century, the same offence was made punishable by fine and imprisonment, at ^This expedition was given up, on account of bad weather. Md. Arch., Vol. Ill, 285. ^ Acts of 1715, ch. 43 (Bacon's Laws of Maryland), continued indefinitely in 1722. The captain of an expedition in 1647 had been ordered to make no distribution until he should arrive at the fort, and give a just account to the authorities of all plunder taken. The practice of the Indians in requiring ransom, often, is well known. The Assembly of Maryland was petitioned, in 1650, to ransom two children held by hostile Indians. Nine hundred pounds of tobacco was asked for the elder and six hundred for the younger ; and the estate of their father, deceased, was not sufficient for this. The Assembly, stating that the public charges were then very heavy, directed that any of the colonists who chose to redeem them should be entitled to their service, in return, until they were twenty- one years of age. Bozman's Maryland, II, 396. We find an English soldier who had escaped from the Indians, in the French and Indian War of 1756, telling the Governor that, had he not escaped, he must have served his Indian captor all his days, for saving his life. ^Mention of Indian slaves, in the Provincial Court Eecords, 1658-1662, pp. 143, 148, 187, 484, &c. 14 The Negro in Maryland. discretion of the Governor and Council; and this act was con- tinued later. The reason, as stated in all the laws, was that no breach of peace might occur between the colonists and the neierhborino; Indians.^ In 1722, a resident of the Province was brought before the Governor and Council, committed for examination by the justices of Somerset county, for having sold or otherwise disposed of an Indian boy, of a tribe friendly to the English. On examination, the man confessed that the boy, in consideration of five pounds in money, a horse bridle and saddle, and two suits of clothes, indented to live with him as a servant for a term of thirty years, and that he after- wards sold the boy to a gentleman in Philadelphia, for fifteen pounds. In Virginia, he stated also, it was customary for Indians to be bound out, and this same boy had been pre- viously a servant there. Thereupon the Council decided that as the man had already satisfied the Indians, and had suffered more than three months' imprisonment, he should be mildly dealt with ; and he was fined five hundred pounds of tobacco and imprisoned one day.^ In articles of peace made in 1666 between the government and a number of Indian settlements, it was stipulated that in case of danger from any hostile Indians, the Governor should appoint a place to which these friendly Indians might bring their wives and children for safety, and that these, if the men chanced to be killed, should remain free and not be servants to the English.^ All disputes between Englishman and Indian were for many years heard before the Governor and Council. After 1700, cases involving not over twenty shillings were decided at first by special com- missioners, and afterwards by any justice of the courts. After 1756, the county courts heard cases of greater value, and decided the rents of Indian lands, &c.^ We find several 'Md. Arcli., I, 250. Acts of 1G92, 1705, and 1715. See Prov. Court Kecords in Md. Arch., IV, pp. 392, 399. 2 Council Records, 1721-1728, p. 47. 3Md. Arch., II, 2G. ♦1700, 6; 1717, 14; 1756, 9. Indians and White Servants. 15 interesting cases concerning Indians. In 1642, a grand jury indicted for murder a certain planter, one Elkin, in that, when moved by malice and the instigation of the devil, he had shot an Indian, known as a king among a neighboring tribe. When brought before the court of the colony, the Governor and secretary on the bench, Elkin pleaded not guilty. The Proprietor's attorney gave as evidence the exam- ination of Elkin, duly attested and with Elkin's signature, in which was a confession that he killed the Indian, and an account of the aifair. But the jury gave a verdict of not guilty, saying that they so decided because they understood the deed had not been committed against the peace of the Proprietor or the King, because the party was a pagan, and because they had no precedent in the neighboring colony of Virginia to make the offence murder. The Governor there- upon directed them that those Indians who had been injured were in peace with the authorities, and that they should not take notice of what other colonies did, but of the law of Eng- land. After reconsideration, they found the prisoner guilty of murder in his own defence. Being told that this verdict was a contradiction, they reconsidered again, and found that the prisoner killed the Indian in self-defence. But the Gov- ernor refused to have this verdict entered, and called for another jury, to hear the same evidence. This jury found Elkin guilty of manslaughter. It is not uninteresting to note that proceedings were taken to have all the members of the first jury grievously fined — for having given an unsat- isfactory verdict, contrary to the verdict of the second jury, from the same evidence. The foreman was then fined, by the court, the sum of two thousand pounds of tobacco. And he was soon fined one thousand pounds more, for contempt of court, for having said at the first trial of Elkins, when the court was " importunately pressing & charging the Jury . . . & arguing & pleading the crime ags* the prisoner," that if an Englishman had been killed by the Indians, there would not 16 The Negro in Maryland. have been so many words over it.^ The penalty given Elkins is not stated, bnt we find him afterwards a resident of the Colony. In the next year 1643, a coroner's jury returned that an Indian lad had been shot and killed by one John Dandy. Dandy at once entered security, in the sum of three thousand pounds of tobacco, to answer the charge of homicide. It is interesting to note that the Indian had been christened, before his death. The grand jury returned that the bill was true, and the petit jury gave a verdict of guilty of felony and murder. Two years before. Dandy had been sentenced to death for some serious oifence, but on petition of a great part of the Colony, the Governor had commuted the sentence to service to the government for three years. He was by trade a blacksmith and gunsmith, and, no doubt, a valuable man to the young colony. And now, again, he saved his own neck, being sentenced to fill the unpleasant office of pub- lic executioner. He was released from this four years later, having proved himself of service to the public.^ Lord Baltimore directed in 1651 that certain lands should be set aside as homes for some friendly Indians.^ When a queen of one of the Indian settlements in Maryland com- plained to the Governor that, though her people had retired to the bounds of their territory, as allotted them, the English plantations had advanced so near that their crops were injured iMd. Arch., IV, 177, 180-183. 2 Md. Arch., IV, 255, '260 ; III, 98, 187. Also, Md. Arch., V, 480-482, 517. Treaties were frequently made between the Colony and Indian tribes. In one, for instance, with certain Eastern Shore Indians, in 1659, it was agreed that the Indians were to restore stolen goods, that any Indian who should kill a white man, should be given over, with any abettors, to the govern- ment, for justice according to law ; and that the Indians, if injured by wliites, should appeal to the neighboring county commissioners, while the English, vice versa, were to appeal to a certain Indian chief. By another treaty, a few years after, with a tribe recently hostile, the right was reserved to the Eng- lish of slaying any Indian who might be found killing cattle or hogs. (Md. Arch., Ill, 3G3, 433.) » Md. Arch., I, 330. Indians and White Servants. 17 by the colonists' cattle, the Governor issued orders that no Ensclishmen should settle within three miles of the Indians.^ To a number of neighboring tribes of friendly Indians grants of land were secured by acts of assembly : it being most just, the acts read, that the ancient inhabitants of the Colony should have dwelling places in their native lands, free from the en- croachments and oppression of the English.^ Soon after the planting of the Colony certain restrictions were laid on the Indians, and on the intercourse between In- dians and English. To give or sell arms or ammunition to an Indian was felony, unless leave was gotten from the Governor. Nor could a colonist keep an Indian over night at his house, without leave. A few years later, permission was given to take arms and ammunition from any Indian who had not a license to carry them.^ Nor could an Indian be entertained by a white at any time. A few Indians had been allowed to carry arms for the use of certain colonists, doubtless for hunt- ing ; but these licenses were withdrawn.^ It is evident that these restrictions depended on hostilities between the Indians and the whites. In the game law of 1730, to preserve the breed of wild deer, there is special exemption for friendly Indians, who could kill all the deer required for their own use. The sale to the Indians of liquor in large quantities was for- bidden, to prevent disorders by drunken Indians. By an act of 1756 a census was to be made, by the local authorities, of all the Indians settled in Maryland, and those who wished to leave their towns were ordered to procure passes. This was during the French and Indian war.^ An act of assembly, in 1650, in recognition of the Proprie- tor, states, as the greatest blessing enjoyed by the Colony, the 1 Md. Arch., Ill, 489, in 1663. 2Md. Arch., II, 200; 1723, 18, &c. ^ Bozman's Maryland, II, 45, 286. *Md. Arch., Ill, 143, 260; IV, 235, 359. 51715, 16; 1756, 13. 2 18 The Negro in Maryland. privilege of planting Christianity among a "people that know not God, nor had heard of Christ."^ But we hear of no pains taken to convert the natives. In the plans for the settlement of all the Colonies, in fact, there is set forth this righteous end, but history shows that earnest efforts were no more made to reach it — than the black and Indian slaves, enslaved as captive heathen, were freed after they were converted. An- other act, for the confirmation of peace with certain In- dians, declares that the articles shall be kept, for the preserva- tion of the people of the Colony, and for the honor of the Proprietor and the English nation, '' which will undoubtedly suffer by breach of faith even to a heathen."^ The treatment of the Indian by the government of Maryland seems indeed to have been most fair. But it should not be overlooked that this policy would have been dictated, if from no other reason, by prudence and even by necessity. The Colonies were not founded without the aid of the gun ; and the words of John Archdale, the Quaker governor of Carolina, are of significance wider than the experiences of that Colony alone. "And, Cour- teous Readers," writes this staunch friend to the Indians, " I shall give you some farther Eminent Remark hereupon, and especially in the first Settlement of Carolina, where the Hand of God was eminently seen in thinning the Indians to make room for the English." For not only had the Indians there been cut off' largely from previous inter-tribal war, "but, again, it at other times pleased Almighty God to send unus- ual Sicknesses amongst them, as the Smallpox, etc., to lessen their numbers; so that the English, in Comparison to the Spaniard, have but little Indian Blood to answer for."^ 1 Md. Arch., 1, 300. *Md. Arch., 11,131. ^ Gov. Archdale, of Carolina, tells of his interview, in 1707, with four Indian i)risoners about to be sold as slaves to the West Indies, as was usual. They were Roman Catholics, havinj;; been taught probably by the Si)an- iards or French. The Covernor adds, tiiat on fuiding they were Christians, he thouf^ht in a most peculiar manner that they should be free. See Car- roll's Jlibt. CoU'ns of S. Carolina, II. Indians and White Servants. 19 Should we digress to glance at other Colonies, we should find only better examples of the custom of enslaving Indian cap- tives, and of the distance usually "observed betwixt Chris- tians and Barbarians, as well in warres as in other negotia- tions" — to use the words of the Commissioners of the New England Colonies to the commander of the expedition against the Narragansetts, in 1645. The famous Body of Liberties of Massachusetts allowed such slavery, and captives in King Philip's war, at the close of the century, were sold.^ In Vir- ginia, while Indians captured in war became slaves for life, by act of assembly as well as by the custom, there was doubt for a time as to the proper lot of those who might be sold to the colonists by other Indians. This is a most interesting point to notice, as such Indians were practically in the same posi- tion to the colonists as were the negroes from Africa — sold by the traders to British merchants. When the king of one of the Virginia tribes sold a boy of another tribe — whether a captive in war we do not know — to one of the colonists as a When one of the tribes in Maryland asked the pleasure of the Gover- nor, in 1665, as to its removal from its old home, to which the whites were constantl}' approaching, the Council decided it would be safer for the Colony to keep these friendly Indians within its command. In 1694 the Governor asked the Assembly what answer should be made to a certain tribe of In- dians, which had recently tarried in Maryland, if it should return and ask leave to settle. It was at the time of the French and Indian wars at the North ; and the Assembly said it did not seem fit at that time to receive any strange nations of Indians. Whereupon the Council composed the following beguiling message for them, should they return : That Mary- land is a country dealing in tobacco and not in furs; and as they have had an invitation from the government of New York to settle in that province, they are advised that such parts as New York and Pennsylvania, which trade mostly in furs, will be the most proper for their abode. In answer to queries by the government in England, about 1760, the Governor stated that there were in the populous parts of Maryland only one hundred and twenty Indians. These lived on lands allotted them by the Assembly, and were very orderly. (Md. Arch., Ill, 534. Council Proceedings, 1694-1698; 1753-1767.) ^ For slavery in Massachusetts, see the admirable work of Dr. George H. Moore (Appleton & Co., New York, 1866). 20 The Negro in Maryland. slave, an act of assembly declared that the king had no power to sell an Indian of another tribe, and that '' the said Indian be free, he speaking perfectly the English tongue and desiring baptism." This was about 1660. Some ten years later, the term of service of Indian prisoners, sold by their Indian cap- tors, and not Christians, was fixed at twelve years and no longer, except children, who were to serve until thirty years of age. But, about ten years later still, all such Indian prisoners were declared slaves for life.^ We do not know how many Indian slaves there were in Maryland, for they were classed with the negro slaves. The Indian certainly was little suited to be a slave, by disjjosition and habit.^ If we find mention of slaves but here and there, in the early records of Maryland, we are constantly meeting with white servants.^ These — Christian servants, as they were frequently called, in contrast to Indians and Africans — were 1 Hening's Statutes of Va., TI, 155, 288, 491. A law of North Carolina, as late as the war of 1760, provided that hostile Indians should be the slaves of their captors. In Soutli Carolina, especially, kidnapping seems to have been carried on ; but steps were taken to prevent it, afterwards. The captives taken in the wars, early in the eighteenth century, had to be delivered to the receiver of the Colony, to be sold in the West Indies. (Hewatt's So. Carolina, I, 91 ; Statutes of So. Car., II, 311, 321.) ^ Numbers of the Indian captives in the various Colonies seem to have been sold to the West Indies. Any number of Indian slaves would have been a very dangerous element in the Colonies. Cotton Mather tells us that the colonists in Massachusetts found certain Pequot Indian prisoners not able to "endure the Yoke," for few of them continued any considerable time with their masters. V^arious acts of the New England Colonies, about 1712, forbade the further importation of any Indian servants or slaves, as they were of a malicious, surly and re- vengeful spirit, and hard to govern withal. ' Where we use the word servants, we mean white, indentured or hired, servants; not negroes. Indians and J^liite Servants. 21 mostly natives of Great Britain who wished to try their for- tunes in the New World, but had not means for their passage and necessary expenses. So they entered into written agree- ments with persons of means, to serve these faithfully for a certain number of years, in return for transportation, clothes and living. The number of servants in Maryland seems to have been quite large, some colonists bringing as many as twenty or thirty or more.^ We hear of one who brought in over sixty. They were a desirable class in all the Colonies, important in settling the country, and counterbalancing any danger from Indians and negroes. Persons already in Am- erica often entered into service, too ; and the punishment for some offences was servitude. To prevent fraud and injustice, one of the earliest laws enacted in Maryland limited the time of service, where no time was specified in the agreement, and fixed the freedom dues to be given by the master.^ It was provided, later, that all agreements of service should be entered at the courts ; and no indenture made during service was to be binding for an extension of time.^ We have a copy of arti- cles of indenture made in 1647.* In return for six thousand pounds of tobacco, the man binds himself for three years, to obey, to serve, according to his master's commands ; not to absent himself without permission ; and not to steal. On the other hand, the master agrees to provide sufficient lodging, food, clothing and washing. It was found at once that servants would run away, so the courts were empowered to add to the time of service, to compensate the masters. The entertainment of others' servants was also strictly forbidden.® And when white servants ran away with slaves, they were obliged to recompense the owners of the slaves. After 1715, a reward of two hundred pounds of tobacco was offered every 1 Neill's Founders of Md., 77. Md. Arch., Ill, 256, 259. 2Md. Arch., I, 80. 3Md. Arch., I, 352, 409; II, 351. *Md.Arch., IV, 327. *Md. Arch., I, 249, 489. 1715,44. 22 The Negro in Maryland. colonist who should capture a runaway servant, and an Indian captor was given a match coat. No servant could go beyond ten miles from home without a pass from the master or over- seer, under penalty of being caught as a runaway. One who entertained a servant over night became liable to a fine of five hundred pounds of tobacco. Later, the fine was raised to one hundred pounds an hour, or a whipping, if the fine could not be paid. Nor was a servant secure, if he escaped the Colony. On complaint from his owner, the courts would send him back^ — as slaves were returned. Treaties with Indians stipu- lated that runaway servants were to be returned. In 1637, the question as to the privilege of servants to rest on Saturday afternoons, was raised in the lower House of Assembly, and it was declared that no such custom was to be allowed.^ AVorking on Sunday, however, was not customary. By act of 1715, masters who did not provide sufficient food, clothing and lodging for their servants, or who unreasonably burdened them beyond their strength, or kept them from necessary rest, or beat or abused them excessively — the whipping must not be over ten lashes for any one offence — were liable, if found guilty by the county court, to be fined not over one thousand pounds of tobacco for the first or second offence. On a third offence, the servants would be set free. Any magistrate, on proper complaint of the master, might order a servant to receive more than ten, but not over thirty-nine, lashes. Com- plaints between masters and servants were heard before the Provincial and county courts, on the petition of either ])arty. As many goods were stolen and sold, trading was forbidden with servants who had no license therefor.^ It is evident that this service was radically different from slavery, in that it resulted either from crime or voluntary con- tract. On the expiration of his term the servant became a iMd. Arch., IV, 224, 319. *Md. Arch., I, 21. Bozinan's Maryland, II, 13G. »Md. Arch., I, 500; 1715,44. Indians and White Servants. 23 freeman and a citizen. For some years' it was the law that fifty acres of land should be included in the freedom dues, lauds being given masters for the servants they imported. Some of these servants were well educated men. We find an advertisement of sale, in 1774, of a schoolmaster, an indented servant, who had two years to serve, with the postscript that he was to be " sold for no fault, any more than we have done with him. He can learn (i. e., teach) bookkeeping, and is an excellent good scholar." Of the servants imported by one of the most prominent colonists, one became a sheriff and five went into the Assembly.^ This very same gentleman, the mil- itary commander of Maryland for many years, presented to the Governor and Assembly, in 1663, a petition which began with the statement that he had, for nearly thirty years, at great cost, benefited the Colony by yearly importations of ser- vants, many of whom had been of " very good Ranck and Quallity ; " nor had he ever before been charged with a breach of his promises or duty to them, though it was well known that the care of so large a family was never met by their labor. It appears that this worthy captain had con- sented, several years before, to take as a servant for seven years the ten-year-old daughter of a poor neighbor, at the neighbor's request. This fellow now falsely alleged that the captain had agreed that the girl should do nothing else than wait upon his wife, and be cared for as his own child — a most ridiculous charge, says the petition, for the lady was about to return to England, and who would be at the trouble of taking such a raw and ill-bred child there, where servants of all sorts might be had on easier terms ! The petition then desires 1 Md. Arch., I, 97, 496. ^Gambrall's Colonial Church Life in Md., 165 ; Neill's Founders, 77. A resident of Baltimore, appointed woodcorder in 1781, was found to have been a servant at the time when the oaths of allegiance to the States had been taken, after separation from Great Britain. So the commissioner adminis- tered the oath before confirming him in his office. 24 The Negro in 3Iaryland. the serious consideration of the court to the statement of the girl's father in begging that his daughter may not be made a slave — a term, says the captain, so scandalous that if it be admitted to be the title or condition of the apprentices in Maryland, no free-born Christians will ever be induced to come over as servants. Therefor, he prayed that his reputation might be vindicated, and the abused servants and apprentices of Maryland be righted.^ And yet the lot of the servant was not unlike that of the slave. He was a piece of property, practically. In the inventories of estates, his services are charged as worth so many hundred pounds of tobacco; one man might own his services to-day, and another to-morrow. By a deed of bargain and sale, of 1641, a man-servant w^as sold from one colonist to another, in different hundreds, for four milch cows. The Provincial Court held that the agree- ment of a servant to dispose of himself for the satisfaction of his master's debts was valid, and ordered execution on him, as on any goods.^ About 1 700, the Governor and Council received a complaint from a certain inhabitant, that a servant of his, a schoolmaster, whom he had corrected for being impudent and refractory, had applied to a magistrate for a peace-warrant against him. He declared that the servant had been insub- ordinate and had threatened to send his wife sprawling ; while the servant, in turn, accused his master of trying to break his head. The Council considered the matter, and decided to order the magistrate not to countenance the servant, for it was not customary to allow servants to swear the peace against their masters — and it might be very inconvenient. Cases of cruelty to servants were sometimes before the courts. ' Md. Arch., I, 463. The House, according to the captain's request, ordered the case to be tried again. Do., 481. ' Md. Arch., IV, 156, 327. C.'ouncil Proceedings, 1704-1708, 8. A letter from Gen. Oglethorpe to the trustees of (ieorgia, in 1739, tells how 69 "heads of German servants" had been delivered to different persons on credit; one Christie got "5f heads; " the widow Harris got 2, &c. Indians and White Servants. 25 When the English courts took up the policy of transporting felons, a number of the worst convicts were sold as servants into the Colonies. Before the Revolution the custom of ser- vice had practically died out ; but it was a common custom at the time when slavery was planted in the Colonies. It must have tended, like the sharply marked class distinctions of that age, to make smoother the pathway for the growth of slavery. I CHAPTER III. Slaves. When, and by whom, the first negroes were brought to Maryland, we do not know ; but it was soon after the settle- ment. We find Governor Calvert bargaining with a certain shipmaster, in 1642, for the delivery of thirteen slaves at St. Mary's.^ The increase of the blacks — so much is certain^ was very slow at first. One of the first acts of Assembly, declaring " the liberties of the people," assured to all Christian inhabitants all the rights enjoyed in England by natural born subjects, except, of course, in so far as those rights might be changed by pro- vincial law — and excepting slaves. And the early acts for the regulation and protection of servants expressly stated that nothing contained in them should affect any slaves whatever. The rule in the courts was that justice should be administered, where provincial law or custom was silent, according to Eng- lish precedent. The royal charter to Lord Baltimore had ordered that the laws to be enacted in the Colony should be consonant to reason and, as far as conveniently might be, agreeable to the rights and customs of England.^ But the first colonists brouglit with them from England no precedent for giving any especial rights or privileges to Indian or negro — nothing but the distance felt in that age between Christian and » Md. Ardi., IV, 189. * Charter of Md., Md. Arch., I, 41, 80, 409, 487 ; III, 53, &c. 26 Slaves. 27 heathen. There were no Indians in England, and few if any negroes. Even later, when a number of negro slaves were held in England, mostly as body servants, and sales of them at auction not infrequently took place, there was no legislation touching them. We have seen how the Colonies dealt with the Indians according to their own ideas of justice or pru- dence. British merchants, indeed, under the patronage of the British government, supplied the slaves; but the colonists otherwise built up their slave legislation as they saw fit. Just as a nobility, an incident of the growth of English society, existed in England at the time of the settlement of the Col- onies and yet took no root in them, so slavery became an incident of the condition of the Colonies, and the slave codes grew up as a matter of local law. Thus, we can trace in the legislation and in the court reports, and in the life of the plantation and the town, of such an unit as Maryland, the entire growth of a slave code.^ ^ We use the word negro, or black, to include mulattoes. When the dis- tinction is to be drawn, the word mulatto is used. The legal view of the introduction and growth of slavery in the Colon- ies has been elaborately treated by Mr. John Codman Hurd in The Law of Freedom and Bondage (Little & Brown, Boston, 1858). The writer of a recent Constitutional History of England says that slavery was legalized in the colonies by British statutes encouraging the slave-trade. A number of negroes were brought to England as servants, some of them from the colonies. An article in the Gentleman's Magazine of London, in 1764, speaks of the encouragement given to the practice of importing negro servants, and states that the number of such in London alone was supposed to be nearly twenty thousand. In the famous Somerset case, eight years after, Mr. Dunning asserted that there were in England fourteen thousand slaves brought from the colonies. Even as late as that time, negroes were occasionally sold in England. One negro boy in London brought thirty- two pounds, at auction, and another, at Richmond, brought the same. A boy was advertised to be sold at auction at Liverpool, in 1779. The visitor to Hampton Court or Warwick Castle, to-day, will see busts of black ser- vants, with metal collars about the neck. In 1677, there was tried in Eng- land a case of trover for one hundred negroes, and the court held that as negroes were usually bought and sold among merchants, and were also infi- dels, there might be property in them sufficient to maintain trover. As late 28 The Negro in Maryland. Slaves had not increased much in numbers in the Colonies before a most interesting question arose concerning them — What was the effect on the status of a slave of his conversion to Christianity ? And the extent to which doubts on this mat- ter spread, and the length of time which those doubts lasted, show that the knowledge that a religious distinction was the basis of this chattel slavery was not confined to students of law alone. It was not unnatural that in popular belief free- dom M'as associated with baptism. In the first case concerning slaves, in English courts, in 1677 — in which the court held that trover would lie for the negro, as they were heathen — the argument was advanced that in England negroes could be no more a property than villeins could. But the court said they were held as goods by usage, and should therefore be given to the plaintiff, " until they become christians, and thereby they are Infranchised." During the session of the Maryland Assem- bly of 1664, a message was sent the Council by the House, requesting the former to draw up an act which should oblige negroes to serve for life, the assembly thinking this very neces- sary to prevent the damage that masters of slaves might sus- tain by such slaves pretending to be christened, and so pleading the law of England.^ And so a law was made that all negroes as 1694 judgment was given that trover would lie for a negro, for he was a heathen. After that, judicial opinions differed; and in about a century, public opinion changed so far as to support Lord Mansfield in his decision in the Somerset case, by which slavery in England ended. The abolition of slavery in the British colonies was brought aliout only after further and arduous efforts by the abolitionists and philanthropists. SeeTaswell-Lang- mead's Const. History of England, p. 300, note, British Statutes ; 10 Will., Ill, c. 26 ; 5 Geo., II, c. 7 ; 23 Geo., II, c. 31. Bandinel's Slave Trade, p. 71, note. Gentleman's Macf., XXXIII, 45, XLI, 521. Memoirs of Granville Sharp, T, 140. Cases of Butts vs. Penny and Gelly & Cleve, quoted in Hurd. In the colonies, as we see, ideas of English law were often very uncertain. 'Butts vs. Penny, in 3 Keble, 785. Md. Arch., I, 526-533. In Chamber- layne vs. Harvey, twenty years later, the question as to whether ba})tism was a manumission was raised, but the court gave no answer, holding that trover would not lie for a negro. In Carthew's R., 396. Slaves. 29 or other slaves already in the Province, or to be imported thereafter, shonld serve for life. This was made more explicit seven years later, by an act entitled " an Act for the Encour- ageing the Importacon of Negros and Slaves," which declared that conversion or the holy sacrament of baptism should not be taken to give manumission in any way to slaves or their issue, who had become or should become Christians, or had been or should be baptized, either before or after their importation to Maryland, any opinion to the contrary notwithstanding. Be- cause, as the act says, several of the good people of this Province have been discouraged from importing or purchasing therein any negroes or other slaves ; and such as have imported or pur- chased any there have neglected — to the great displeasure of Almighty God and the prejudice of the souls of those poor people — to instruct them in the Christian faith, and to permit them to receive the holy sacrament of baptism for the remis- sion of their sin, under the mistaken and ungrounded appre- hension that their slaves, by becoming Christians, would thereby be freed.' So the law remained. To a question of the Lords of Trade as to the number of negroes converted to Christianity, Lord Baltimore answered, in 1678, that all he could say was that in many other parts of America masters were refusing, " out of covetousness," to allow their negroes and mulattoes to be baptized — of an idea that baptism would work as much loss to them as the death of their slaves ; but when this opinion became current in Maryland, a law was made declaring that as in former times the baptism of villeins in England was not taken to be manumission or enfranchise- ment, so it should not then be taken to free negroes and mulat- toes. And there have been found good eiFects since, adds the proprietor, masters generally being willing to instruct these in the faith of Christ.^ We find little else in Maryland to ^ Md. Arch., II, 272. Reenacted in 1692, and, in other words, in the per- manent act of 1715 (44), «Md. Arch., V, 267. 30 The Negro in Maryland. throw light on this most interesting subject. One colored man, a native of Madagascar, who had been a servant in England, and had then been shipped to America as a servant, was detained as a slave in Maryland. On petitioning for freedom in 1602 — which was given him, the court finding that he had been shipped as a servant only — his plea was that he had been baptized and educated and had served two apprentice- ships, and was therefore free by the laws of England. We find the zealous Thomas Story publicly reproaching a clergy- man of the English church, at a yearly meeting of Friends at West River, in 1699, for taking negroes into the brother- hood of Christ in baptism, and yet keeping them slaves.^ The idea that baptism implied freedom seems to have lin- gered long in all the Colonies, even where there was direct legislation to the contrary. In 1729, in response to an appeal from some of the American colonists — evidently, according to Bishop Berkeley, in order to increase the conversion of the blacks — the Crown-Attorney and the Solicitor-General of England sent over their opinion that baptism in no way changed the slave's status.^ ' Prov. Court, Liber C, 162. Janney's History of the Friends, III, 66. According to that zealous missionary of the time, Rev. Dr. Bray, the whites of Maryhind abstained largely from baptism themselves. *Tliis opinion seems to have been especially called for in Rhode Island. Works of Berkeley, Vol. III. See, also, Pearne vs. Li.sle, Ambler's R., 75. In Virginia tiiere was enacted, in 1GG7, that baptism did not give freedom, so that divers masters, freed from doubt, might endeavor to spread Chris- tianity among the blacks. By the Act of 1670, all servants ?(o< christians and imported by sea, were to serve for life. But this was changed twelve years later, having been found inconvenient in preventing the introduction of slaves from neighboring colonies : inasmuch, we read, as many Negroes, Moors and others, born in heathenish, idolatrous and Mahometan countries, have been gotten as slaves therefrom by some well disposed christians, who have then brought them to the christian religion, out of a pious zeal, and have since had occasion, or may have occasion, to bring them into Virginia to be sold — whore they can sell them only for the Iin)ited time of service of a white christian servant, and nuist then either carry them elsewhere, where they can be sold as slaves for life, or else depart from their just right to Slaves. 31 Until a few years only before slavery was abolished, the old religious distinction that underlay that institution was still to be read in one law of Maryland. The testimony of no negro or Indian would be received as evidence at law in any case in which " any Christian white person " was con- cerned. The word Christian was struck out in 1846. The clever political student Bodin, writing in 1576 of slav- ery in Southern Europe, noted with some reproach that — like the Mahometans, who converted but still kept in bonds their Christian prisoners — the Portuguese and Spaniards were keep- ing in perpetual slavery the Moors and negroes whom they had taken as heathen but had converted. ^ In Maryland and the other Colonies there was probably no widespread and seri- ous opposition to the continuance of this bondage of the chil- dren of enslaved Indians or Africans, whether heathen or Chris- tian. Thus slavery was based on a race distinction ; though we them, to their great damage, and to the great discouragement of the impor- tation of slaves. (Hening's Statutes, 1667, 3; 1670, 12; 1682, 1.) About 1700, there appeared in print in New England an earnest plea for the relig- ious instruction of the negroes and Indians. The writer, who says he does not know why freedom should follow conversion, asks what hindrance there is to the baptism of those people. It is a notorious matter of fact, he answers, that masters discourage those poor creatures and hinder them from coming to baptism, though many desire it. Talk to a planter of the soul of a negro, and his actions, if not his words, will tell you that the body of the black may be worth twenty pounds, but the souls of a hundred will not yield him a farthing. The true reason is, that custom of giving them their free- dom after they become christians. (Moore's Slavery in Mass., 93.) An Eng- lish clergyman in Carolina, in 1709, wrote to the secretary of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, that a few of the two hundred and more negroes in his neighborhood were taught of the christian religion, but their masters would by no means permit them to be baptized, from a false notion that a slave is thereby freed, by law. Another missionary wrote, soon after, that he had with much importunity prevailed on a certain person to allow him to baptize three of the negroes. (Hawk's North Carolina, II, 310, 832.) So fixed had these ideas become in Ehode Island, as stated by Bishop Berkeley in a sermon at London, in 1732, that but few negroes there had been baptized. ^ Commonweale, Knolles' Trans., 43. 32 The Negro in 3Iaryland. must be careful in supposing that such changes were plainly seen, or that most men acted from theories. As a rule, men were thinking of material prosperity. Most of those who theorized on the subject, echoed, without doubt, the voice of that New England writer, who appealed for the religious instruction of the negroes : Some persons, nay, some nations, he says, seem to be born for slaves ; particularly many of the barbarians of Africa, who have been such almost from the beginning of the world, and who are much better oif when slaves among us than when free at home, to cut throats and eat one another, especially if by slavery of the body they are made capable of freeing their souls.^ However the matter of religion or race may have entered into slavery, the "color line" was not drawn as sharply in Maryland at first as it was afterwards — although " negroes and other slaves," as we read in the old acts, were certainly deemed a most abject class. As an illustration of this, as well as of the newness of many questions which the few legis- lators at St. Mary's had to answer, we place here several laws, which might properly be considered also under the head of crimes and punishments. In drawing up the act of 1664, to prevent slaves from pleading freedom by baptism, the Council asked the lower House what it intended should become of such free women of the English or other Christian nations as married negroes or other slaves ; should they serve as long as their husbands lived, and should their issue be bond or free? Suits had evidently arisen over such issue, and some damage been caused to the masters of the slaves. In a few hours, the House sent back their answers — that women so married sliould not serve during their husbands' lives, and that their chiklren should serve to thirty years of age. But the act, which was soon passed — reciting that divers frceborn English women, forgetful of their condition and to the disgrace of their nation. ' Moore's Slavery in Mass., 94 ; quoting from the Athenian Oracle of about 1700. Slaves. 33 intermarried with negro slaves — declared, that such women as might so marry thereafter should-«efve the slaves' masters so long as the slaves lived, and that children of such marriages already made should serve until they were thirty years old, but that the children of such marriages made thereafter should be slaves "as their fathers were."^ By the act of 1681, children born of white servant women and negroes were free.^ After 1692, the .issue of a union between any white woman and any slave or free negro became servants for a long term.^ By the act of 1715, ministers and magistrates were forbidden, by fine, to marry any white to " any Negro whatsoever, or Mulatto Slave." By this, a white and a free mulatto could marry. And an act, two years later, to provide penalties against the parties marrying unlawfully, under this act of 1715, made a free negro or mulatto liable to service for life — except mulat- toes born of white women, who had to serve, like the whites, for only seven years,* Again, by act of 1728, free mulatto ^This act declared that "Negroes or other slaves" should serve for life, and that " all children born of any Negro or other slave shall be Slaves as their ffathebs were for the terme of their lives." There must have been then no free blacks in the colony — or we are left to reason that children followed the condition of the father instead of the mother, entirely con- trary to custom, as we find it later. (Md. Arch., I, 526, 533.) The act of 1681 declared simply that all children of slaves were to serve for life. ^ The mother also became free ; and her master, if he knew of the mar- riage, was liable also to a fine of 10,000 pounds of tobacco, and so was the min- ister or magistrate who performed the service. (Acts of 1681, W. H., 174.) ^ By this act of 1692, also, the white woman who married, or became with child by, a slave or free negro, became a servant for seven years, to the use of the parish clergy or the poor. If a servant and if her master had not known of her offence, she first recompensed his loss by service. The black served for life, except that a free black, for having a bastard child by a white woman, served seven years. There was the same heavy fine against the master who allowed such a marriage and against the person who per- formed it. And there was, also, the provision that any white man who married with, or had child by, a negro woman, should be put to service for seven years. (1692, L. L. 220.) * Service for seven years at the disposition of the county court, for the benefit of the public schools. By act of 1715, the fine against minister or 3 34 The Negro in Maryland. women who might have children by " negroes and other slaves" were to be punished by the same penalty as white women for the same offence — which was declared to be as heinous for a free mulatto as for a white. ^ So, the act of 1717, which remained the law of evidence for a long period, ex- cluded the testimony of any Indian or slave or free negro or mulatto servant, in cases at law in which any Christian white person was concerned, but left the free mulatto, apparently — the free mulatto born of a white woman, surely — as free to testify as was a white.^ Africans might be more or less colored, but they were not all slaves, of course. And kidnapping came to be recognized magistrate was made 5,000 pounds of tobacco. Any white woman who became a mother by a slave or free negro had to serve seven years, as before, and the free black served the same time. The children of such unions served until thirty-one years old. There was, also, the same service of seven years for white men, the fathers of illegitimate colored children. All service was disposed of by the courts. (1715,44; 1717,13.) ^ All free negro women, also, having illegitimate children by white men, were liable to the same punishment as white women for having children by negroes. Forasmuch, says the preamble, as such relations, as between a free mulatto woman and a slave, or a free negro woman and a white, " are as unnatural and inordinate as between white women and Negro Men, or other Slaves." (1728, 4.) ^ 1717, 13. See Evidence, in chapter on The Free Negro. In 1788, a committee of the House of Delegates reported in favor of abolishing those parts of these laws which inflicted penalties on the chil- dren. Two years later, they were abolished ; it being contrary to the dic- tates of humanity, and to the principles of the Christian religion, says the preamble of the act of repeal, to impose penalties on children for the offences of their parents. (1790, 9. Code of 1860, Art. 30, 128.) Several cases, under these laws, came to the Court of Appeals. In 1681, the Lord Proprietor brought witli him to Maryland a white servant called Irish Nell. She married a slave, evidently before the pas- sage of the act of 1681. Perhaps indeed the act was called for by this marriage. The descendants of those children of Nell, born after the act — whicli exempted from servitude the children of such marriages made there- after — petitioned in vain for freedom. See 1 H. & McH., 210; 2 H. & McH., 137. Also 3 II. & McH., 380. The cases cited from the Maryland Reports down to 2 Gill, are from Rrantly's edition. Slaves. . 35 by all authorities as a crime, by custom if not by positive leg- islation.^ But it is evident that the status of a black, or of his ancestry, could not often be easily shown. The chief justice of Calvert county was asked by the Gov- ernor and Council of Maryland, in 1760, to examine carefully one Cousins, captain of a brigantine, who had recently im- ported a number of negroes into the Province, — as word had just come to the Governor that several of these negroes had declared that they were not slaves but freemen ; that one of them in particular, called Capt. Gray, was the son of an Afri- can of some consequence ; and that Captain Cousins had treacherously stolen them away. See, therefore, ends the let- ter, if Cousins be guilty of the crime whereof he is accused ; and if the evidence be sufficient, have him brought before the Council at once. The depositions of the mates, a boatswain and a sailor of the brigantine, were soon sent to the Council. The seaman testified that he had sailed from Liverpool with Cousins on a slaving voyage to Guinea, and that there the negroes were purchased ; all of whom he believes were slaves, except, perhaps, the one called Captain Gray. This Gray, he ^The Massachusetts Body of Liberties, of 1641, restricted slavery — ex- cept, of course, for crime — to lawful captives taken in just war, and to such strangers as might be sold to, or might willingly sell themselves to, the col- onists. A few years after, a kidnapped negro from Africa was sent home, by order of the General Court — which felt bound, so reads the resolution, to bear witness against the " heinous and crying sin of man-stealing." (Moore's Slavery in Mass.) The British statute, for extending and improving the trade to Africa, at the middle of the last century — which declared that trade to be very advan- tageous to Great Britain, and necessary for supplying the Colonies with suffi- cient negroes at reasonable rates — provided that no master of a ship trading in Africa should by force or fraud, or any indirect practice, carry away from that country any native thereof, or allow any violence to be committed on the natives in prejudice of the British trade. (23 Geo. II, 31.) In 1779 a captain of a Liverpool slaver was prosecuted by the African company for having sold a free negro, whom he had hired as a sailor. He was fined five hundred pounds, as a warning to the other commanders engaged in the trade. (Macpherson's Annals of Commerce, III, 638.) 36 The Negro in Maryland. understood, had been a servant to a freeman on the coast of Guinea, and was employed by his master in carrying slaves out to the ships. While thus at work, he stole a scarlet jacket from Captain Cousins, who never allowed him to go on shore afterwards, but offered to return him if another slave were given for him. But those to whom this offer was made refused to exchange him, saying that he was a scandal to his country, and they would not give for him a slave four feet high. The seaman further stated that he had heard that servitude was the common punishment for crime in that country. The mates and boatswain swore that Gray was not only taken in theft, but had been concerned afterwards in cutting the ship's cable, and so endangering her loss ; and that the other negroes in question had been left on the ship as pledges by the traders, for some seven weeks or more before she sailed, without any offers to redeem them, and that as many goods had been given for them as for other slaves. The Council deemed the com- plaints groundless, and Captain Cousins was discharged. A petition for freedom, of a certain woman — held, it so hap- pened, by a parish — came before the General Court of Mary- land in 1796. The fact was admitted, without question on either side, that the petitioner was descended from a negro woman who had been imported many years before from Mad- agascar. The counsel for the petitioner claimed that the act which stated that all slaves imported, and their issue, should be slaves, related to those brought from countries whence slaves were customarily exported. A person brought from any country where the slave trade was not carried on, and sold in Maryland, would not lawfully be a slave. Madagascar was not a place whence slaves were usually brought; and Vol. 6 of the " World Displayed " was cited. On the other hand, the counsel for the parish quoted three works of geography and travel, in which there was stated that in Madagascar the petty kings make war on each other for })lunder and slaves, and are accustomed to sell slaves to Europeans. The court dis- missed the petition, holding that, as Madagascar was a country Slaves. 37 where the slave trade was practised, and Maryland was one where slavery was tolerated, the petitioner, in order to receive her freedom, would have to show that her ancestor was free in her native country.^ The act of 1664 and its successors, declaring the children of slaves to be slaves, did not operate, to quote the General Court of Maryland in a decision in 1799, to make all negroes slaves, but merely created a presumption that they were such, which presumption could be rebutted.^ There was growing up slowly, during the eighteenth century, from manumission or free ancestry, a small free black population. If one parent of a child was free and the other was a slave, the status of the child — as under Roman law — was that of the mother. The existence of slavery in Maryland was stated plainly in many acts of assembly and in a constitutional amendment of 1837. But, as the courts in some of the free States began to require owners of fugitive slaves to prove the existence of slavery in the State where the slaves belonged, an act of 1839 declared that in Maryland from the earliest settlement, negroes and might be thereafter held as such, as the property of their and mulattoes had been held as slaves, and were then held owners ; and that the owner of any slave was entitled to his service during his life, unless the slave could show that by the grant or devise of his owner, or of some former owner of his or of his maternal ancestor, a shorter period of service had been prescribed. A negro was presumed to be a slave. If he petitioned for freedom, the question to be tried was his right thereto, not the right of his master to hold him in slavery. The slave must bear the burden of proof. Nor was the fact that a negro went at large and acted as a freeman, deemed a proof that he was free.^ 1 Council Eecords, 1753-1767 ; Sept. 22d, 1760. 3 H. & McH., 278. *4H. &McH., 193. 3 1839, 42. 6 G. & J., 86 ; 9 G. & J., 112, 127. See chapter on Manu- mission. 38 The Negro in Maryland. The acts of the Assembly of Maryland of 1671 and 1692— which, as we have seen, declared that the children of slaves were slaves, and that conversion did not aifect slavery — were entitled, acts to encourage the importation of negroes, and were passed because several of the good people of the Province had been discouraged, so we read, from importing them.^ But the number of those brought in was small, until about the beginning of the eighteenth century. Governor Nicholson wrote the Board of Trade, in 1698, that some six hundred servants had recently been imported and four or five hundred negroes were expected during the summer.^ There is men- tion of some three hundred slaves brought into Patuxent Bay in August, 1700. The Board of Trade in London was constantly asking after the state of the slave importations. The Governor of Maryland wrote, in 1708, that the trade had been rising and was then a " high " one ; that some six or seven hundred blacks had been imported in the ten months past.^ Two years later, came word that the negroes were increasing. The Public Record Office in London has a list of the "Christian" men, women and children and also of negro slaves, in Maryland, in 1712.* The whites numbered ' In the same way we find early laws of South Carolina declaring that negroes are necessary for the development of that Province. A prominent member of the Massachusetts Bay Company wrote his brother-in-law, the elder Winthrop, in speaking of the Narrragansett In- dians, about 1645, that " if upon a Just Warre the Lord should deliver them into our hands, we might easily have men woemen and cliildren enough to exchange for Moores, (i. e. negroes) which wilbe more gayneful pilladge for us than wee conceive, for I doe not see how wee can thrive untill wee get into a stock of slaves sufficient to doe all our buisines, for our children's children will hardly see this great Continent fdled with people, soe tliat our servants will still desire freedom to plant for them- selves, and not stay but for verie great wages. And I suppose you know verie well how wee sliall maynteyne 20 Moores cheaper than one Englishe servant." (Moore's Slavery in Mass., 10.) 'Steven's Hist. Indu.x, vols. 4 and 5. •'Records from the London Oflioe, quoted in Scharf's Maryland, I, o76. * Steven's Index, vol. 8. Scharf, I, 377. Slaves. 39 nearly thirty-eight thousand, the negroes over eight thousand. In three of the southern counties, the blacks far outnumbered the whites. In the years following, both races increased fast, but the blacks faster than the whites. By 1750, the whites may have been nearly a hundred thousand, the blacks nearly forty thousand.^ In 1790, there were over two hundred and eight thousand whites, and nearly half as many slaves ; the eight thousand and odd free blacks making the proportion of white to black as less than two to one. The great staple of colonial Maryland, as of Virginia, was tobacco. The Governor of Virginia wrote of the tobacco trade, in 1726, as the one by which the governments of the Colonies subsisted. Tobacco was the common currency. Cot- ton seems to have been planted somewhat before 1700, but it was spoken of by one high official to another as prejudicial to the planting of tobacco and the King's interest. So great was the production of tobacco that efforts were made by the colo- nial authorities both to improve the staple by more limited crops, and to turn the interests of men to other things — but it was hard to make men agree to the first, and to both aims the policy of the mother country was bitterly opposed. Hardly had a generation passed, after the foundation of the Colony, before laws were enacted, to encourage the production of hemp and flax, and manufacturing and tanning. But it was little use to urge men to work the iron ore, when an act of Parlia- ment, encouraging the exportation of pig iron from the Colo- nies to England, forbade in them the erection of any furnace or forge. By 1750, the trade of Maryland, chiefly in to- bacco, was carried on by British vessels of some twelve thou- sand tons, total burden — the shipping of the Province being forty or fifty small craft, only. Among the queries sent, some ten years later, by the authorities in England to the Council of Maryland was the question : are there any trades or ^ The early estimates of population in the Colonies seem as a rule to be very untrustworthy. We must take them as approximations. 40 The Negro in Blaryland. manufactures in Maryland which are hurtful or may prove hurtful to Great Britain ; and, if so, how may they be sup- pressed, divided or restrained? And in reply we read, that the chief branch of trade was the importation of goods and manu- factures from Great Britain, supposed to be worth annually more than one hundred and sixty thousand pounds, and, in return, an annual export of about twenty-eight thousand hogsheads of tobacco, bringing to the producers and the mer- chants together, before it reached the English markets, nearly three hundred thousand pounds. Perhaps eighty thousand pounds worth of other produces were shipped — corn, wheat, pig iron, skins, lumber, &c. This trade was carried on in some hundred and twenty British vessels of eighteen thousand tons, total burden. The boats belonging in the Province numbered about thirty only, of thirteen hundred tons in all, and had been mostly engaged in the West India trade ; but that trade had not been very profitable, and there was little probability of its increase. As to manufactures or trades in the Province which might be hurtful to Great Britain, there were none.^ Even as late as this time, we must remember, the bulk of the population of these Southern Colonies had not gone far from the coast. Maryland, like Virginia, had been well suited for agriculture in its physical characteristics. For years the settlements had been mostly dotted along tidewater, plan- tation after plantation, with few towns. Endeavors made to build large towns and ports by act of assembly were far from successful.^ The flat fields were cut up by a network of riv- ers and creeks. A short row in a boat would often save near neighbors miles of travel over wretched roads. Up these inlets came the British vessels, to give to the planters the man- ufactures that he seldom saw otherwise, and to take away the ' See Md. Arch., V, 16, 266. Council Kecords, 1749, 390; 1761, 316 (416?); 1756, 117. «A8 1683, 5; 1684, 2; 1688, 6, &c. Slaves. 41 tobacco and breadstuffs from the very fields where they were raised. The British ships brought not only the manufactures, but the slaves. The colonists themselves were anxious, at first, as we have seen, for supplies of blacks. In how far they were influenced by ideas that black labor was cheap and advantag- eous labor, peculiarly suited to those flat coast lands, hot and malarial in summer ; or in how far competition between these tobacco regions may have really ruled out any other labor, we do not venture to answer.^ But to the British, the slave trade only supplemented the policy of discouragement of manufac- tures and encouragement of tobacco. Acts of Parliament, at the beginning and middle of the eighteenth century, encour- aged it as highly beneficial to both mother country and colo- nies ; and it was pursued to the benefit of the British Crown, as well as of the merchants. Of the twenty-two hundred and ninety negroes imported into Maryland from 1699 to 1707, all but a hundred and twenty-six came in London vessels.^ Towards the close of the seventeenth century the public charges of the Province had been growing burdensome. Efforts were being made to increase the facilities for education. The seat of government was moved to Annapolis. In 1689 war broke out between Great Britain and France, to bring new burdens on the Colonies threatened by French and Indians. The same Assembly which reeuacted the law to encourage the introduction of slaves in 1692, laid a new duty of fourpence a gallon on ^ The introduction of slavery into Georgia suggests most interesting ques- tions of this kind. The only labor allowed in Georgia, by the rules of the Trustees of the Colony, for some twenty years after the settlement, was white labor. Many considerations, as the nearness of hostile Spaniards and In- dians, and the unfavorable character of part of the settlers, prevent any hasty answers ; but climate, especially in the production of rice in the low- lands, and the fact that the same produces could be bought much cheaper on the Carolina side than on the Georgia side of the Savannah, were cer- tainly strong influences on those Georgians, by far the great majority of authorities and citizens, who finally secured the introduction of black labor. ^Doc. from Public Record oflice, quoted in Scharf's Md., I, 377. 42 The Negro in Maryland. imported liquors, to discharge the arrears of government, to pay soldiers, to repair courthouses and prisons, and for other charges. Two years later this was continued, and a duty was laid further on several commodities exported, as furs, beef and bacon, for the maintenance of the free schools. The next year, in addition, a duty of threepence a hogshead was put on tobacco, for a year ; and ten per cent, on all " European com- modities " exported, for three years ; as well as a tax on cer- tain local offices.^ Over three hundred pounds had then to be sent towards the support of the colonial forces in New York. It was then — when the Province was so destitute of ready money, to pay the soldiers in arms for its defence, that a mem- ber of the House of Delegates offered to loan certain sums until he could be reimbursed from the treasury — that the first duty w'as laid on slaves imported, and on white servants, too. The majority of the Assembly declared for ten shillings a head on negroes ; all agreed on two shillings sixpence for servants. The receipts were thereupon to be applied to the building of a statehouse and other expenses. We should note that at the same session, there was passed an act to restrain large assem- blages of negroes. There were rumors of movements by papists and negi'oes — it is interesting to note how European politics were reflected in the Colonies, often amounting only to a little talk, and some legislation. At the next session the duty on both negroes and Irish servants was made twenty shillings a head — with a penalty of five pounds on any smuggling merchant or shipmaster — to raise su])plies and to limit the importation of Irish pai)ists. The full title of the act of 1704, which con- tinued this, was an Act for imposing threepence a gallon on liquors, "and twenty Shillings })er poll for Negroes, for raising a tSupply to defray the public charge of this Province ; and twenty shillings per poll on Irish Servants, to prevent the im- porting too great a Number of Irish j)aj)ists into this Province." But by act of the same session, liquors and negroes could be ' 1G92, 22; 1094, 19, 23. Slaves. 43 imported without duty in vessels owned wholly by residents of Maryland, to encourage the inhabitants to adventure their ships abroad more freely. In 1715 the same exemption was offered, in addition, for Irish servants imported in home ves- sels. The next year an additional duty of four pounds a head was laid on Irish servants and on negroes, for the old reasons ; but this act met with the dissent of the Lord Proprietor. So the next Assembly laid twenty shillings more a head on them, making the total duty forty shillings, except for those imported in home vessels. So the duty remained for years, except that after 1728, home vessels had to pay half duty ; and after 1732, Protestant servants from Ireland could be imported free, as from elsewhere.^ These duties were to be laid on all importa- tions, by land or water; but after 1721, residents of Mary- land, who owned slaves in other colonies, and persons coming to Maryland to settle — as complaint was made of the hardship such persons had to suffer through the duties — were allowed to import their servants free, if not for sale.^ We have no grounds for presuming that the early duties on negroes were laid for any other reason than that given in the acts — the payment of public charges. But by the middle of the century there was evidently some opposition rising to the further large importation of them. Maryland was not such a frontier, nor was its black population so large in proportion to the whites, as to cause its citizens the anxieties which were felt in South Carolina, where the laws, which had not long since 'Proceedings ofHouse, May, 1695; 1695, ch. 9; 1696,7; 1699,23; 1704, 9,67; 1715,36; 1716,6; 1717,10; 1728,8; 1732,23. After 1735, no duty had to be paid for any servant or slave who might die, or be exported by the importer, within three months after importation. (1735, 6.) When the House of Commons asked, in 1736, for the laws in force by which duties were laid on various articles of trade, the Governor of Maryland answered, for negroes, forty shillings. This evidently referred to the duty for those imported on English vessels ; and the home commerce, as we have seen, amounted to little. n721, 9. 44 The Negro in 3Iaryland. spoken of the need of black labor, now called for whites, and ascribed the faster increase in the blacks to the " afflicting providence of God." But when, during the French and Indian w^ar, the Maryland Assembly argued with many words the expediency of requiring indentured white servants to do military duty, as called for by the Governor, one objection thereto was that the importation of servants would decrease, for planters would import more blacks, who were never sub- ject to military duty. When a country, answered the Gover- nor, is in danger of being lost to the enemy, it is no time for its government to enter into critical dissertations as to whether the enlistment of servants may not tend to lessen the importa- tion of them, for planting, and to increase that of slaves.' In 1754 new duties were laid, to meet the demands for His Majesty's service in the French and Indian war. A pedler had to pay four pounds for his license ; each wheel of a carriage cost the owner five shillings a year ; twenty shillings a head was put on all servants imported, to serve for seven years or more, and five shillings on most others. On negroes, ten shil- lings a head was added to the existing forty. When larger expenses had to be met, later, some new duties were laid. The duty on servants for long terms was abolished, and twenty additional shillings per head was put on negroes.^ When these new duties ceased, a year after the war ended, there was laid a duty of two pounds a head on negroes, over and above the still existing duty of forty shillings.^ But, as before, any ^ Council Records, 1756, 90. "Among the provisions of this act were a tax of 5 shillings a year on all unmarried men worth from £100 to £300, and 20 shillings on those of greater means ; for every billiard table, £3 ; for every horse imported from any colony for sale, a duty of 40 shillings; a tax of 1 shilling on every 100 acres of freehold property, except lands owned by papists, who paid 2 shil- lings, &c. 1754,9; 1756,5. ^1763, 28. The acts 1715, 36; 1717, 10, seemed to have continued in force. So the total duty, to 1771, was eighty shillings a head. The money was applied to the schools. Slaves. 45 person coming to Maryland to live, from any part of the King's dominions, could bring in his servants free. And the duty would be remitted also on slaves exported within two months. Eight years later, in 1771, there was placed a fur- ther additional duty of five pounds a head — excepting, as before, those brought in by persons coming to settle, and excepting those exported within four months — on importations by land or water. This ceased in 1778, but within two years, under pressure of war, taxes and duties were rated anew. As before, nothing had to be paid on slaves brought in, not for sale, by persons coming to reside. Otherwise, there was a duty of fifteen pounds on every slave who had lived in the States for full three years, and of five hundred pounds on every other.^ After two years, in 1782, as enough of the required funds had been raised by taxes and sales of State property, some of these new duties — as those on iron and tobacco exported — were taken off; and it was declared that all those on imports should cease as soon as Congress should lay the expected duty of five per cent., except the duty on slaves. And at the same session the tax rate on all property was reduced by a third.^ The next year — when the favorable con- dition of the State finances allowed the removal of the extra duties and taxes laid for redeeming the bills of credit — was passed the act wdiicli forbade the introduction by land or water of any slave for sale. A citizen of the United States who might come to Maryland to live, and should actually live there a year, could bring in any slaves who had belonged to him elsewhere — if they had been in the country for three years. The previous whereabouts of the slave was to be fully proven to the collector. Servants of travelers were specially 1 This act (1780, 8,) is entitled an Act for sinking the quota of Maryland of the bills of credit issued by Congress. It put a duty, also, on iron and tobacco exported, a tax on marriage licenses, &c., &c. The title of 1771 (7) is simply to place an extra duty on negroes imported. Payment under 1780, 8, was in pounds currency. « 1782, 50, 54. 46 The Negro in Maryland. exempted, but they could not remain indefinitely, or be sold in the State. And any slave imported contrary to law was to be set free/ The number of blacks had grown to be about eighty thousand, nearly a half of the number of whites. They had increased faster than the whites during the preced- ing decade, if we may trust the estimates of population. The wishes of the Colonies, now the States, had changed during the century. The result of the change is well known : how negroes were forced on the southern Colonies — despite frequent remonstrance from some of them — by the mother country.^ Virginia had been foremost in remonstrance, and now forbade all slave trade from without her borders, in 1778. The Maryland Act of 1783 was much the same as this Vir- ginia Act of 1778; but the high duty of 1780 on negroes fresh from abroad was practically a prohibition of the foreign trade. Aside from the duties, we find no remonstrance against the slave trade on the part of the colonial Assemblies of Mary- land. Later, when the question of the prohibition of the foreign trade was before Congress, the Assembly of Maryland resolved, in 1805, that their senators and representatives should be instructed and requested to use their utmost exer- tions to obtain an amendment to the Constitution, by which Congress, when it was deemed expedient, could put an end to all further importation. And the same resolution was sent to the Governors of all the States, with the request tiiat it be laid before the different Legislatures, for their concurrence and adoption. Again, the next year, similar messages were sent the Maryland congressmen, declaring the prohibition of the slave trade to be a most desirable measure.^ ' 1783, 23; 1782, 29. Scliarfs History of Maryland, III, 291, says that a bill against im[)ortation was presented in tiie House in 1767, but was not passed. Tlie manuscript Journals of Assembly do not give any session that year. «See Bancroft. Part III, ch. 16. ^Res., 1805, 11, 12; 1806, 6, 14. Slaves. 47 The old duty of forty shillings was not collected, as we have seen, on slaves brought into Maryland by citizens who had estates in other colonies or by persons about to become residents. But all importations had to be entered at the cus- toms, and no slave could be sold for three years. The act of 1783 allowed importation to residents only, and limited it then, to slaves who had been in the country for some time, and who were not for sale. But some fault was soon found with such sweeping restrictions. Several citizens of Virginia who owned lands in Maryland asked leave of the Assembly to bring in some of their slaves from Virginia, to cultivate those lands. A bill in their favor passed the House but was defeated in the Senate. For several years following, similar bills were similarly defeated. One citizen of Maryland, who had married a Virginian who held slaves in trust, and had also carried certain slaves into Virginia, received permission in 1791, by a special act, to import all these slaves. The Senate then urged upon the House a bill amending the law of 1783. Should we reciprocate, reads their message, the privileges given by Virginia, and allow Virginians to bring their slaves over the Potomac, under careful restrictions, surely " no political disadvantage will accrue " to Maryland. Whereupon the House passed the bills — by a vote of thirty- eight to seventeen — so that citizens of Maryland holding land, in their own or in their wives' rights, in Virginia, Delaware or Peunsylvania, and owning slaves employed on those lands, might bring these slaves into Maryland, to be worked for their benefit, and not to be sold ; and provided, further, that the slaves were residents, or children of residents, of the States mentioned, before 1783. Citizens might bring in, also, any such slaves acquired by inheritance or marriage in other States. And Virginians holding lands in Maryland might bring in their slaves, to cultivate these. To prevent fraud, the slaves — as well as the title to them, if acquired by inheri- tance or marriage — had to be recorded in all cases at the county office ; and they could then be carried to and fro, at the 48 The Negro in Maryland. pleasure of the owner.^ The next year, a former citizen of Maryland who had been living in Delaware for two years, obtained an act to allow him to bring back the negroes he had taken away with him, and their issue. The proprietors of several iron works which lay near together on both sides of the Potomac, were allowed to carry back and forth male slaves used on the works, provided that no Virginia slaves should be sold in Maryland unless under ^eri facias. Slaves could also^ be carried to and fro, by certain parties, between Maryland, Virginia and Washington, for work on certain public buildings ; but they were to be removed from Mary- land within a year from the completion of the work, or they would become free.^ Further doubts as to the act of 1783 were settled by a provision, of 1794, that residence of a year in Maryland, by persons coming there to settle, was not neces- sary before slaves could be imported ; but no slaves or their increase, so brought in, could be sold until the importer had lived in Maryland for three years, barring the case of dispo- sition by will or at law/ Since 1783, slaves could be brought ^- to Maryland by citizens of the United States only. In 1792, some of the French inhabitants of the West India Islands fled from the revolutions there to Maryland. So a new law^ declared that such French subjects who should settle in Mary- land during the disturbances at home might retain their slaves, but the number that they could keep, after the expiration of a year from their coming, was limited to five domestic servants to the master of a family, and three to a single man ; while 1 House Journals, 1787, p. Ill; 1788, 52; 1789, 31 ; 1791, ch. 19, 57. ' 1792, 45, 48. *1792, 75. This was not to become a law unless a similar act was passed by Va. * 1794, 43. See also 4 H. & McH., 143. *1792, 56. When the act was repealed, five years later, the authorities of Baltimore were authorized to rid the city of any of these slaves who niif;;iit Ite deemed dangerous to the peace; for it was said that many of them had been disorderly and were under suspicion. (1797, 75.) Slaves. 49 any surplus slaves, not exported, became free. Such French- men as merely sojourned in Maryland could keep the same number for their own use, but could not dispose of them. When the House of Delegates received petitions in 1795 from certain residents of Charles and Prince George's coun- ties, for changes in the law so as to allow the introduction of slaves — by land, we presume — the committee reported that they were opposed, " upon principles of policy," to an entire repeal of the law, but advised that it be made more clear and explicit. In the next year a petition was received from a cit- izen of Talbot county, that he might bring back to Maryland a negro whom his mother had carried away, and in whom he had certain rights. It was found that the slave had been removed during the infancy of the petitioner, at a time when he could give no consent. The committee, again, and this time with success, urged a general law. The act of 1796, which, in many ways, long remained the law, reiterated the prohibition of the importation of any slave by land or water, for sale — declaring, as before, that such slaves should be thereby free — but provided that citizens of the United States, coming to Maryland to settle, could bring in within a year any slaves which they owned at the time of their removal, if the slave or the mother of the slave had resided in the United States for three whole years previous ; but neither the slaves nor their increase could be sold — except in settlement of an estate or by process at law — until the importer had lived in Maryland for three years. Travelers had to carry their ser- vants away with them. If a slave were carried away by any person during the infancy of, or without the consent of, the real owner, that owner might bring the slave back at any time.' A resident of Maryland, possessed by inheritance, in 1 House Journal, Nov., 1795, pp. 6-29; 1796, 57, &c. Acts of 1796, ch. 67. As to freedom from importation, the Court of Appeals held, in 1820, that this applied to voluntary importation on the master's part only. 5 H. & J., 69. 4 50 The Negro in Maryland. his own or his wife's right, of lands in an adjoining State, and of slaves used on those lands, might bring the slaves into Maryland to his own land^ for his own benefit and not for sale. Conversely, a resident of an adjoining State possessed by inheritance of lands in Maryland and the owner of slaves at home, might import the slaves, to work them on those lands only.^ In both cases, the slaves must have been resi- dents, or descendents of residents, of the States in question, before 1783. And careful record had to be made, within three months, in the county office.^ After the slaves had been properly recorded, they might be removed as often as the owner should choose without repeated record. Any citi- zen of Maryland who acquired property, by marriage, bequest, in course of distribution or as guardians, in any slave who was a resident, or the descendant of a resident, of the United States before 1783, might remove such slave into Maryland for the purpose only of employment for his own benefit, and not for sale. Such slaves had also to be properly recorded ; and they could not be sold for three years. Over twenty years later,^ there was added the condition, that slaves so imported should be used by the importer only in his own immediate service and not for any other purpose whatever. By a supplementary act of 1797,^ executors and administra- tors of citizens who should remove into Maryland and die within a year, might import within a year any slaves, with their issue, that had belonged to the deceased and had them- selves, or their mothers, been residents of the United States ^ By 1798, 76, citzens of Maryland or of an adjoining State, inheriting lands in Md. or the adjoining State, and owning slaves used on them, might import the slaves for use on their own lands. * If the slaves were acquired by inheritance, the testator's name, the date and place of record of the will, nuist all be recorded ; when by marriage, the name of the person from Avhom the title was derived, was necessary. ^ 1818, 201. It was further declared that such- slaves did not have to be brought in within any limited time. *1797, 15. Slaves. 51 for three years previous. So, guardians of the children of such citizens might import such slaves within a year from the beginning of their trust ; and the children on becoming of age, might also bring in such slaves and their issue, within a year. We have noted that occasionally, under authority of special acts, slaves were brought from Virginia to Maryland for speci- fied occupations and for limited times. Thus, in 1794, leave was given the Potomac Company to import slaves, with the condition that they would be freed, if not removed within a year from the completion of the work in hand. Several years after, as several citizens of Maryland were in the habit of hiring out their slaves to this same Company in Virginia, and as doubts had arisen whether the slaves could be brought back after a year's residence away, without being entitled to free- dom, a further act declared that slaves might be hired out to the Company, but that they should be deemed free unless returned within a year from the end of the work. It appeared proper, so reads the act, that citizens of Maryland might have the privilege of hiring their slaves to the best advantage, " when no injury to the State can result therefrom." When, in 1803, a citizen of Virginia petitioned the Maryland House of Delegates for leave to bring in certain negroes, the com- mittee of the House reported that it was inexpedient to extend the privilege of importation.^ The proprietors of a stage line between Philadelphia and Norfolk, got leave in 1799 to use their slaves as drivers, to and from Maryland, on condition that every driver be duly recorded. In that portion of Mary- land ceded to the District of Columbia, a number of slaves, belonging to citizens of Maryland, had been hired out or otherwise employed. An Act of 1802 allowed the importa- tion of such slaves, and their issue ; and it was further made lawful for citizens of Maryland and of that part of the Dis- trict which had been ceded by Maryland, to remove to and ^ House Journal, 1803, 79. 52' The Negro in Maryland. from the District at pleasure such slaves, and their descen- dants, as had been brought into the District from Maryland.^ Other border counties found the law oppressive ; and it was finally enacted, in 1812, that slaves might be hired out in any adjoining county of another State^where the laws of that State did not forbid — as often as the owner wished ; and, conversely, slaves owned in the adjoining counties could be brought into Maryland, to be hired out. In either case, no record had to be made, but the slaves must be returned within a year.^ Hardly had the Revolution ceased when a number of citi- zens of Maryland began active efforts to abolish slavery. Some were political leaders. Many of them were of the Society of Friends. In December, 1785, the House of Delegates received the petitions of several citizens of Queen Anne's, Kent, Caroline, Dorchester, Worcester, Talbot and other coun- ties, relative to an abolition of slavery. These petitions were read a second time on the day following, and were rejected by a vote of thirty-two to twenty-two. It is interesting to note that the votes of the members from the counties named — and many delegates were not present — were abont equally divided, pro and con.^ Two years later there was presented to the House an address and petition for the emancipation of slaves, from the yearly meeting of the Friends in Baltimore ; but these were refused also, by thirty votes to seventeen.^ The Maryland society for promoting the Abolition of Slavery and the Relief of poor Negroes and others unlawfully held in Bond- 1 1802, 68. See 3 H. & J., 379, 382 ; 1813, 56. M812, 76. ' House Journsil, 1785, pp. 36-39. Of four of the largest slave-holding counties, Calvert, Charles, Prince George's and St. Mary's, only one of the delegates present voted to receive the petitions. * House Journal, 1787, pp. 34-36. Slaves. 53 age, was organized in 1789. Its membership was soon between two and three hundred, and a building in Baltimore was devoted to its use. Its work began at once by a petition pre- sented to the House of Delegates, on November 12th. On the next day the House received, also, an address of the Friends, of the same purport. These were referred to a com- mittee of seven members, who reported the next day, through Mr. William Pinkney. It should be the wish of every free community, they said, to bring about the abolition of slavery. As both a sudden and compulsory abolition are exceptionable — the former being dangerous, the latter in violation of acquired rights — no opportunity should be neglected of attain- ing abolition " by silent and gradual steps, with the consent of the owner." So, all restriction should be removed from the voluntary emancipation of slaves.^ Within a week, a bill was introduced in the Senate, to promote the gradual abolition of slavery, and to prevent the rigorous exportation of blacks from Maryland. It was read the first time and laid on the table. Consideration of it was postponed, some days later, to the first week in December. It was then committed to Mr. Nicholas Hammond, who had introduced it, together with Mr. Charles Carroll and Mr. John Hall, with the resolution to request the House of Delegates to appoint a committee for conference. Accordingly, the following message, brought in by Mr. Charles Carroll, was sent to the House the following day : "A Bill for the gradual abolition of slavery, and for pre- venting the rigorous exportation of negroes and mulattoes from this State, has been originated in this House, and lain some time for consideration. The great importance of this subject, whether considered with a view to the persons whom it concerns, or to the advantage and happiness of the commu- nity at large, appears to be such as to require peculiar investi- gation, and the most serious attention of the legislature. ^ In 1752, manumission in any way during the last illness of the master had been forbidden. 54 The Negro in Maryland. HeDce it is conceived that a discussion of this subject by a joint committee of both Houses will be proper, that by a candid exchange of sentiments such a system may be reported as will be thought most agreeable, as well to the sense of both branches of the legislature as to the sense of our fellow citi- zens." But this proposition of the Senate the House refused by a vote of thirty-nine to fifteen.^ The members from the large slave-holding counties voted against it, and those from the others were divided. The Senate ordered that the bill be referred to the next Assembly. At the next session the Senate received a petition from the Abolition Society, and referred it to the House. When this petition was read the House voted, by twenty-six to twenty-two, to refer it to a committee. There was then put the question, that the committee be in- structed to express their disapprobation of that part of the petition which referred to the gradual abolition of slavery ; but this was defeated by a plurality of two votes. And nothing further seems to have been done at that session.^ But the work of the abolition societies had not been in petitions alone. In 1791 the House of Delegates received complaints against the society in Baltimore for its interference between certain slaves and their masters. The committee on Grievances and Courts of Justice, to whom the matter was referred, reported that the owners had been unjustly brought to much unneces- sary trouble and expense. So large and influential was this Abolition Society that an individual who should be brought to law with it had better give up his slave than defend his rights. In this case the Society had acted in an indecent and 'House Journal, 1789, pp. 10-14, 64-5. Senate Journal, 1789, 5-34. A letter in Hazard's Register (Vol. X, 411) from a gentleman of Baltimore, written in 1832, states that Ciiarles, Carroll of Carrollton, introduced in the Senate of Maryland, in 1797, a bill by which all female slave children were to be bought by the State, educated and bound out to the age of 28, when they were to be free ; and other slaves under 45 were to be free at a certain time. This, we presume, was the plan of Mr. Carroll in 1789, as the Senate Journal for 1797 does not make any mention of abolition. 'Senate Journal, 1790, Nov. loth. Slaves. 55 unjustifiable manner — so said the committee. The House, after considering the representations of the Society in defence, voted by a large plurality that its action could in no way be justified upon any principle by which good citizens ought to be moved. Although a resolve that the Society had become unnecessary, oppressive and repugnant in principles to the laws of the State, was lost by three votes, the work of the Society as a body had to be discontinued. Other societies were formed of not large membership. A number of slaves were assisted to get freedom, and a few petitions and memorials sent to the legislators from time to time, but only to meet with disap- proval.^ During this period, however, there was a noticeable increase in the number of slaves manumitted. Manumission by will or otherwise during the last illness of the master, which had been forbidden in 1752, was allowed once more by the general act of 1796, on Slaves — by amendment of the Senate. When, in 1823, a communication was received in the House of Delegates from the Governor of Ohio, on gradual emanci- pation in the United States, the committee of the House reported that they deemed it inexpedient then to express their views thereon.^ In the Assembly of 1827, there was pre- sented to the House a petition of sundry inhabitants of Har- ford county, for the abolition of slavery in the State. It was referred to a committee of nine — one member from Harford, Baltimore, Prince George's, Talbot and Worcester counties, each, and two from Cecil and Montgomery. On the day following, this committee reported, that they were compelled to acknowledge the inexpediency of submitting, at that time, 1 House Journal, 1791, pp. 82-106. Griffith's Annals of Baltimore, 127. Poole's Abolition Societies, 72. House Journal, 1791, 19, 31, 38 ; do. 1792, 24 ; do. 1801, 66. Mr. Jefferson stated that there was not as much disposition for abolition in Maryland as in Virginia. We may add that there was very little in Virginia, however much many leaders like Mr. Jefferson may have desired it. * House Journal, 1823, 139. 56 The Negro in Maryland. any system of legislation for abolishing slavery. But they expressed their entire confidence that the time was fast coming when Maryland would be relieved, through the plan of col- onization, from " this grievous national calamity." " We cannot now, for obvious reasons," they continued, " follow the examples which have been set us by our sister States to the north and east of us. With them the evil to be subdued was a pigmy, with us it is a monster ; with them a superflu- ous and decaying limb was to be removed ; with us the destroying worm is to be sought for in the root. There, the system, full of health and vigor, submitted cheerfully to the simple cure ; here the disease, exhibiting itself in its greatest strength and worst form, must receive a different treatment, and be gradually subdued by persevering, but not abrupt remedies." ^ This report was read and left, apparently, on the table. A memorial was presented in the House, in 1829, ) from sundry citizens of Frederick county, asking for a law which should declare that all children born of slaves should be free after a certain time. In 1832, a committee was ordered to enquire into the expediency of such legislation, but there seems to have been no result.^ An amendment was added to the State constitution in 1837, to the effect that the relation of master and slave should not be abolished unless a bill for the purpose should be passed by an unani- mous vote in each branch of the Assembly, and should then be published at least three months before a new election of delegates, and should be then confirmed by unanimous votes of the Houses in the next session thereafter ; nor then, without full compensation to the master for the property of which he would be deprived. Exactly how far the feelings of the people of ]SIaryland were voiced in these actions of their legislators, is as hard to judge to-day — as it is hard to learn whether the " sundry 1 House Journal, 1827, 320, 342. "House Journal, 1829, 427; 1832, 89. Slaves. . 57 citizens " who signed these abolition petitions were six or a score or a whole community. There were citizens, and some of them prominent citizens, always ready and anxious to fur- ther any steps towards gradual abolition, but the people of Maryland, as a whole, did not care evidently to do away with slavery, or felt unable to solve the problems that a larger free black population would bring, or looked too long and too trustingly to colonization as the remedy for the evil/ Several eiforts were made, also — especially at the same time with those early efforts for abolition — to restrict or pre- vent exportation of slaves from Maryland. In 1789, in the House of Delegates, Mr. Pinkney had spoken of this as a species of traffic inhuman in itself, and disgraceful to the gov- ernment.^ Two years later, several petitions were presented in the House, from the Friends, from the Abolition Society in Baltimore, and from certain citizens of Caroline and Kent counties, for legislation to prevent the exportation of slaves and free negroes. These were referred to a committee of seven — one member, each, from Baltimore town, Baltimore county, Annapolis, Queen Anne's and Harford counties, and ^ In 1830, there were several anti-slavery organizations in Baltimore — a " National Anti-Slavery Tract Society," a Branch of the Society of Md., &c. — but these seem to have been small and of little vitality, A small number of prominent citizens of Baltimore and the counties associated together, in 1846, to initiate a movement towards gradual emancipation ; but public opinion, in the growing hostility between North and South, would not support any such plan, and it was abandoned as wholly imprac- ticable. (Baltimore and the 19th of April: Hon. Geo. W. Brown, p. 113.) Note resolutions of the Assemblies — 1841, 16; 1843, 57; 1849, 37. We may add that the Bill of Eights of Maryland, of 1776, did not state that all men were free and equal — as did the Bill of Rights of Virginia and the Declaration of Independence. It gave to "every freeman" remedy at law for injury to person or property, &c. * House Journal, 1789, 9-14. 58 The Negro in Maryland. two from Dorchester, headed by Mr. Pinkney. In a few days, they reported that they could not conceive how, while the citizens of Maryland continued to hold slaves — a property recognized by law and secured by the Constitution — the ex- portation of slaves could with any warrant be prohibited. They did not see that justice or policy required such an inter- ference with the rights of the community. Nor could they forbear from suggesting that such petitions would only make worse rather than better the condition of the slaves, by tend- ing to destroy the spirit of acquiescence among them, by which alone their happiness could be secured, and to fill them with regret for evils that did not admit a remedy.^ With this report the House concurred. At the next session, another memorial of the Friends was received, read and referred, but with no result. In 1800, there was received a petition from sundry inhabitants of Kent and Queen Anne's counties, for an act to prohibit the sale of slaves — without the State only, pre- sumably. This was referred to a committee of seven, two from Anne Arundel, two from Kent, and one each from Charles, Dorchester and Queen Anne's counties. Over a week later, this committee reported that they had given the subject the serious consideration which its importance merited. They considered that the property in slaves acquired by citizens of Maryland, under the faith of laws existing before the Kevolution, and sanctioned by express compact on the adoption of the new gov- ernment, was secured by society to individuals on the general basis of property. And Avhcre the rights of such individuals are to be resumed by the public for the general advantage, a reason- able compensation must be made. They would not deny the power of the legislature to meet any great regulations of civil policy which the uncertain events attending every social institu- tion might render necessary, particularly such an institution as slavery with them ; but, as they were not aware of the neces- sity then of any such changes, they could not consent to pro- ' House Journal, 1798, 19, 31, 38. Slaves. 59 hibit generally that use of their property which the needs of slave-owners might make indispensable. Nor did they believe that the transportation of the blacks to a warmer climate more suited to their physical natures, was either inhuman to the blacks or impolitic to the State. They deemed the gradual diminution of the black population of Maryland — a people so different by nature from the whites — and a substitution in their place of a white yeomanry, to be objects highly desirable. Yet, with all this, they could not for a moment doubt that the right of property in slaves is, and ought to be, a right limited by the laws of humanity and Christianity. The legislature is bound to repress vices of cruelty, and to encourage charity and philanthropy. While they would refuse to prohibit generally the sale and transportation of slaves to the South, they would so far restrain the same as to prevent the violation of those ties of nature which even savage man respects, and which society should protect with a religious reverence. And to this end they offered the resolution, that a law should prohibit the sale — except in consequence of the commission of some crime or offense — of any slave to be carried out of Maryland, by which an acknowledged husband or wife, according to the relations customary among slaves, would be separated from each other, or by which a mother would be separated from a child under a certain age. This report was read, but nothing seems to have resulted from it.^ The next year the House received further memorials of the same purport from the Friends and sundry citizens. After some weeks a similar resolution was reported, fixing the limit of age under which a child could not be taken from its mother at ten years. But this resolution was rejected by a vote of thirty-eight to twenty- one.^ In 1818 a petition from citizens of Washington county, that the existing traffic in slaves might be restricted, was likewise referred to a committee ; but without result. In 1 House Journal, 1800, 58, 77. * House Journal, 1801, 44, 66, 80-84. 60 The Negro in Maryland. 1832 there was presented a petition from the justices of the orphans' court of Somerset county and certain citizens of Som- erset and Worcester, for an act to restrain registers of wills from engaging in the purchase of negroes for transportation and sale. The committee on Grievances and Courts reported against the petition/ By this time the policy of the State was to free itself as much as possible of the black population. Any slaves for life could be carried out or sold away from the State, except such as were brought in for the purpose of trans- portation and sale. As manumissions increased there was an increase in the number of those slaves who were to be free at a certain time. During their terms of service they were as other slaves. The law provided for the careful record of the deeds under which they were to be free, and that those who were brought into Maryland, being slaves for a term of years only by the law of the State whence they came, should serve for the prescribed length of time only. It is easy to see how injustice might arise from the transportation and sale elsewhere of these blacks, as slaves for life. As early as 1789, the attention of the House of Delegates was called by the Society of Friends and by others, to the exportation by fraud or violence of slaves for terms of years ; and a committee stated that the honor of the State was deeply concerned in giving exemplary punish- ment to such a practice. For a generation thereafter, eiforts for stringent and effective legislation were frequently made, especially by the Society of Friends.^ The general act of 1796 gave a penalty of eight hundred dollars — or work on the road for not over five years, in default — for anyone who might transport, knowingly, from the State, and sell as a slave for life, any black entitled to freedom at any age. And there was the same penalty for bringing in and selling such in the State. • House Journal, 1818, 96 ; 1832, 204. -House Journal, 1789, 9-14; 1790; 1791, 31 ; 1795, 53, 65; 1803, 15, 18, &c. Slaves. 61 But a committee of the House of Delegates reported, in 1801, that the removal of these servants and other acts of inhuman- ity to the unhappy blacks called loudly for the interposition of the legislature ; on which the House went to the extent of resolving, by vote of fifty-four to five, that the severest penal- ties should prevent the sale, South, of slaves for terms of years. Finally, in 1810, there was enacted that no such slaves should be sold to anyone who had not been a bona fide resi- dent of Maryland for a year. The penalty, as for any sale for a longer term than that which the black had to serve, was five hundred dollars. That for actual kidnapping had been fixed the year before at between two and ten years imprison- ment.^ During the session of 1816, the House passed, by a vote of thirty-four to twenty-three, a bill which required the formality of a bill of sale, acknowledged before witnesses and containing a description of the slaves transferred, in the case of sale and removal of slaves where the person about to remove them had not been for two years an actual resident of the county where they had been held. This was defeated in the Senate by a tie vote. But an act of the next session pro- vided that purchasers of any slaves for removal from the State should take copies of duly acknowledged and recorded bills of sale, in which the slaves should be identified. A slave for a term of years could not be sold to any other than a resident of the State of over a year's standing ; nor could a resident pur- chase as agent for a non-resident, under penalty, in either case, to seller or buyer, of not over two years' imprisonment. And all sales of slaves for terms of years were clothed with the formalities of bills in writing, under hand and seal of the pur- chaser, and of the seller or his agent; which should give the term of service, the interest of the seller, and the residence of the purchaser ; and should be duly acknowledged before a jus- tice of the county, and be recorded within twenty days. If 1 See 1783, ch. 23 ; 1790, 9 ; 1796, 67 ; 1804, 90 ; 1810, 15. Act on Crimes, 1809, 38. 62 The Negro in Maryland. these formalities were fraudulently omitted, the servant became free ; and magistrates were authorized to examine any persons on whom reasonable suspicions were fastened. The penalties of this act were extended in 1834 to all cases where a resi- dent of Maryland should purchase or receive, knowingly, with the intention of sending away, a slave for a term of years ; and where residents should remove and then sell such slaves, taken with them.^ These formalities for the sale of slaves entitled to freedom, and the penalty of not over two years' imprisonment for any illegal sale of them, remained the law. But notoriously vicious servants were often sold, for transportation, under the authority of the courts, by act of 1833 — the court being satisfied that the master had warned the slave of that penalty, and the slave being provided with an authorized copy both of the order of the court and of his title to freedom. We find the Assembly of 1818 giving permission to a resi- dent of Cecil county to remove a Hegro girl, a slave for a term of years, to Pennsylvania, on condition that he give bond with security, not to sell or remove her out of that State. So, in 1829, certain trustees were allowed to sell several negroes for their unexpired time of service, in DelaM'are — but to no other than an actual resident of that State ; and the conditions of the permission of sale were to be mentioned in the bill of sale.; and they must secure a bond for one thou- 1 House Journal 1816, 98. 1817, ch. 112; 1834, 266. The luininuim im- prisonment became eighteen montlis. A society called the Protection Society was organized at Baltimore about 1817. Many valuable blacks were aided, and incorrigible servants were quietly transported. (Griffith's Baltimore.) A bill for a " Protection Society of Kent county " was rejected by the Senate in 1827. A few years later, a number of slaves were bought in Maryland, to be taken to Louisiana ; but difficulties arising at the custom house in Baltimore, owing to the informalities in the bill of sale, the matter was carried before a justice of the city court. As the negroes, on being examined, acknowledged themselves to be slaves, a special act of the Assembly allowed the transportation as if the bill had been drawn according to the forms j)rescribed by law. (1821, 15.) Slaves, 63 sand dollars, with good security living in Maryland, that the slaves should not be removed from Delaware during the time of service. And the act declared, further, that the trustees or their heirs might maintain an action on the bond, should the slaves be removed, and any damages would be used in bringing back their slaves and for their further benefit. In another case, a citizen of Delaware was allowed to take from Maryland a negro woman, in whom he owned an unex- pired term, on condition that he first gave bond with security, to be kept in the clerk's office of the county from which the slave was removed, that he would not keej) her in servitude after the expiration of her term of service. Again, a citizen of Prince George's county was authorized to sell a negro woman out of Maryland, if he specified in the bill of sale that she was to be free at a certain time, and if he took security from the buyer that she should not be disposed of for longer servitude. Another citizen of the same county was given leave, two years later, to take with him to Virginia his servant for a term of years, provided the negro should appear in person before the orphans' court and signify his willingness to go, and also that the master should furnish him with a cer- tified copy, under seal, of the instrument under which he was entitled to freedom. Again, in 1840, a special act allowed the removal of a girl to Virginia, provided that she should give her consent, and that the master should first file -with the county clerk a satisfactory bond to the State of Maryland for one thousand dollars, with security from a citizen of Mary- land, for the faithful and safe return of the girl to the State by the master or his executors as soon as she finished her term of service, should she then desire to return. She must return, if at all, within twelve months after becoming free. And in case she desired to return but was detained, the district attor- ney must bring suit on the bond, and any money recovered should be used for the Colonization Society. Before she left, the county clerk was to give her, at the expense of her master, a certified record of her right to freedom. Thus several 64 The Negro in 3Iaryland. exceptions to the laws were made. But all petitions for spe- cial acts were not granted. A bill passed the House, in 1835, to allow a certain clergyman to carry out of Maryland a col- ored apprentice, the son of free parents ; but the Senate would not pass it. Two years later, a bill was introduced in the House to allow a certain resident of Prince George's county to carry with him to Mississippi a servant for a term of years. By the recommendation of the committee on Colored Popula- tion, these bills were amended so as to require the master both to give bond in the sum of two thousand dollars, that he or his heirs or executors would liberate the slave at the proper time, and in all respects comply with the conditions of the permission given him, and, also, to have a copy of the per- mission recorded in the office of the county in Mississippi to which he should remove. This bill the Senate rejected; and refused to reconsider, when asked by the House.^ In 1820, a bill was introduced in the Senate, to repeal all laws that forbade the importation of slaves into Maryland, provided that no slave imported should be manumitted withhi ten years. This bill passed the Senate by a vote of seven to five, but was defeated in the House. Two years later, leave was asked in the House for a bill of similar purport, but the committee reported that the laws were satisfactory in giving sufficient latitude for importation. The House refused to agree to this by a vote of thirty-seven to thirty-four; and then the bill was referred to the next Assembly. There, a bill was again passed in the Senate and defeated in the House." From time to time, special acts allowed the importation of »See 1818, ch. 205; 1829, 2,55; 1831,233; 1834, 1 ; 1836, 201; 1840, 111. House .Journal, 1837, 56, 165, 208. 'Senate Journal, 1820, 19. House Journal, 1820, 82; 1822, 162. Senate Journal, 1823, 18. Slaves. 65 slaves, in answer to the petitions of the owners. And not a few such petitions were rejected.^ In 1823, as — so the pre- amble of the act reads — the numerous special acts of legisla- tion had been of great expense to the State, and no incon- venience could occur from a general law embracing most cases — there was enacted that any citizen of Maryland who acquired " by marriage, bequest, course of distribution, or as guardian, or by gift, or in any other lawful manner," any slave, a resi- dent of the United States, might at any time bring such slave into the State for the purpose only of employment there " for his own immediate service." Slaves so brought in had to be recorded. They could be neither sold nor manumitted until they had been residents for three years. There seems to have been some doubt, thereafter, as to whether slaves imported under this act could be hired out within three years. One special act allowed certain negroes who had been brought back to Maryland with their owners, then minors, to be hired out, without danger of their freedom being thereby acquired. Another allowed a citizen of Harford county to hire out sev- eral negroes, "in the same manner in which he might or could have done had the said negroes been born slaves " within the State. Again, the executors of a citizen of Maryland who had died in Florida, were given permission to import certain slaves belonging to the estate, and to hire out or sell them, as directed in the will, as if they had never been out of Mary- land.^ But — the Legislature having been roused by the South- ampton insurrection — the proviso was added, that, if the ^ For instance, leave was asked to introduce in the House, in 1829, a bill to authorize one of the members, from Caroline county, to bring into the State, as a hireling, a negro to work at a forge. Leave was then refused. Later, a bill was reported, by leave ; was then amended, to limit the privi- lege of keeping the black to five years ; and was finally rejected. (House Journal, 1829, 176, 359.) The acts varied considerably in particulars, such as the times within which the slaves must be registered at the county clerk's. 2 1823, 87; 1827, 176; 1831, 10, 273. 5 66 The Negro in Maryland. negroes should refuse to go to Liberia, they should be sold out of the State. The slaughter of a number of white persons of Southampton county, Virginia, in the summer of 1831, by the negro Nat. Turner and a few followers, roused the attention of the whole country. This so-called insurrection was wholly local, was put down at once, and showed no tendency in the slaves as a people to rebel against their masters. But many empty rumors of uprisings went abroad, far beyond Southampton county. The year 1831 is a landmark in all legislation in Mary- land aifecting the wegro, slave and free. It was then that the State actively took up the policy of the colonization in Africa of its free blacks. There was further enacted — it was the autumn of 1831 — that it should not be lawful after the first of June following to import into Maryland any slave for sale or to reside there. This did not apply, however, to the rights of non-residents, under laws then in force, to remove their slaves to or from islands belonging to them in the Potomac. Nor should the act prevent persons who lived in Maryland, or an adjoining State, and held land in the two States, not over ten miles apart, from removing their slaves to and from those lands, solely for the cultivation of the same. Such slaves so brought in must be recorded within thirty days with the county clerk. Any person importing a slave contrary to the act should forfeit the slave, who, in turn, would be entitled to freedom on condition that he consent to be sent to Liberia or to leave Maryland at once.^ Otherwise he was to be sold by the sheriff to the Col- ^ 1831, 323. The Court of Appeals held, in 1837, that the importation of a slave contrary to this act, so as to entitle the slave to freedom, must be by the owner or with his approbation or authority. (8 G. & J., 269.) If a slave returned from another State where he had resided, even with his owner's pernii.ssion, the owner could not hold him — thougii the return was against the master's con,->ent. (U G. «& J., 14. 1837.) But the Act of 1831 did not prevent owners from sending away, or taking away their slaves, to travel, or sojourn temporarily. The plan of perma- nent residence elsewhere must actually be cousuunnated. (9 G. & J., 127.) Slaves. 67 onization Society, for the sum of five dollars and prison fees, to be carried to Liberia. If the Society would not take him he was to be sold, on condition that the purchaser would take him beyond Maryland to reside. All justices of the peace were bidden to hold for court, and, if necessary, to commit to jail, any persons importing slaves contrary to the law. At the next session of Assembly, 1832, the House received some thirty- eight petitions for leave to introduce slaves. No special act seems to have been passed, but a supplement was added to the act of 1831, because — so reads the preamble — the introduction of slaves ought to be prohibited except in a few special cases, and all cases of hardship should be embraced under one law, according to some general principles. The supplement^ declared that slaves for life who should be hired out or loaned to service for limited times in a State adjoining Maryland, or in the District of Columbia, might be returned to Maryland ; but the importer must be a resident of Maryland as well as the owner of the slaves — at the time both of exportation and importation. Persons wlio had already acquired land in Mary- land by inheritance or otherwise, or by purchase with intent to become residents, and who were about to become such, could bring in auy slaves owned by them before the act of 1831 was passed ; but the proper record ujust be made and the affidavit of the owner given that the conditions of law had been prop- erly complied with, and that the slaves were slaves for life, and were not imported for sale. Persons living in the District of Columbia, east of the Potomac, and holding lands in Maryland, might move to those lands from their residence any slaves for life, and the increase of such slaves, who had belonged to them and lived either in Maryland or the District before the act of '31. Also, residents of Maryland removing for a limited time to the District, might bring back at pleasure any slaves carried with them. Those, too, who owned land in an adjoining State, ^ 1832, 317. The importation of such hired slaves had been allowed by an act passed a month before. (Ch. 40.) 68 The Negro in Maryland. and worked on those lands any slaves who belonged to them and had gone from Maryland, might bring back such slaves at any time. Citizens of Maryland who should leave home for a time, in the service of their State or of the United States might bring back with them any slaves for life that they had carried away ; and in case of their death, their representatives might return them ; but there must be entered on record, before removal, the usual list of the slaves, together with a declaration of the reasons for the departure from the State, and also of the purpose of returning, and another record must be made within a month after the return. It was enacted, lastly, that where any slave owned in Maryland by a citizen of the State should have been married before the law of 1831 — in regular marriage ceremony by a minister of some recognized religious body in the State — to any slave owned in any adjoining State, it should be lawful for the owner of the slave in Maryland to bring in the husband or wife. But the fact of the marriage must be proven by the purchaser, or some credible white person, and put on record within a month. This act was strongly opposed, passing the House by a vote of thirty-six to twenty-nine.^ At the next session, the Senate passed a bill relaxing some- what the strict prohibition of the previous year, but imposing a tax on such slaves as might be imported, for the benefit of col- onization. The House amended by cutting down the proposed taxes by a half, and then passed the bill by a vote of forty-one to twenty-eight. It enacted that any citizen of Maryland might imj)ort slaves for life acquired in another State by mar- riage or bequest, or in course of distribution ; also, that any persons residing out of Maryland, and removing there with a bona fide intention of becoming citizens of the State, might also import their slaves, the intention of residence being shown ' One member moved to repeal tlie policy of colonization, and State taxes for it, :is the passage of this bill of 1832 would admit more blacks tiian were removed by 1831, 281. Tlie motion was lost by 45 to 21. The bill was introduced by the chairman of the Committee on Colored Population. Slaves. 69 by affidavit duly filed in the county office within a month. In all cases, a list of the slaves had to be filed in the county office, with a statement that the list was true, and that the slaves were not to be sold and were slaves for life ; and at the same time there had to be paid for the use of the Colonization Society, the sum of fifteen dollars for each slave between the years of twelve and forty-five, and five dollars for a slave either younger or older.^ There was further enacted the next year, that any officer of the army or navy called by the service into Mary- land, might bring with him his slaves, on condition that they be not sold, and be taken away when he left. A further sup- plementary act to the stringent provisions of '31, now allowed citizens of Maryland, or of the District of Columbia east of the Potomac, who had, or might acquire, lands in the District or the State, respectively, to move back ai|d forth at pleasure any slaves for life who were natives of the State or of that part of the District. Also any resident of Maryland thereafter appointed executor, trustee or guardian in the State or an adjoining State or District, could carry to and fro from the adjoining State or District, and hire out in Maryland, if deemed advisable, any slaves for life held in trust, on condition of due record in the office of the county to which these might be at any time removed. Such slaves, of course, could not be sold.^ Certain residents of Charles county had received by bequest in Virginia a number of slaves, but had exchanged them for others. A special act ended their fears by allowing the other slaves to be brought in. Several other acts allowed the removal of certain slaves between Maryland and Virginia. In one case there was. a proviso that they should be used solely for cultivation,^ By the act of 1831, those persons owning lands in both Maryland and an adjoining State, not over ten ^ House Journal, 1833, 205, &c. 1833, ch. 87. A special act also admitted nine slaves, on payment of the taxes. The case was not included under the provisions of the general act. 2 1834^ 75, 124, 284. =* 1835, 50, 74, 172, 194, 274. 70 The Negro in Maryland. miles apart, might carry their slaves to and fro. The ten mile restriction Avas now done away, and citizens of either Maryland or Virginia who owned lands in both States anywhere could move their slaves at pleasure, paying the taxes for colonization when the slaves were recorded.^ As no provision existed for the introduction of slaves gotten by gift, there was enacted further that any citizen of Maryland might import any slave for life, acquired by gift in the United States, but on condition not only that the slaves be duly recorded and the colonization fees paid, with an oath that the gift was a bona fide one, but that none of the slaves or their descendants could be manu- mitted in Maryland unless the owner should provide for their removal.^ In 1836 the question of changing the laws so as to admit slaves without restriction was reported adversely by a House committee., It seemed best, they said, to continue the policy then being tried, which promised well ; and cases that were especially deserving, in the judgment of the Legislature, would always find relief.^ But three years later, there was enacted that any citizen of Maryland, and any person coming to Maryland to reside, might bring in from any part of the United States any slave for life. A person moving into the ^ 1835, 329. Apparently, the tax had to be paid on the first introduction, only. A special act, in 1843, allowed a certain citizen of Virginia, owning land in Maryland, to move his slaves at pleasure, but limited their use to work on those farms, and said the colonization fees need be paid only once. (1843, 38.) ^1835, 61, I. e. Removal under the act of '31, for decreasing the free black population, 3 See House Journal, 1836, 384. 1837, ch. 351 ; 1844, 42 ; 1846, 244. In one case, a citizen of Anne Arundel was allowed to bring back from Louisiana fifty slaves, who had been taken there for temporary work. Again, a gen- tleman of Virginia asked and got leave to bring with hira, whenever he wished, a black boy who had been his servant in Maryland, before his removal to Virginia. Again, a certain owner of lands in liotii Maryland and Delaware could carry to and fro his slaves including children born to them in Delaware. At least two slaves owned in Virginia were hired out in Maryland, the owners being required to put them on record and pay the fees. Slaves. 71 State must file within a month an affidavit of intention of resi- dence; and, in all cases, the slaves must be recorded, with sworn affidavit, that they were not imported for sale and were slaves for life, and the fees for the Colonization Society must be paid. Three years later, again, the privilege of carrying to and fro slaves for life, from the United States, and not for sale, was given to any person entering the State, to remain tempo- rarily or permanently, on condition of proper record and pay- ment of fees. Thus, step by step, were lessened the stringent provisions of '31.^ In 1847 the House committee reported unfavorably the suggestion of a repeal of all restrictions; but two years later, all laws were repealed which prohibited or in any way taxed the importation from any part of the United States of any slaves for life. But no slave whatever could be imported for the purpose of sale and transportation, under penalty — when the slave was actually sold, to be taken away — of not less than two nor more than five hundred dollars. Nor could any slave sentenced to transportation as a punishment for crime, in any other part of the United States, be imported into or held in Maryland.^ The total amount received by the Colonization Society from these duties on the introduction of slaves, during seventeen years, had been nearly twelve thousand five hundred dollars — the number of slaves brought in must have been a thou- sand or more.^ In 1850, there were over ninety thousand slaves in the State — some ten thousand less than there had been a half century before. In 1860, there were eighty- seven thousand. But the free blacks — having increased dur- U839, 15; 1842, 213; 1845, 113. ^ 1849, 165. The penalty for importing a convict slave was from $100 to $300 ; for holding one in the State, the loss of the slave, who was sold for the benefit of the State. The Baltimore Sun of May 2nd, 1851, mentions the arrest of a man for importing a slave contrary to law. ^ Report of Committee on Colored Population to Constitutional Conven- tion of 1850-51. 72 The Negro in Maryland. ing that decade by three times the decrease in slaves — num- bered nearly eighty-four thousand. The Code of 1860 read, simply, that anyone could import any slave for life from any part of the United States, except those who were guilty of any crime, or had been banished from Maryland. From the very settlement of the Colonies the indentured white servants frequently caused their masters vexation and loss, by running away. Laws to prevent this were soon made in Maryland. Any persons suspected to be runaway servants or criminals were to be taken up and kept until either they could prove their freedom and pay four hundred pounds of tobacco, or their masters claimed them and paid the same sum. It is interesting to note that a law of this kind, of 1669, was to be communicated to the sister Colonies to the North, that fugitives might be held there for their masters.^ For a hundred years, law after law was made, but despite stringent regulations — of passes required, and penalties threat- ened — some of the servants would not stay in service. Fin- ally, white indentured servants ceased to form a class in the population, and when men spoke of a runaway they meant a negro.^ Some of the negro slaves soon followed the example of the white servants. In a quarrel between the Dutch of New Amsterdam and the government of Maryland, in 1659, the Dutch declared that unless their runaway servants were sent back to tliem, they would keep all the servants and negroes ' Md. Arch., II, 224, 523. ^ We read in an act of 1786 (43) that many apprentices had been running away. The Baltimore Sun, for Jan. 6, 1858, gives the case of a wliite a})pren- tice, who had absconded and was sent back by the magistrate. In the latter years of slave-liolding, as to-day, a white apprentice had sometimes to be given back to his master. Slaves. 73 that had fled to them from Maiyland.^ The courts allowed masters of runaway servants to recompense themselves for their losses by holding the servants for a longer term. Slaves for life were evidently incapable of paying any such penalty. An act of 1663 required English servants who should run away in company with negro or other slaves, to repay the master or owners of the slaves, by direction of the courts.^ The act of 1669 makes no mention of slaves. That of 1676 was intended chiefly for servants, though slaves are included, and declared that former acts had proved ineffec- tual, in not giving sufficient encouragement for the seizure of runaways. So, servants were forbidden to depart ten miles from home without a note of leave, under penalty of being arrested as runaways, and having to serve, at the end of their terms, ten extra days for each day of absence. Any person who should detain a servant, knowing that he or she was unlawfully absent from home, would be liable to a fine of five hundred pounds of tobacco for every night the servant was on his place. Those who carried away any servant or slave should pay the employer or owner treble damages and costs. As the act applied to servants, " whither by Indenture or according to the Custome of the Countrey or hired for wages," it is evident that any passer by was liable to be examined, and perhaps delayed, by any zealous citizen. So, the better to insure against detention or arrest, persons traveling beyond their own county were directed to get a pass, under the county seal, for which they had to pay one shilling or ten pounds of tobacco. Any person who should take up a runaway or one without a pass who could not give a good account of himself, was entitled to two hundred pounds of tobacco or other satis- faction. If he lived in the Northern Colonies or in Virginia or Delaware, except in certain parts adjacent to Maryland, he was entitled to twice that sum for a runaway returned to 1 Md. Arch., Ill, 372. ^Md. Arch., I, 489. 74 The Negro in Maryland. Maryland.^ In order that runaways might more easily be returned, the plan was adopted of making Annapolis a clear- ing-house, as it were. Not only were runaways brought there, but notices were to be speedily sent there, from all parts, of servants or negroes in custody, whose masters were not known ; and a list of these was to be kept posted by the sheriff. The commissioners in each county were also to post notices, at the offices of the courts, of such runaways as might be taken thereabouts.^ In 1709, an Indian who had been kept for some time in one of the county jails, was discharged by special act of assembly, and the distinction was then drawn that persons, other than negroes and mulattoes, who should be found trav- eling without passes and committed as runaways, should not be detained over six months, if they could not before prove their freedom. On being released, such persons had to pay or work out the costs. After 1719, servants and slaves who had not been taken away by their owners, might be sold at auction, and the balance, after all costs were deducted, was secured to the owner, should he appear within reasonable time.^ In treaties made by the Governor of Maryland with various Indians, in 1661 and 1663, there is the stipulation that the Indians are to return any runaway "Englishmen." Later, the neighboring Indians were encouraged to seize runaways by the reward of a blanket or its value. Treaties with them forcbade their harboring servants and slaves, who were to be given over to the nearest English plantation. The backwoods offered a near retreat for runaways. As a certain tribe of Indians had evidently been regardless of the rights of the good people of Maryland in their servants and slaves, the Governor and Council decided, in 1722, to send to these a messenger with a treaty of peace and friendship, and the promise of a reward of ' Md. Arch., II, 523. Ee-enacted in 1692 and 1699. See also LL. 3, 40. -Council Proceedings, 1695/6, H. D. 2, p. 297. •a.L. 3, 385. Re-enacted in 1715, 44, 35. 1719, 2; Repealed, 1802. Slaves. 75 two blankets and a gun to every Indian who should return a slave. These allurements were evidently unavailing, for three years later it was decided to send again, to invite some of the chiefs to Annapolis. The messenger was to endeavor to persuade them to come, by all reasonable means, including a present of a calico shirt and pair of scarlet worsted stockings to each chief, and the distribution of four other shirts among such as the chiefs should name. Feeling sure of the success of this mission, the Council decided that whatever negroes should be brought down by the Indians should be held in custody until the Assembly should decide what to do with them. But neither chiefs nor slaves came, and another messenger still seems to have been sent without result. At that time a sum of money was appropriated from the treasury for the encour- agement of the seizure of runaways.^ Honest people of Maryland were somewhat troubled by the escape of debtors to foreign parts, and after 1715, masters of vessels could not lawfully carry away any persons whatsoever without the proper passes from the authorities. But servants and slaves were still evidently able to get away, for there was enacted in 1753 that captains of boats over eighteen feet long, keel, should not enter or take permit to sail, at any custom house, without taking an oath against concealing any such on shipboard, or taking them away. They might be properly hired for work on a vessel, but otherwise the captain became liable to a fine of twenty shillings and costs, for every hour he allowed a servant or slave on board. Ten years later this act was made perpetual, the preamble stating that it had appeared very beneficial.^ When word came to Annapolis, in 1697, that two negroes, a man and a woman, were outlying in the neighboring woods, the man being armed with a gun and threatening the life of 1 Md. Arch., Ill, 433, 486. Council Kecords, 1700, X, 238 ; 1722, 51, 131, 140, 1725/6, March 23. mi5, 19; 1753, 9. 76 The Negro in Maryland. anyone who tried to take them, the Governor ordered an officer of the county to raise the neighborhood, to apprehend the negroes by force and to give them to the sheriff at Annapolis, to be imprisoned against the appearance of their master. If the posse was not successful in arresting them, the rangers would be put on their track. In 1723 there was enacted that any runaway negro, or other slave, who should outlie in the woods and resist those persons who were legally empowered to capture him, might be killed, without offence or penalty on the part of the pursuers. An act of 1751 secured from prosecution any person who might kill a slave, deemed to be guilty of any serious offence, and resisting arrest. The value of the slave so killed, was paid to the owner by the public. But this was so qualified, two years after, that the person should not be secured against trial, but should not be punished in any way, if the killing was found by the court to have been done justifiably.^ As sheriffs sometimes neglected to advertise runaways, a law of 1792 provided that advertisements, with minute particulars, should be continued until the prisoners were released in course of law. After 1 802, sheriffs were to advertise runaway servants or slaves in some public newspaper printed in Baltimore, in Washington and in Easton, besides any other notices they should see fit to post, within fifteen days after the capture. The run- away was to be fully described. If the owner did not apply for him within sixty days, and give security for all costs, the sheriff should advertise him for sale, wait at least twenty days, and then sell him to the highest bidder. All the proceeds after > Council Records, H. D. 2, 442. 1723, 15 ; 1751, 14; 1753, 26. In 1738 several negroes who had broken jail, and others who had run away, were outlying in Prince George's county, and had done some violence. The Council were of the opinion that the magistrates had not exerted themselves sufficiently, so the sheriff was ordered to seize them, and to take, if neces- sary, the whole power of the county. (Council Records, May 5th.) We read that in 17G4 the Governor, having read the letters and depositions relating to the shooting of a slave of Charles Carroll, Esq., by Captain John Ireland, " was pleased to order a nolle prosequi and pardon " for the said Ireland. (Council Records, Liber T. R. 1G9.) Slaves. 77 costs were deducted, were to be paid by the county court to the owner, but if he did not apply within two years, they went to the county. No servant or slave so sold could be carried out of Maryland within two years after the sale, under the same penalties as for the transportation of a free black. For every case of neglect to follow the law, a sheriif could be fined a hundred dollars.^ By the act of 1 796, a free black who allowed a slave to use his freedom paper, by means of which the slave escaped, could be fined not over three hundred dollars — half to the master of the slave — or be sold to service in default. But as misuse of these certificates continued, greater care was now prescribed for the issue of them, and a second one was not to be issued to any free black, except on satisfactory proof that the first had been lost. In 1810, the courts before which negroes might be brought as suspected runaways, were ordered to be well satisfied in every case before granting discharges. After 1817, any person who had been duly committed by a magistrate as a suspected runaway, and had then been duly advertised, as before, but had not been claimed within the sixty days, was taken before a judge of the county or orphans' court for full examination. If the judge deemed the prisoner a free man, he would thereupon discharge him. Otherwise he would remand him for a reasonable time, and have the reputed owner notified, but if no rightful owner appeared in that time, the prisoner would then be discharged. In either case, any costs were paid by the county. This radical change of freeing the negro who, while not claimed, could not yet prove his free- dom, and of leaving all costs to be paid by the public, was not effected without much strong opposition. The motion to strike it out of the bill was lost by two votes only in the House. At the next session a bill to repeal it passed the House finally, but was rejected by the Senate. It remained the law, save that after 1828, the charges for the care of blacks ultimately discharged, were paid from the State treasury.^ 11792,72; 1802, 96. nSlO, 63; 1817, 112; House Journal, 1828,98. 78 The Negro in Maryland. White servants who ran away and were captured had to recompense their masters by increased term of service. Negro servants for terras of years were dealt witli, doubtless, in the same way, but they were few in number before the nine- teenth century. By an act of 1804, a master could secure the use of a captured runaway for such extended time as the court should deem just; but the court must be satisfied that the servant had not run away from ill treatment. The servant could be used for the specified time by the master or his heirs, but was in no case to be assigned to anyone living out of INIary- land. In 1830, the House committee, in answer to a petition of sundry citizens of Talbot county for further security to slave owners, recommended a bill which allowed the sale for a much increased term, of those slaves, for terms of years, who had run away and been taken. But the bill was amended so that no order for the sale should be granted except in cases where the servants had once before run away ; and the matter was then indefinitely postponed. In 1833, it was enacted that the courts could extend the terra of runaway blacks so as fairly to indemnify the owners for all loss, or could give orders, on due petition of the owners, for the sale of the owners' rights in thera to anyone in or without Maryland, if, as in all cases, the offence had not been caused by the ill treatment of the master. In case of sale, the slave was to be given a certified copy of the papers on Avhich his freedom depended, and of the order of the court for the sale. He could then be taken from the State if the purchaser desired.^ Slave owners had always, by the custom of the country, the right to give their slaves reasonable punishment. One of the provisions of the act of 1751, on negroes, was that the owner of a slave who had attempted to run away might, if he chose, turn him over to the county court, to be punished by whip- ping, cropping, branding or otherwise, as the court should see fit — but not so as to kill him or unfit him for labor. By the 1 1804, 90 ; 1833, 224. Slaves. 79 same act, any person who should persuade a slave to run away, became liable, if the slave absconded, to pay his full value to the owner, or if unable to do this, to be imprisoned for a year. A white servant, for the same offence, had to pay the same sum, or serve the master for four years. By the act of 1796, on negroes, there was fixed a penalty of not over two hundred dollars — in addition to whatever damages might be gotten at law — for any person who should be convicted of giving a pass unlawfully to any slave or servant, or assisting in any way in their escape. Half of this fine went to the owner of the slave, half to the county. By the act of 1 809, on crimes, the stealing of a slave or the act of giving aid or counsel thereto, was punished by indemnification and impris- onment for not over twelve years. In 1818, the penalty for inciting or aiding a runaway to escape, or for harboring a runaway, was fixed at not over six years' imprisonment. This was for a free person, only. In 1827 — perhaps the result of a petition from sundry citizens of Montgomery county for greater security for slave property — there was added that slaves found guilty, before any justice, of aiding runaways, should receive thirty-nine lashes.' The House of Delegates received, in 1820, a petition from certain inhabi- tants of Cecil county for a law making a slave who should run away guilty of a felony. This was referred, but evi- dently without result. In 1838 there was enacted, that any- slave who should escape from Maryland with the intention of freeing himself from servitude, against the will of his owner, should be deemed guilty of felony, and, on due conviction by the court, should be sold by the sheriff, at a properly adver- tised auction, to be transported from the State. The proceeds, after expenses were deducted, went to the owner of the slave. And the purchaser was required to give bonds to the State of Maryland, in a sum equal to the amount paid, that the slave should be removed from the State ; and in default of a proper nSlS, 157; 1827, 15. 80 The Negro in Maryland. bond, the slave would be sold again. And the Governor of Maryland was directed, when evidence of the escape of a slave was laid before him, to demand the runaway, as a fugitive from justice, from the authorities of the State to which he had fled. Ten years later, the amount of the bond required was doubled, to twice the value of the slave.^ The old reward to those taking up a runaway, of two hun- dred pounds of tobacco or twenty shillings, was changed in 1806 to six dollars. In 1833 — as it had been shown, says the preamble, that this was not enough to give the neces- sary encouragement — the reward was raised to thirty dollars. Constables, too, received special fees for taking up runaways ; for instance, those of Anne Arundel county got six dollars for each capture. After 1844, the sum allowed for capturing any runaway slave between the ages of fifteen and forty-five years was fifteen dollars, where the capture took place within thirty miles but more than twenty miles from the slave's home, and fifty dollars, if over thirty miles away. For a slave under or over those ages, the reward was half those sums. But, to entitle one to such reward, the capture must take place beyond the county in which the slave was owned or hired. For a slave taken within a free State, except in the border counties of Pennsylvania, there could be claimed a reward of one hun- dred dollars, or half the value of tlie slave, at the option of the owner. Where larger rewards were offered by the owners, these sums were deemed to be included therein.^ In 1818, the longest term of imprisonment for aiding or inciting a slave to escape had been fixed at six years. In 1844, this maximum penalty was reduced to five years. Five ' 1838, 63 ; 1847, 309. n833, 111 ; 1837, 271 ; 1844, 273. In 1829, a petition from sundry citizens of Frederick co. for repeal of the acts on runaways, and that no fees be allowed anyone who might take up a negro who should be found to be free, was laid on the table. By Act of 1844, a slave once in a free State, one hundred miles from home, was deemed a runaway, so as to entitle the captor to the large reward offered. Slaves. 81 years after, however, the minimum term in the penitentiary was fixed at six years, the maximum at fifteen ; and so the law remained. A slave convicted of the same offence, received either imprisonment for the same time or not over forty lashes, in the discretion of the court. Later, the penalty of impris- onment was changed to sale out of the State.^ Masters frequently sold to the South their slaves who attempted to run away. There remained on the statute books the old law which exempted from punishment anyone who- should chance to kill a runaway slave forcibly resisting cap- ture, and which made the State liable to the owner for the value of the slave. In 1807, the House of Delegates received a petition from a citizen of Somerset county, for compensation for his slave who was drowned while pursued as a runaway. The committee reported that the act of 1751 made provision for payment for slaves killed in pursuit; that the slave in question ran into Pocomoke river to avoid being caught, and in consequence was drowned ; that no distinction should be made as to the manner of the death, if it was from pursuit, for the result to the owner of a slave was the same. This report, with an appropriation of a hundred pounds, the House accepted by a vote of thirty-three to twenty -nine; but the Senate rejected the bill. In 1856, the State paid a certain citizen one thousand dollars, under the act of 1751, for a slave killed while resisting arrest.^ 1 1844, 80 ; 1849, 296. 2 House Journal, 1807, 44-59. 1856, ch. 54. In May, 1852, a runaway slave was killed in Pennsylvania by a resident of Baltimore. The Legislature of Maryland voted several thousand dollars for legal and other assistance to him, declaring that it was believed that the circumstances of the case did not make the killing murder or homicide, to be punished by law. (1852, 330, Res. 12, &c.) It seems also that masters were accustomed to have committed to the jails by magistrates such slaves as were unruly or desirous of running away, or whom, for one reason or another, they desired to have in safe keeping. To prevent abuse of this custom, sheriffs were forbidden after 1818 to receive slaves from such owners as were engaged in the slave traffic ; but others 6 82 The Negro in Maryland. There was also in force the old law fining a ship-captain — three dollars now, instead of twenty shillings, an hour — for carrying away negroes without passes, and for allowing slaves on board his ship, unless properly hired. In 1824, there was enacted further that no officer of a ship should receive on board or carry away any colored person without a properly authenticated certificate of freedom from a clerk of court of the State, as well as a certificate from the clerk of the county where the vessel sailed, with a description of the black. The clerks as well as the captains were to keep careful lists of all colored persons allowed to sail, and captains had to show these could have their slaves committed to jail and kept there at their expense. Three years after, a bill passed the House to allow sheriffs to receive only such slaves as were committed in due course of law, but this was rejected by the Senate. Some ten years later, a slave escaped from a county jail, to which he had been sent by a magistrate at the master's request. The mas- ter sued in the county court to recover damages from the sheriff. He failed there, but the Court of Appeals decided in his favor. " It has been," said the Chief Justice, "the constant practice (with what moral propriety it is not for us to say ) for owners of slaves in this iState to have them committed to the jails of the respective counties, for real or supposed offences against their owners." (1818, 208. 5 G. & J., 253.) Within the jails whites and blacks were separated, but they were expected evidently to he given the same food and care, save that any medical care would depend on the master ; not being paid for by the public, as in the case of free prisoners. In 1824, as it was represented that Baltimore was subjected to great ex- pense for the care of negroes committed to jail as runaways — the free black population of the city was fast growing — the sheriff of Baltimore county was ordered to have all supposed runaways brouglit before one of the judges of the court, within two days, to be examined and either discharged at once or recommitted. The black, if recommitted, was to be advertised in two Baltimore papers, within two days, and twice a week for two months. If not tlien claimed, he was to be discharged. Tliis act was repealed four years later ; the act of 1817, as amended by 1828, 98, being in force for Baltimore as elsewhere. (1824, 171.) The cliarges to tlie State for board in Baltimore jail of supposed runaways, ultimately discharged, were in 1830, $237.96 ; in 1831, ?;354.13; in 1832, $364.05; in 1833, $270.24; &q. The number of runaways conmiitted were, in 1852, 61 blacks ; in 1853, 1 wliite and 40 blacks ; in 1854, 62 blacks; in 1857, 3 whites and 86 blacks: in 1858, 1 white and 82 blacks; in 1859, 2 whites and 99 blacks; &c. Slaves. 83 lists to any persou who should desire to see them, and had to give every facility for search on their vessels, under a penalty of one hundred dollars. For actually carrying away a col- ored person contrary to this act, a captain became liable to a fine of one thousand dollars — half to the State, half to the person who should enter suit. In March, 1 828, a slave woman left Baltimore on a steamer of the Penn., Del. ■& Md. Co. The owner warned the captain of the boat that the slave was probably on board, but no eiforts were made to find her. The company was then sued for the loss of the slave and judgment given against it in both the lower court and the Court of Appeals. The captain testified that the owner could have searched any part of the boat, and that officers were always stationed on the boats before sailing, to prevent runaways from getting aboard ; but the Court held that the captain, if he had been sufficiently informed of the supposed presence of the negro, and had failed to make the necessary search, had acted at his peril, and that his employers were responsible.^ In 1838, a new law was made, to lessen the facilities of escape for slaves. From that time, no railroad, chartered by the State of Maryland, or vessel navigating the waters of the State, could transport any slave without a permission in writing from the owner, under a penalty of five hundred dollars for every slave, to be recovered from the railroad corporation or the owner or captain of the vessel. One half of this penalty went to the informer, one half to the State. In addition, if any slave escaped by being carried on a railway or vessel, the owner might recover the amount of his loss from the corpora- tion or ship-owners, by an action of debt. But the law did not extend to prevent slaves from travelling in company with their masters or their master's agents.^ In accordance with this act, officers of boats and railroads were expected by their employers to require proof of freedom or a permit to travel 11824, 85; 6 G, & J., 197, Dec, 1834. nSSS, 375. 84 The Negro in Maryland, from any colored person not known to them to be free. In 1849, a bill to provide, especially, for the inspection of all vessels passing through the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, for the purpose of stopping fugitives, was ordered in the House of Delegates; but evidently nothing further was done.^ In 1855, the owner of a slave who was carried on the Philadel- phia, Wilmington and Baltimore R. R., and thus helped to escape, recovered over one thousand dollars from the railroad.^ In August of the same year, a negro bey owned in Somerset county, came to Baltimore on a steamer tilled with passengers from a camp-meeting. The officers of the boat had no knowl- edge that he was on board. The owners of the boat were sued, and judgment given in their favor, in the Court of Com- mon Pleas in Baltimore. But this was reversed by the Court of Appeals, which held that the owners could not escape the penalty by showing that neither they nor their agents knew that the slave was on the boat, although reasonable diligence had been used to prevent runaways from embarking. The law had been made, said the Court, to remedy the great loss suffered by slave-holders ; and where one of two innocent parties must suffer, the loss should fall on him who could most easily have prevented it.^ Another slave ow'ner, at about the same time, got over eight hundred dollars in a suit against the Northern Central R. R. for allowing his runaway slave to use the road.* In another case, the runaway slave had been hired out by his master to work on a sailing vessel which ran between Baltimore and Annapolis. His master won five hun- dred dollars from the owners of the packet, in a suit in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel county ; but this judgment was reversed, the Court of Appeals holding that transporta- • House Journal, 1849, p. 132. *In Circ. Court for Harford Co., Baltimore Sun, Feb. 3rd, 1855. '13 Md. Reports, 181. 1859. * Baltimore City Superior Court. Baltimore Sun, Feb. 10, 1858. Slaves. 85 tion, by the act of 1838, meant the taking away from the owner without his consent/ From Georgia or Carolina a runaway slave must make a long journey before reaching free soil — from Maryland the escape would be a short one at the most. For Pennsylvania had abolished slavery in Revolutionary days, and so many of the inhabitants had become opposed to slavery anywhere, that runaways were frequently protected and aided to escape further. As early as 1796, the Maryland House of Delegates received a petition from a citizen of Worcester county, stating that the abolitionists, together with civil officers in Pennsylvania, had taken away his negroes and arrested his person, and praying for aid. The committee reported that the petitioner had been grossly injured in his person and property by some of the citi- zens in that State, but that it would be improper for the Legis- lature to interfere and become a party on his behalf, as the federal courts were open to all citizens of the country, and competent to redress all such injuries. With this the House concurred by a vote of sixty to four. A further suggestion that the State should loan money to the petitioner, on sufficient surety, that he might enter and prosecute the necessary suits for redress, was lost by one v^ote. In 1798 a bill for better security of property in slaves was introduced in the Maryland House of Delegates, only to be postponed ; but a resolution was adopted, declaring that slave owners were subjected to great loss and inconvenience from the escape of slaves to Dela- ware, Pennsylvania and New Jersey, where they remained concealed and protected by the whites, and authorizing the Governor and Council to take measures with the Governors of those States to stop such abuses.^ In 1815, sundry inhabitants of Allegany, St. Mary's and Washington counties asked for ^ 21 Md. Reports, 1. 1863. Nor was it necessary, said the Court in this case, that a slave should actually escape, to constitute the offence, under the law. - House Journal, 1796, 37-40 ; 1798, 47, 106 ; Res. 7. 86 The Negro in Maryland. action to prevent the escape of slaves into Pennsylvania. The House thereupon resolved that the Legislature of Pennsyl- vania be requested to use its authority, as it should deem best, to prevent the citizens from harboring and employing runaway slaves, and to facilitate the return of such to their real owners. This resolution was, however, rejected in the Senate.^ But at the next session was passed a resolution that such abuses had so increased from citizens of Pennsylvania and Delaware, and the inconvenience to the good people of Maryland had become so great, that further silence was improper. And the Governor was ordered to send a copy of this resolution to the Governors of those States, to be laid before their Legislatures, that some provisions might be made to prevent the evils. Again, the next year, the Governor was ordered to open a cor- respondence at once for the same object, and it was declared that the abuses were injurious in their consequences even to slaves themselves.^ lu 1820 the Assembly resolved that it was necessary to call the attention of Congress to the constant and ready protection given to runaways by citizens of Penn- sylvania. Every possible difficulty, we read, was there put in the way of the recovery of a slave, even in the legal and just efforts of the owner. If legal proceedings favored him, force was not seldom used. Such a state of things was not only vexatious to masters, but tended to destroy the contentment and happiness of the slaves. So the Governor was requested to ask the members of Congress from Maryland to exert their influence to procure measures by Congress to protect the rights of slaveholders.^ At the very next session of Assembly, the committee on Grievances and Courts reported to the House that they had found true the petition of one of their fellow members, a delegate from Baltimore county, as to the treat- ment which he received in person from sundry citizens of York ' House Journal, 1815, 34, 43, 57, 76. ^1816,68; 1817,43. '1820, Res. 281. Slaves. 87 county, Pennsylvania, while he was in the peaceable and legal exercise of the provisions of the act of Congress for the capture of fugitive slaves ; and the committee urged that measures should be taken by Pennsylvania to stop the practices, not merely of aiding runaways, but of keeping away the owners by threats of personal violence, and of using the civil authorities to force owners to abandon their property rather than undergo imprisonment and trial under a State law against kidnapping. The House thereupon passed a resolution, asking the Governor of Pennsylvania to interpose in behalf of the petitioner, but the matter was dropped in the Senate, as the petitioner had by that time been relieved. Another resolution, however, was sent the Governors of Pennsylvania and Delaware, to remedy the abuses in general. Silence on the part of the Assembly of Maryland was declared to be highly improper, if not criminal.^ By the next session, again, another member of the House had received opposition and indignity ; whereupon a joint com- mittee from House and Senate, at the head of which stood Mr. Reverdy Johnson, entered into communication with the authorities of Pennsylvania. Into the correspondence which followed, and the work done by this committee and those who afterward treated with New Jersey and Delaware, we are not called on to enter.^ Suffice it to point out the injuries which the people of Maryland felt they were receiving at the hands of their neighbors. These injuries, wrote the joint com- mittee of 1822, had for several years been loudly complained of by the people of Maryland, while due regard was had to the delicate nature of the subject, and of the caution Math which it should be treated. Slavery was a calamity, certainly not more deplored by Pennsylvania than by Maryland. All friends of freedom should rejoice at its complete extermination ; but that end could not be expected for many years to come. So long 1 House Journal, 1821, 21, 119 ; Kes. 53. 2 House Journal, 1822, 46, 163, &c.; 1823, 67; 1824, 24, 103, &c.; 1825, Res. 81. 88 The Negro in Maryland. as slavery lasts, citizens of Maryland are as much entitled to their slaves as to any other property ; their rights to them are as much secured by the Constitution of the United States as any rights they possess. The existence of our happy Union depends, in a great degree, on preserving harmony among its members. So spoke this committee. All must have agreed that the rights of slaveholders should be protected. In 1837 and 1843, resolutions of the Assembly declared that no State could abridge the rights guaranteed to all citizens by the Con- stitution of the United States, and called for a law from Congress to make the rescue of a fugitive a criminal offence, to be punished by imprisonment, when remuneration could not be given. ^ A citizen of Maryland met with such experiences in New York, while attempting lawfully to recover a runaway, that the Assembly in 1849 directed the Attorney-General to take all steps for an appeal in the case, if necessary, to the Supreme Court. The negro, so the resolution stated, was dis- charged by a justice of the Supreme Court of New York, on grounds which amounted to the abnegation of the laws of Con- gress to secui'e slave owners their property in runaway slaves. In tlie same year, several men were brought to trial by the State for helping slaves to escape, and the Assembly, as we sa^v, tripled the maximum term for that offence. A few years later, the State appropriated over eleven hundred dollars to several persons in Montgomery county for arresting a man from New York ^\•ho had furthered the escape of slaves.^ Finally, the Governor, in 1847 and 1852, told the people of Maryland how ineffectual were requisitions on the State of Pennsylvania for the delivery of slaves, as well as for the de- livery of a citizen of Maryland who had aided slaves to escape; and how one respected citizen of INIaryland had died from vio- lence received in Pennsylvania, and another was shot down there and his son seriously wounded, while engaged in the re- » 1837, Res. 79 ; 1843, lies. 28. M849, Res. 21, 32; 1853, 124. House Journal, 1853, Doc. G. Slaves. 89 turn of their runaway slaves, according to the act of Congress. There is much significance in the experience of two slaves who ran away from their home in Virginia, in the winter of 1856, and cautiously followed the railroads North. After passing the Gunpowder River, beyond Baltimore, they thought they had crossed the line into Pennsylvania, and applied for work ; but they were still in Maryland, and were sent back to Virginia. In other ways, too, in the newspapers, men were frequently reminded of the insecurity of slave property. In the county papers were the sheriffs' advertisements and the description of runaways, with the rough wood-cut of a black hurrying on, with stick and bundle-handkerchief over his shoulder, and his eyes turned backwards. The Easton Star, for instance, told how twelve slaves had just run away from that neighborhood on a certain Saturday night, and that two nights before, and two nights after, several had escaped from the lower counties. The Cecil Democrat said that six slaves had gone from that county while their master was away, and that they were doubtless assisted by abolitionists, as one had been seen there-abouts, about that time. Again, the Easton Gazette chronicled the loss of five more slaves on a Saturday night. One citizen of Balti- more county lost seventeen slaves together, but found them in Pennsylvania and brought them back. Later still, in 1853, there was a stampede of slaves, as the Cumberland Telegraph put it, but eight at least were recaptured across the line. On a certain day in September, 1855, said the Chestertown News, ten slaves not only took themselves away, but three horses and two carriages besides ; and on October 20th, following, seven more escaped, and on the 26th, eleven more. There were reports, too, of escapes and captures in which weapons were used on both sides. It is certain that many a slave and free black, especially in the communities where they were known, moved about freely without thought of the need of a pass, or of fear of hindrance. If the laws, as we have seen, were not always regarded, some- times they were ineffectual. A certain British vessel cleared 90 The Negro in Maryland. from Baltimore, iu 1852, after the master, as required, had taken the usual oath against shipping runaways. The owners of a slave boy, then missing, had their suspicions, and over- took the vessel down the Chesapeake and had her searched. The boy was found, hidden on board by a colored man, unbe- known to the officers. Two slaves, some years later, got tickets at the Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Station in Baltimore, on showing a certificate of freedom, but their owner and the police caught them before the train started. But a slave who traveled without a pass was liable to get into trouble. One day in Baltimore, in 1858, several colored men were ari'ested as runaway slaves, and taken before the Superior Court; where it was found that they were slaves who had come to tJie city to spend their Christmas holidays, by permis- sion of their master, and that they had left their passes with the captain of the steamer in which they came and were to return home. They were at once released by the court.^ The slaveholders' convention of Worcester county in 1858, resolved, among other things, that slaveholders should be requested to discontinue the practice of letting slaves leave home without passes. Scattered here and there in the court reports are convictions of both whites and blacks for aiding runaways to escape. In a few cases, too, both whites and free blacks were found to have encouraged slaves to run away, and then to have betrayed them for the reward.^ One free black, at least, seems to have earned a livelihood by aiding slaves to escape, for when tried in Balti- more, in 1857, for helping away five slaves, it appeared that he had been for some years in that occupation, was in the employ of three whites, and generally got fifteen dollars for every slave he got away. He had been in the penitentiary before, and was then sold out of the State for thirty years."* ' Baltimore Sun, Jan. let, 1858. -' For instance, Baltimore Sun, of Jan. 19tli, 1849. •' Baltimore City Circuit Court, Jan. 6th, 1857. He brought $350. Slaves. 91 In 1846, thirty and more citizens of Kent county were incorporated into a "Mutual Protection Society," for the insurance of slave property. Every person who insured a slave became a member, and the object was to protect the mem- bers from loss of slaves who might run away beyond the limits of Maryland. Slaves who were captured were to be sold by the Society beyond the State, and the proceeds went to reimburse members and into the funds of the Society. In 1860, was formed the Southern Slaveholders' Insurance Com- pany of Maryland. Any slaveholder of the United States could have his property insured, and either the runaways were returned or their value paid.^ Yet, while slave property in Maryland was thus far from being secure, and many slaves did run away, the great majority of slaves there probably had no thought of leaving home. In 1854, two slaves who had run away from Worcester county, desired to return home, but feared that they might be convicted as runaways, and sold out of the State. A s})ecial act of Assembly, therefore, allowed them to return to their master without fear of such punishment. Some years after, a slave belonging in the same county ran away into Delaware, but soon turned back to go home. On his way he was arrested, lodged in jail in Delaware, and then sent home. By a special act, his mistress was allowed to keep him, inasmuch, we read, as his presence in the slave population was thought by many slaveholders of the county to be calculated to keep his fellows from absconding.^ In 1689 rumors went abroad that the Romanists of Mary- land were plotting against the government of the Province, iSee Acts of Incorporation, 1846, 356 ; 1860, 390. A bill for a "Protec- tion Society" of Kent County had been rejected by the Senate in 1827. n854, 291; 1861-2,134. See also, 1861-2, 245. 92 The Negro in Maryland. and that many and great disturbances were threatened, particu- larly in Calvert and Charles counties. The Indians, it was said, were in league with the papists. Suspicions must have been cast on the negroes, also, for those Southern counties had a large slave population. But a declaration signed by some fifteen prominent men there, assured the home government that the plot was wholly groundless and imaginary. In 1695, there was passed an act to prevent the frequent meetings of negroes. This soon expired ; but it is evident that blacks were regarded by the authorities as a part of the popula- tion that could easily be used in political intrigues.^ Nor were men entirely free of apprehensions from the white ser- vants, some of whom were the refuse of European camps, prisoners of war, and worthless convicts. There were reports of a plot of Irish servants and slaves in Bermuda, and of an insurrection which had been planned and almost carried out in Gloucester county, Virginia, by a number of servants, one of whom betrayed the plans, and four of whom were tried and executed.^ The Assembly of Maryland in 1705 declared that certain whites were guilty of a conspiracy to seize the Governor and magazine, and, joining with the " Heathen Indians," to cut oif the inhabitants of the Province.^ During all the years of Jacobite disaffection to the Protestant succession in Eng- land, the Romanists of ]\Iaryland were kept under the eye of government. In 1708, for instance, the sheriffs of the coun- ties were ordered to send to the Governor within a few weeks the number and names of papists — not merely of masters of 'Pub. Kecord Office, quoted in Scharf's Maryland, I, 309. In 1698, the provincial Governors were ordered — at the suggestion of the Board of Trade — to see that the laws for increasing the whites in proportion to the blacks, were duly enforced. There were no such laws in Md., but Gov. Nicholson urged on the Board the evils that might follow from too great increase in tlie blacks. (Steven's Hist. Index, Vol. 1\'.) * Virginia Carolorum, 295. 'Bacon, 1705, 5. Annals of Annapolis, 108. The ringleader, who was not caught, was attainted, two years later. Slaves. 93 families, but of the households, servants and slaves baptized in the Roman faith.^ In 1739, the Council received the depo- sitions of several negroes of Prince George's county, telling of a most wicked and dangerous conspiracy which had been entered into by the blacks there, to destroy the whites, and to possess themselves of the country. Whereupon, the Governor issued orders for a special commission of Oyer and Terminer for the speedy trial of those who had been taken, and that a guard of twelve men, under the command of the colonel of the county, should be kept at the jail until the execution of any who might be convicted. And, further, the sheriff of Annapolis was ordered not to allow any negroes to enter that city on Sundays without written permits from their masters. On the next day, the Council decided that, in accordance with the laws on slaves, the trials could not be held before the next regular courts should sit, so the sheriff was ordered to take every precaution with his prisoners, and to levy any posse that might be necessary ; for there was reason, wrote the Council, to fear that those who were already in jail and the numbers which must be committed, together with their accomplices without, might give trouble. The Governor, further, issued a proclamation to all officials, civil and mili- tary, to aid in averting such great dangers as were threatening the lives and property of the people, by the rage and fury of merciless and barbarous slaves. Care was to be taken to enforce strictly the laws against tumultuous meetings of slaves, to secure all slaves who might be found wandering at large and who could not give satisfactory accounts of themselves, to execute all laws for the public safety, and to exhort all the people to be on their guard, for the defence of themselves and their neighbors. In particular, the magistrates were bidden to take notice of the way in which local officers should act, and the major-generals of the Eastern and Western shores were given careful instructions for the practice of the troops, 1 Council Journal, 1704-1708, 125. 94 The Negro in Maryland. to be ready for any possible insurrections or foreign wars. These messages were startling ; but this insurrection seems to have been no more than a local excitement caused by a few blacks. The leader was tried and executed. There was a great difference of opinion, indeed, as to the extent of the out- break and of the dangers from it, the House of Delegates assuring the Council — during some opposition to the appro- priations which the Council desired, the following year, on account of the war between England and Spain — that the Romanists of the Province were not inclined to disturb the peace, and that inquiry into the insurrection of the negroes in Prince George's county failed to find anything which could in any way be presumed to have endangered the welfare of the Province.^ In 1742, the Council feared that there was a con- spiracy of certain Indians to destroy all the whites in Mary- land ; but articles of peace were soon made with them, the action of the Governor was lenient, and within a year their guns were restored to them.^ In 1745, again, the Romanists were under great suspicion. To one of their leaders Governor Bladen wrote, that their religious duties should be fulfilled, as they surely might be, without such large meetings of people as might give suspicion of designs other than religious exer- cises. Nothing, said the Governor, could give greater alarm to good subjects of King George than such frequent meetings of whites and negroes under pretence of divine worship.^ Again, with the breaking out of the French and Indian war, not only Avere the people of Maryland, particularly tliose in its distant parts, bidden '>by a proclamation to be ready for defence, but the colonels of militia in Frederick and Baltimore counties were ordered to hold reviews, and to make returns of » Council Records, 1738-1753, 59, &c., 110. The Council seem to have taken the House to be very unpatriotic for being willing to believe no ill- will on the part of the negroes, and so for discouraging tlie need of military measures. "Council liecords, 1738-1753, 1(32, ^Council Records, 1738-1753, 255. Slaves. 95 the number of men and arms, and whether there was plenty of ammunition in the counties in case of any rioting or plot- ting by servants, slaves or others. Should such intrigues be known, the ring-leaders were to be seized by the troops.^ After Braddock's defeat, according to Governor Sharp's let- ters, the people were thrown into the greatest consterna- tion, slaves and convicts were well watched, and the militia were ready to quell any insurrections. Soon, indeed, reports came to the Council that the negroes in certain parts had held some tumultuous meetings and intrigues, and the Rom- anists in several counties had so misbehaved as to give cause for fears of insurrection. So the magistrates throughout the Province were ordered to make examination, and to imprison the offenders ; but if the reports were false, to carry the authors before the courts as disturbers of the peace. Inquiries were also to be made into the report that some Roman Catholic priests had recently been absent from their homes. Answers were received from the magistrates in nine counties, and all to the effect that the constables in the various hundreds were wide awake to their duties, that the Romanists were few in num- ber, and that nothing unusual had been done by the negroes.^ In the troubled state of affairs during the outbreak of the Rev- olution, several gentlemen requested Governor Eden to give out arms to the people, from fears that the servants and slaves might revolt. The Governor expostulated, stating that such action would tend only to hasten any such evil, but finally gave a quantity of arms to certain regularly appointed persons, in accordance with the militia act.^ But in both the Revolu- tion and the war of 1812 there was no general uprising of slaves. On the contrary, a number of colored men served ^ Council Records, 1753-1767, 56. * Council Eecords, 1753-1767, 59, 65-73. Stevens' Hist. Index, Vol. X. Gov. Dinwiddle, of Va., had fears of the negroes at this time. (Dinwiddie Papers, II, 102.) 'Letters of Gov. Eden, Scharf's Md., II, 179. 96 The Negro in Maryland. faithfully in the American forces. In the summer of 1 793 there arrived in Baltimore some twelve hundred refugees from San Domingo, flying from the horrors of servile insurrection. They brought half as many slaves with them. They were, reported a committee in the Assembly, in a state of distress which exceeded description. The Assembly appropriated five hundred dollars weekly for two months, and thousands of dol- lars were raised for them besides, throughout the State. The horrors of this insurrection had not been forgotten when, in the autumn of 1831, there came the reports of the revolt of slaves in Southampton county, Virginia. It is certain that fears and suspicions of the negroes were rumored in Maryland. In some of the lower counties, expresses were sent off for arms and men, and some blacks were arrested ; but there seem to have been no good reasons for any such apprehensions, and no need for such measures.^ Insurrection wholly local and the work of a few negroes only, was not unknown in Maryland. In 1845, several slaves and a free black were arrested for that offence in Charles county. The free black was given forty years imprisonment, and one slave was sentenced to be hung, but most of those who took part in the intrigue were not brought to trial, but were sold out of Maryland by their masters. A memorial, signed by a number of very respectable persons, was presented the Governor, to commute the sentence of the slave from hanging to imprisonment. The Governor signified his willingness so to do, did the law allow the confinement of slaves in thepeni- '1831, Res. 27, 05. Niks' Register, XLI, 131. In lower Delaware and Maryland, says tlie current number of iVi7es' Register, awful reports were heaped u})on one anotlier by fear, but there does not seem to have been the least foundation for this excitement. Mr. McSherry, in his History of Maryland, p. 358, says that the intrigues of the party of Nat. Turner extended over a part of Maryland, but that a misunderstanding on the part of those concerned, and timely measures on the part of tlie whites, prevented tlie outbreak. Unfortunately, no sources for this are mentioned. Slaves. 97 tentiary ; whereupon a special act of Assembly directed that the slave might be imprisoned.^ Rumors of serious insurrections in Maryland seem to have been as groundless in the latter days of slavery as they had been generations before, when the politics of Europe, reflected in the Colonies, made the royal Governors look on the negroes as ready accomplices of the Romanists, or of the Jacobites, or of the French. In the spring of 1855, a rumor of an uprising of the slaves caused great excitement, in Dorchester county, and the houses of many negroes were searched for firearms, but the papers soon announced that the whole afl^air was a hoax.^ Meanwhile the excitement spread to Talbot county. It was feared that the blacks planned some movement during the Easter holidays approaching. A meeting of many and respectable citizens of Easton adopted resolutions asking slave- holders to keep their servants at home — although, says the Easton Gazette, there is probably no truth in the rumors.^ Two years later, a similar report broke out in Prince George's county. The blacks were more carefully watched, but all excitement soon subsided, and people concluded that there had never been any plan or intention of insurrection. In the autumn of 1859 occurred the John Brown raid on the border of Western Maryland and Virginia. Maryland militia were sent for the suppression of the outbreak, and the sheriiFs of the Western border counties called out large patroling parties, to prevent the meeting and escape of slaves. For some days the papers were full of nothing else. It was even said that there was to have been, on a certain day, an uprising of all the slaves of Maryland and Virginia. Then began the formation in all parts of Maryland of new military companies. Here, a public meeting was held and a rifle company formed ; in other places, cavalry companies were enlisted. The martial spirit is ' Executive Message, 1845 ; 1845, ch. 368. "Cambridge Democrat, quoted in Baltimore Sun for April 13th, 1855. ' Raston Gazette, April 7th, 1855. 7 98 The Negro in Maryland. up, said one county paper, and our people are their own best defenders.^ In Frederick, so the local papers stated, strangers had been seen to lurk about the barracks, if not indeed to attempt to enter them; so volunteer companies keep guard at night. There were rumors that accomplices of Brown were abroad, and the patrolers were ordered to arrest all suspicious characters. Again, that some forty slaves had planned to escape from Carroll county on a certain Saturday night, and that horses and wagons were found waiting when the plot was discovered. Afterwards, men learned that one of the first persons shot by John Brown's party was a colored porter at the Harper's Ferry depot, who remained faithful to his trust, and that the aid given Brown by the slaves was trivial. At that time even, there were many proofs that the threatened dangers were exaggerated. On the night of October 19th, the citizens of Frederick were startled by a report that an insurrection was about to break out, and their town was to be attacked. The streets were at once patrolled by bodies of armed men, and various precautions taken ; but the report in the newspaper is headed "Another False Alarm." ^ On a certain night, early in November following, an alarm of insurrection and murder was given while services were being held in a church in Som- erset county. The congregation, says the local paper, rose from prayers, broke up the benches to provide themselves with weapons, and scoured the neighborhood, but found nothing to alarm them. On the night following, the houses of many free blacks were searched, and a slave who attem])ted to leave one of the cabins w^as shot, being mistaken for an insurgent by the excited crowd. This has all, doubtless, adds the paper, grown out of the excitement roused by the affair at Harper's Ferry.^ The last week in November, the people of another neighbor- 'See Baltimore and county papers for Oct., Nov., Dec, 1859. 1860, ch. 57, 274; 1861-2, 163. - The Sun, Oct. 22nd, 1859. ■ ' Somerset County Union Nov. 4th. Slaves. 99 hood were told that a lady near the VirgiDia line, a large slave- holder had received a letter stating that the blacks of the Eastern shores of Maryland and Virginia had planned an insur- rection which was to be carried out at once. The local paper did not put the slightest faith in the report, but suggested that the citizens should be vigilant and ready for any emergency. A similar report — spoken of by the Baltimore Sun as a hoax — had been current on the Eastern shore of Virginia, the week before. At almost the same time, an excitement spread in Talbot county from a threatening letter which was found on a wharf at St. Michael's.^ Patrols were at once organized and a strong guard made ready to protect Easton. But nothing unusual happened, save these measures, and some unwonted severity, perhaps, shown by the constabulary to the blacks. Once again, Easton was put under arms, from the information of a colored woman ; and some person in the county remem- bered that a suspicious looking man, who might have been Brown himself, had been seen thereabouts before the Harper's Ferry affray. At these times of reported insurrection, the blacks were without doubt more frightened than the whites. Doubtless, too, many a community in Maryland could have said, at such times, what the paper in Wilmington, North Carolina, added to its account of the excitement that followed the news of the Nat. Turner insurrection : that the subject could not be dismissed without speaking of the good behavior of the slaves thereabouts, who might be entrusted, it was believed, to take part in the defence of the community under any circum- stances. In the Civil War that soon followed, the women and children of the South were left largely in the care of slaves, while the masters were fighting for a cause which would have lengthened, to say the least, the existence of slavery. 1 Easton Star, Nov. 29th, 1859. 100 The Negro in Maryland. Of the provisions of the act of 1695, to restrain the fre- quent assemblages of negroes, we know nothing ; l)ut the law soon expired. In 1723, the Assembly considered the evils resulting from the large meetings of negroes on " Sabbath and other Holy-days," and enacted that the courts should begin at once the yearly custom of appointing constables, in such hundreds as required them, to suppress tumultuous meetings of slaves. Every constable so appointed was required to visit all suspected places in his hundred, once a month, and could give not over thirty-nine lashes to every negro who might be found away from home without a permit from his master. For the fulfilment of such duties, the constable was to be paid five hundred pounds of tobacco; and he might call on any person to aid him. For a white man who should refuse assistance, there was a penalty of one hundred pounds of to- bacco ; a negro refused on pain of a whipping. Afterwards, such duties belonged to all constables, under penalty for neg- glect of not less than one hundred dollars. And any person who refused his aid when summoned, could be fined not more than that sum nor less than twenty dollars. The special pay for the constable was eight dollars ; but after 1806, every constable had, before he could receive this, to get a certificate from at least two respectable citizens of his hundred, bearing witness to his industry and fidelity in carrying out the law.^ By a law of 1715, persons who entertained or kept away from home any servant or slave for the space of a day or night became liable to a fine of five hundred pounds of to- bacco. This seems to have been taken advantage of by per- sons — many crafty and ill-disposed persons, the act says — who entertained servants and slaves for a few hours at a time and at dead of night, and also enticed these to steal their mas- ters' goods, and to commit other disorders. So the fine was changed in 1748 to one hundred pounds an hour; "to be 1 1695, 6 ; 1723, 15 ; 1806, 81 ; Code of 1860, art. 23, 30 and art. 66, 63. ■M715, 44; 1748, 19. Slaves. 101 recovered before a single magistrate, if not over six hundred in all. If the offender could not pay he might be whipped. The penalty afterwards became a fine of two dollars an hour. Servants and slaves who harbored others unlawfully were to be whipped by order of a magistrate. After 1723, also, the owner of a plantation was directed to send home, by whipping if necessary, any negroes who might be found there, without permission or errand from their masters. And any person who encouraged slaves to meet in numbers on his place, except on lawful occasions, became liable to a fine of one thousand pounds of tobacco — afterwards of twenty dollars. The constables of towns, also, were usually ordered by special acts of Assembly to see, among other duties, that negroes did not gather in noisy groups in the streets, or at meetings, or remain out late at night. For instance, a con- stable was appointed in 1800 for the town of Cambridge, as the peace of the town was much disturbed by frequent meet- ings of negroes, and the constable of the hundred had hap- pened to live out of the town. The constable appointed for the village of Newmarket in Dorchester county, in 1804, was to prevent disorderly meetings of blacks there and in the neighborhood, and to give moderate punishment, under the direction of any justice of the peace, to all such as should bfe found strolling the streets at night, or frequenting the houses of persons other than their masters, without permission.^ Often, in towns with a considerable black population, a bell was rung at a certain hour in the evening — as nine in winter and ten in summer — and the black who remained out of doors thereafter had to rely on his own good character, or on the carelessness or good nature of the constable, or his heels, to save him from punishment. These restrictions, both in county and town, were not the result alone of fears of insurrection or of loss by runaways. They were largely for the ordinary preservation of the peace. U800, 6; 1804,70, &c. 102 The Negro in Maryland. For instance, the Society of Friends who held yearly meet- ings in Anne Arundel and Talbot counties, were much annoyed by the numbers of persons who met and drank liquors in the neighborhood of their meeting-houses. Soon after 1700, they petititioned the Governor and Council to have an end put to such abuses. Finally, after several complaints, a law was made in 1725, to forbid the sale of liquors within certain dis- tances of the meeting houses, except at inns. But the orderly Friends were still troubled by the racing of horses and the meetings of negroes — great crowds of idle whites and blacks, they said, drank and behaved riotously there — until, in 1747, horse racing was forbidden, also, and the constables of the neighborhood were specially ordered to disperse all crowds of slaves, at the times of the yearly meetings, if necessary by whipping and by the assistance of a posse.^ Besides such ordinary measures for good order, there was the need, often, of reasonable discipline in the care of servants and slaves, if the master was not to lose by their picking and stealing, and was to get good work from them. Could they frequent the grogshops, his corn and tobacco might easily be turned into liquor ; and were they up for the night, his work would suffer by day. It was as natural for the master of servants or slaves then, to wish them at home by nine or ten at night, as for good housekeepers to make the rule, to-day, that after reasonable hours there shall be no company in the kitchen.^ Masters were caused much trouble by the sale of liquor to servants and slaves. The early court records show that care was taken by a license system, to keep inns from becoming nuisances. One landland of St. Mary's, for instance, gave bond in 1660, in the sum of a thousand pounds of tobacco and 1 Colonial Church Life in Maryland, 123. Act 1725, 6; 1747, 17. *The good Friends of Pennsylvania who met in yearly meeting in 1696, not only advised their brethren not to increase slaves among them, but to bring the slaves they had to meetings, to keep them from loose and idle living, and from rambling abroad of First Days and other times. (Janney's History of the Friends, 111, 179.) Slaves. 103 casks, that he would, for five years, have good order kept at his house, especially at times of divine service, and would not allow servants and apprentices to get liquors or to remain tip- ling there without their masters' knowledge. Over a hundred years later, an act of Assembly authorized the city of Annapolis to regulate taverns, as, we read, many of the servants and slaves there were injured and their masters deprived of their services, by the sale to them of rum and spirits. After 1780, any tavern keej^er in the State who should harbor, or sell any liquors to any servant, apprentice or slave, without written leave from the master, became liable for each offence to forfeit to the master one hundred and sixty pounds of tobacco, — afterwards, ten dollars.^ To prevent the sale of stolen goods, there was enacted, in 1692, that no one should trade or barter with any servants or slaves without permission from their owners, under penalty of two thousand pounds of tobacco, half to the government and half to the owner of the goods. And if the value of these was over a thousand pounds, the owner, also, could enter suit for damages against the receiver — who, if he could not pay this further fine, received thirty stripes on his bare back. The law afterwards read that no person should buy or get in any way from any slave any goods whatever, or should sell anything to any slave, without written permission from his owner or overseer, under penalty of a fine of five dollars, on conviction before a magistrate.^ Also, after 1796, any slave who should sell liquor or keep entertainment at any muster-ground, race track or other public place, without his master's permission, became liable to arrest and a whipping by order of a magistrate.^ iSee Prov. Court Eecords, 1658-1662, 397, 411. 1779, 11; 1780, 24; Code of 1860. ^ W. H. & L., 91 ; 1715, 44 ; Code of 1860. These acts, said the Court of Appeals, in 1837, did not imply any right in slaves to deal or make con- tracts, the penalty on the free person showing the reverse. Servants and slaves had been encouraged to sell stolen goods. (9 G. & J., 14.) ' 1796, 67. 104 The Negro in Maryland. In 1666, the House of Delegates called the attention of the Council to a bill deemed very important, to prohibit ser- vants and negroes from keeping pigs for their own benefit ; but the Council replied that such a law was not necessary, as every master had the power to forbid swine to his slaves and to his servants — unless the indentures of the servants hap- pened to give them special privileges. In 1723, there was enacted that masters who allowed slaves to keep any horses or cattle or swine, as their own, should forfeit five hundred pounds of tobacco and the animals. There were, afterwards, no such restrictions.^ A slave could not legally hold prop- erty : whether he had possessions or privileges depended, as the Council said in 1666, on the master's will. Generally, the slave had at least a garden and chicken coop, from whose pro- ceeds he got such luxuries as coffee and tobacco. Some mas- ters bought what the slaves raised — even at the risk, occa- sionally, of paying for a sweet potato or a chicken that was already theirs ; others gave their slaves permits to sell and buy ; others, still, lay asleep in the big house, while the black quietly did his bartering at some corner store or on some boat in the river. The majority of slaves in the coast States worked by tasks ; when the allotted work was done daily, the slave's time was his own. On Saturday afternoons, some slaves had less than the usual work to do, and it was the general custom to give holidays at Christmas and Easter-tide. At such times, the market places of the county towns might be tlironged with blacks. At the session of Assembly of 1787, the House received from the Senate a bill to prevent the inconveniences arising from slaves who were allowed to act as freemen. The first section placed a penalty of five pounds a month on all mas- ' Md. Arch., II, 23, itc. One of the resohitions of tlie convention of slaveholders of Worcester county, in 1858, was that slave owners and slave liirers be asked to discontinue tlie practice of allowing slaves to have corn patclies. Slaves. 105 ters who should allow slaves to go at large or hire them- selves out, except during ten days at harvest time. A motion to strike out this section was lost by a vote of thirty-two to fifteen. The second section provided that no slaves, except such as were generally known to be pilots, should be allowed by their masters, under a like penalty, to run any boat over twenty feet long which was used to carry goods belonging to any other person than the owner of the boat. This section was struck out ; but the bill, as amended and passed, excepted regular pilots. And a person who should hire any slave un- lawfully, was also made liable to the penalty of five pounds a month. At the session of 1794, there were several attempts made for further legislation — evidently for greater restrictions. One bill, introduced in the House, was to prevent slaves from acting as free in several counties. Baltimore county was added by a vote of thirty-nine to seventeen, and a motion to except Baltimore city was defeated by seven votes — though the delegates from the city were opposed to the bill. Motions to add Anne Arundel, Talbot and Cecil counties were all lost, and the bill as passed was rejected in the Senate. In 1802, the Senate offered a bill for an act by which the penalty on the master who should let out the slave, was raised to forty dollars. This the House would not agree to, although it would tend, the Senate argued, to remedy an evil which had risen to such a degree as to require legislative interference. The House maintained that a fine of twenty-five dollars on both the master and the hirer of a slave was sufficient. The next year, the Senate again brought in a bill, and again the House rejected it.^ By an act of 1817, there was made an exception of twenty days at harvest time, instead often days. The maximum penalty for one who should make any contract with a slave for his services, or who should let his slave go at large or hire himself out, remained twenty dollars a month. 1 House Journal, 1787, 150, &c.; act 1787, 33; House Journal, 1802, 43, 56, &c. 106 The Negro in Maryland. In 1821, a special law required constables in Worcester and Caroline counties to arrest and bring before a justice all slaves, except regular pilots, who might be found going at large or hiring themselves out, or who might not have fixed homes on their owner's estates, or be duly hired out in the employ of some person. If the justice found that the law was being violated, he should let out the slave for the rest of the current year ; the proceeds to be given to the county. A constable was entitled to two dollars for thus taking up and letting out a slave. This act was extended, at the next session, to Som- erset and Queen Anne's counties.^ But competition between white and black was not without some influence, we presume, in bringing about such legisla- tion. A petition was presented the House of Delegates, in 1808, from "the owners of hack-stages, draymen, carters and laborers " of Baltimore, who complained that they were "deprived of employment by the interference of slaves who engross the same." This was referred to the next Assembly.^ Despite the laws, slaves were often hiring themselves, or being hired out. At the slaveholders' conventions, these lib- erties were always severely denounced. The papers tell us, for instance, how the grand jury of Anne Arundel, in 1854, gave particular attention to doing away with the custom of slaves hiring themselves out by permission of their masters ; and how the citizens of a certain district in Somerset county, at a public meeting early in 1860, expressed their disapproval of the practice of allowing slaves hired out to be masters of their own time, and of that of hiring them out with the provision of their own consent to the agreements.^ Not a few slaves in ' 1817, 104; Code of 1860, 66, 29: 1821, 183; 1822, 115. In 1806, sundry citizens of St. Mary's county petitioned, without result, that slaves be pre- vented from acting as pilots. MIouse Journals, 1806, 20; 1808, 75. Mkltimore Sun, April 28th, 1854; Jan. 20th, 18G0. In 1849, a bill to prevent the employment of slaves by nicrohants, shopkeepers and traders, without the written consent of their owners, was laid on the table. Slaves. 107 Maryland, particularly in the cities, were allowed by their masters to live and act as freemen, and also to buy their own freedom by their extra earnings. But this was by the suffer- ance of others only and by no right of their own. Thus, in one case, the owner of a slave who had been hired out to some third party in Baltimore for a time, finally agreed with him to sell him his freedom for two hundred dollars. This was in 1833, and for two years the negro went at large and acted as a free man, earning in various vocations — now by keeping an oyster house, now a boot-black shop — the money for his freedom. By June, 1835, he had paid, through an attorney or agent, all but twenty-seven dollars, and received receipts on account of his freedom. During the summer fol- lowing, he went to New York, and was a waiter on a North River boat. On returning in October, he tendered the balance of payment, which was refused by his owner's agent, and he was soon arrested as a runaway slave and sold. The Court of Appeals — on an appeal from the City Court — held that slaves could not enter into valid contracts with their masters, any more than with any one else, nor enforce any alleged con- tract at law, but agreed with the lower court in setting this negro free — under the old law which declared free any slave who should enter Maryland to remain.^ There was enacted in 1752, that slave owners who should neglect to provide for old or disabled slaves, or should allow them to leave their homes, or wander about begging, becoming nuisances to the public, should forfeit four pounds to the 1 9 G. & J. 14. Bland & Woolfolk vs. Negro Beverly Bowling, 1837. An interesting case came before the Court of Appeals in 1850. Some twenty years before, a certain slave woman was allowed by her master to go to Baltimore, and to live with her reputed husband there — the husband to pay a given sum yearly for her services. When her family became large, this payment was not exacted. She lived as free, renting houses, hiring herself out, &c. She was then seized by a representative of her owner, who stated that there was a report that one of the family was about to run away. There were various questions in the case before the courts. The Circuit Court gave her freedom, but the Court of Appeals denied it. (9 Gill, 120.) 108 The Negro in Maryland. county court for the use of the county. In 1 790, because, we read, humanity required that faithful servants should be sup- ported by their masters, another act provided that any master who should allow a slave who was aged, or infirm from any accident, to wander abroad, or to lack proper care and cover, should be examined by the county court, and, if guilty, required to give good bond in the sum of thirty pounds, for future care of the negro. This act, of course, did not apply to a slave who might run away contrary to the will of the owner. After 1796, the bond was one hundred dollars.^ Aged or infirm slaves who were occasionally left without anyone to support them, were cared for by the levy courts and afterwards by the county commissioners. Some lived and died at the regular alms- houses. Old slaves were sometimes left in want by persons who died insolvent, and the county authorities were specially ordered to care suitably for these. At a council meeting at Annapolis, in 1699, at which some of the King's instructions were read on the conversion of negroes and Indians, Governor Blakiston said he was in- formed that several masters hindered their negroes, though baptized, from going to church. On being told that there was no law to prevent such abuses, he recommended the pas- sage of one ; but nothing seems to have been done.^ There was enacted in 1 723, that no person whatever should work on the Lord's day, nor should command or allow any children, servants or slaves to work in anyway — works of necessity and charity excepted. Nor should children or menials be allowed to profane that day by unlawful pastimes and recreations, on penalty of a fine of two hundred pounds of tobacco from the ' 1752, 1 ; 1790, 9 ; 1796, G7 : Code of 1860, 66, 26. * Council Proceedings, X, 211. Slaves, 109 master. This fine afterwards became five dollars/ Any privi- leges of church-going which slaves might enjoy depended, much as with children, on the disposition of the masters. We have seen the prejudice that was widely spread at first, against the conversion of the blacks ; but when men found that Christianity did not work manumission, and after the earnest efforts made by the missionaries, such as Dr. Bray in Maryland, most masters seemed very willing for their slaves to worship. Some preferred that they should attend the churches of the whites, fearful of the teachings, perhaps, of preachers who were ignorant or, possibly, hostile to slavery. Others allowed their slaves to join societies of the blacks which were more or less under the supervision of regular church associations. It was customary for certain portions of churches to be set apart for colored persons. In an act for the erection of a church in St. Anne's parish in Annapolis, in 1774, there was stipulated the provision for a place, in addition to the public gallery, for those servants, and another for slaves, that might attend service." Masters and slaves knelt at the same com- munion table. Of sixty-one communicants that belonged to one parish in Anne Arundel, in 1790, thirteen were entered as " Black Brethren ; " and a piece of the church glebe next to the church yard, was given these, by their request, for a burial place for themselves and their descendants. We find an interesting vote of the vestry of another parish, in 1747, that the churchwardens prevent the negroes from going in among the white people to disturb them, as they frequently did, and from going in and out of church during service. But in this, we may add, the blacks had had the example set them by their betters ; for ten years before, the sexton had been ordered to keep the vestry-house locked, as persons were in the habit of running in and out of church in cold weather, 1 1723, 16. 2 1774, 11. 110 The Negro in Maryland. to visit the fire that was kept in the vestiy.^ In the genera- tion before the Civil War, many earnest workers were busied in the South in the religious instruction of the blacks. There was never anything in the laws of Maryland to prevent slaves from holding religious services quietly on their masters estates; but with the Southampton insurrection and the growth of abo- litionism throughout the land, some restrictions were placed on religious and other associations of the blacks — free blacks as well as slaves. Ordinarily, the constables and magistrates were looked to to enforce the laws concerning blacks as well as whites. But after 1820, any justice in Anne Arundel, Calvert, Charles, Prince George's and St. Mary's counties was empowered, on the application of three judicious persons, to call out patroling parties to search the neighborhood, for from four to eight hours, to see that the negroes were at home and orderly. These patroling parties were formed of citizens subject to the militia duty, were limited to fifteen in a party, and were to be commanded by discreet persons named by the justice. They received fifty cents a night when on duty. The commissioners of Frederick county were soon empowered to appoint justices to summon a patrol whenever necessary. And, after 1856, the commissioners of Kent county could appoint if they saw fit, a dozen or so special police to enforce the laws against the blacks.^ But it was at times of excitement only — of rumors ^Colonial Church Life in Maryland. " 1820, 200. Calvert county was added by 1822, 85. 1821, 148 ; 1826, 210 ; 1856, 177. Slaves could not carry guns or "other offensive weapons" off their master's estates — a prohibition wliicli seems to liave been made in 1704, at a time wlien Romanists and negroes were looked on, as we saw, as [wssible enemies of the government. If they did so, they could be wliipped and the guns be forfeited, if belonging to them. Before that time negroes and other Slaves. Ill of runaways or uprisings — that the patrols were called out ; and at such times, impromptu patroling parties helped to exe- cute the laws everywhere. For instance, in the summer of 1835, a stranger who had been seen talking with the negroes and attending some of their meetings, in the neighborhood of Chestertown, was put in jail for examination. The town, wrote a gentleman to Niles' Register, was in an uproar for several days, and was guarded every night by armed men of the greatest respectability. At one time in the winter of 1857, the patrols were out nightly in Prince George's county — but the papers soon announced that the excitement had sub- sided, that the patrol had expired by limitation, and that people did not think that there had been any intention of a rising among the blacks. The slaveholders' convention of Worcester county in 1858, resolved to call on constables and magistrates to enforce the laws for watching the blacks. On the night after an alarm of insurrection in Somerset county, in 1859, a patrol was organized, and search was made, with guns and other weapons, in the houses of free blacks in the neighborhood. In a part of Montgomery county a meeting of citizens was held after John Brown's attack on Harper's Ferry, to denounce Brown and express sympathy for the Union ; and a " protective committee " of twenty-four mem- bers was appointed, to call a meeting of citizens whenever the public safety was endangered, and to call out such of the volunteer companies as might then be needed to patrol the neighborhood. It is stated also, that the commissioners of St. Mary's county appointed a patrol in the autumn of 1860, in each district, to visit their neighborhood at least once a week at night, to disperse all negro meetings and arrest all abolitionists.^ For patrols that were called out by the sheriffs slaves had been exempted from training or any military service whatever (LL. 3, 40, &c. ; Code of 1860). White servants were enlisted on emergen- cies only (1715, 43). See Chapter on the Free Negro. ^ See Niles' Register, Aug. 22d, 1835 ; Baltimore Sun (quoting the local papers often), Jan. 9th, 1857 ; Jan. 4th, 1860 ; Oct. 13th, 1860. See Chapter on the Free Negro. 112 The Negro in Maryland. in Allegany, Cecil, Frederick and Harford counties, after the attack on Harper's Ferry, the State paid some fifteen hundred dollars.^ But the patrol, like most of the laws which it was intended to enforce, was directed, in the latter days of slavery, as well against the free black as the slave. One of the most interesting phases of our subject, as a study of historical development, is the growth of the slave code touching crimes and punishments. It is notorious that the English criminal law, and the admin- istration of justice under it, were exceedingly severe down to the present century. The sentences of the Court of Star Chamber are well known. In one case, in 1630, a Scottish divine, for writing a scurrilous attack on the bishops, was sentenced not only to be degraded from orders and to pay a large fine, but to be whipped, set in the pillory, to have one ear cut off, one side of his nose slit, and one cheek branded with S. S. (sower of sedition), to have these repeated a week later in another part of London, and then be imprisoned for life. These cases may be regarded as exceptional, but in all parts of England hanging was a common punishment for many offences. It is stated on the authority of a magistrate of Som- ersetshire, that in that county, in the year 1596, there were thirty-seven persons whipped, thirty-five burned in the hand, and forty executed ; and many among the large number dis- charged, deserved, in his opinion, similar punishments. Two years later, in a neighboring county, there were seventy-four persons sentenced to be hanged in a year. IMore than one- half of these were condemned at quarter sessions ; several of them for stealing sheep. Thougli the sentence of death was often connnuted, as to branding, whij)ping, or transportation to M 861-2, Ch. 163. Slaves. 113 the Colonies, the criminal law remained exceedingly severe during the eighteenth century. A woman who killed her hus- band, or a maid-servant who killed her master or mistress, could be burned to death, until 1790. Nor was this law obso- lete, for there is mention of a woman burned in 1782 and of another in 1784, though they were jjrobably strangled before the torch was applied. In 1752, it was enacted that persons convicted of murder should be executed with little delay, and that the bodies should in no case be buried, but either be hung in chains or given over for dissection ; and such was the law until William IV. Inhabitants of London were accustomed, as late as 1745, to see heads and portions of human bodies nailed up on Temple Bar. The last heads were those of nine Jacobites, of the Revolution of '45, who had been hanged, cut down, disembowelled, beheaded, quartered, and their hearts thrown into a fire — all before the eyes of the public. The spikes which held the heads were not removed till this century. The pillory was not abolished in England till 1837; and whipping has remained the penalty for certain offences.' It was as natural for the colonists to follow, largely, the customs of their old home as it was for them to continue to speak English. In Maryland, it was specially provided that justice was to be administered, where there was no special law or fixed usage of the Province, by English law and usage, in so far as this was deemed applicable by the courts.'^ Each county court was ordered to keep the usual branding irons, and the pillory and stocks without the court-house, and the ducking stool as near by as possible. The corporal punishments given, in those days, in all the colonies, are so well known as to make examples almost superfluous. When Capt. Josias Fendall was found guilty, in 1681, of speaking several sedi- tious words against the government of Maryland, the Provin- ' See Pike's History of Crime, Stevens' Criminal Law, Wade's History of tlie Middle and Working Classes, &c. *See Md. Arch., I, 147, 158, 192, &c. 114 The Negro in Maryland. cial Court showed great clemency in giving liiin only fine and banishment. This sentence, the Court said, was as favorable as could be expected ; for an early law allowed not merely fine and imprisonment, but boring of the tongue, slitting the nose, cutting off one or both ears, whipping, branding with a red- hot iron — any one or more of these, as the court should think fit.^ It was not treason and sedition, and such unusual crimes only, that were thus punished. The colonists were evidently much troubled by hog-stealers, and a law of \QQ>Q, declaring that previous acts had been insufficient, enacted that a hog- stealer should pay the treble damages, and also, for the first offence, have four hours in the pillory and his ears cropped; and for the second offence, be branded in the forehead with the letter H. A third offence could be punished with death.^ Some of the early laws reflected the class distinctions, so strongly felt in England. Treason was to be punished, in addition to forfeiture of all goods and franchises, by drawing, hanging and quartering of a man, and by drawing and burn- ing of a woman, — except in case of the lord of a manor, who should be beheaded. Among the various penalties for burglary, house-burning, sorcery, &c., was service for a term of years — but this could not be inflicted on a gentleman. Another law, for rules of justice, prescribed that no corporal punishment be given a gentleman, except by virtue of statute law of the Province.^ Of greater interest still is the law of 1723, which gave the stocks and whipping-post to blasphemers and drunk- ards who could not pay their fines — and who were not free- holders or other reputable persons. The punishments provided by law of the Province especially for white servants, and incident largely to the custom of service, were very few. It was at first the law that servants who re- fused to perform the lawful orders of their masters were to be » Md. Arch., V, 328, I, 248. »Md. Arch., II, 140. 'M(l. Airh., I, 71, loS, 184. Slaves. 115 whipped or otherwise corrected by order of, and in the discre- tion of, a magistrate. Ou the other hand, a master who refused to carry out his covenant with a servant, or who denied him or her proper food and care, was to be imprisoned by the magistrate until surety were given for the performance of his duty.^ It was the law for many years that a servant, if proven guilty of causing a servant-woman to be with child, should recompense the master of the woman for half his loss in her work. But the father, if a freeman, had to pay the whole loss, by servitude or otherwise. The case, whether of freeman or servant, came before the county court.^ Any person who traded with an indentured servant, without license from the master, was liable to a fine, and the servant who purloined or traded with his master's goods, to a whipping. For a second offence, the servant was to be branded, in addition. These penalties were evidently given by a magistrate ; but if the freeman trading with the servant was unable to pay his fine, he was bound over to the higher court, and could be there sen- tenced to a whipping, if found guilty. Later, all cases of petty thieving, not belonging to the Provincial Court or to special commissioners, were tried in the county courts, and the accused, freeman or servant, if proven guilty by one good evidence, was to restore fourfold, and to suffer the pillory and whipping. If a freeman had not goods, he paid his fine by a term of servitude, as did the servant. Nor was there any difference prescribed in the severer penalties for repeated offences.^ Masters were accustomed to administer some jus- tice, themselves ; but the law forbade them after 1715, to give more than ten lashes for any one offence ; providing that they might carry troublesome servants before a justice of peace, to be given such whipping, up to thirty-nine lashes, as he deemed fit, after hearing the complaint. The cases of iMd. Arch., I, 53. ^ Laws of 1662, 1674, 1715. ^Md. Arch., I, 501 : Laws of 1704, 1715. 116 The Negro in Maryland. masters who might be accused of neglecting or abusing their servants liad been changed from the jurisdiction of the mag- istrates in first offences to that of the county courts. Ser- vants who absented themselves from their masters' service were adjudged before the county courts to renewed service, ten days for one absent day, at the expiration of their term. Persons entertaining such servants were fined ; and after 1748, those wdio could not pay the fine could be whipped, and put under security for good behavior.^ This custom of white ser- vice practically died out toward the close of the eighteenth century, — at the time when criminal law was being changed by the changes in public feeling. We have seen already how careful and judicious the gov- ernment of Maryland was in its relations with the Indians. It sometimes vied with the customs of those Indians who were at war, by offering a bounty for every ear of a dead Indian ; and in a treaty ^ith a tribe recently at war, is the stipulation that the colonists might shoot down any Indian found killing cattle or hogs.^ But, in most of the treaties, it was expressly stated that all Indians who might kill English- men should be given up to the authorities, to be tried for murder as a white man would be. We find mention of a special commission of Oyer and Terminer for the trial of an Indian who had murdered a white servant.^ A treaty with the Nanticokcs in 1687, provided that an Indian who should commit any ofl'ence against the English, — l)e it murder or hog stealing or helping runaway servants and slaves, — should be tried by Elnglish law, and that any Englishman who might injure the Indians should be tried by the same law, also. At about the same time, a Poconioke Indiati was imprisoned for rape on an English woman, and the Council duly considered ' 1715, 44; 1748, 19. ■•'Md. Arch., Ill, 502, 580, 433, 486. *Md. Arch., II, l'J5, V, 470. An Indian convicted of murdering a white w:is shot at St. Mary's, 16G9. Slaves. 117 in what manner he shoultl be tried, and decided by the statute law. Thereupon several of the chiefs came before the Council and desired to be informed of the English law, which was duly expounded to them, and which they promised not to break in future. As it was found that the woman had wil- lingly erred, the Indian was merely whipped, according to English law, and advised by the Court to be more circum- spect. In 1648, four Patuxent Indians were brought before the Provincial Court, charged with stealing and killing hogs, and with other thieving, and it was stated to the Court that intolerable injuries had been suffered by the colonists at the hands of the neighboring Indians. The prisoners, brought to the bar, denied the charge, (there was evidently no objec- tion to their testimony, be it noted), stating that a hammer which they had had on the day mentioned, had been purchased from another Indian two years before. And the plaintiff not being able to produce furtiier evidence, the jury declared not guilty, and the Indians were discharged by the Governor. We find that two Indians were executed, by sentence of the Provincial Court, for the murder of two negroes.^ For three-quarters of a century after the settlement of Mary- land, the negroes in the Province were few in number, and were nearly all, if not all, slaves. The punishments which were administered on the plantation were sometimes too severe, as we shall see, in the case of both white servants and slaves, though the laws early forbade excessive abuse or punishment to these alike. Whether justice was administered by magis- trates and judges with greater rigor to the black than to the white, we cannot say ; but during this long period, be it noted, there was no special provision by law for the trial and punish- ment of slaves for serious offences. For murder or burglary or any serious crime, any offender, white, black, or Indian, was brought before the Provincial Court, to receive, we pre- sume, the same fair dispensation of justice. In 1700, there 1 Md. Arch., IV, 409 ; V, 558. Davis' Day Star, 151. 118 The Negro in 3Iaryland. were no more slaves, probably, id Maryland, than there were in Massachusetts at the time slavery was abolished there ; and in Maryland then, as in Massachusetts always, there was no special code for the trial and punishment of slaves.^ But the slave trade was soon carried on with vigor, and the blacks grew to be a considerable part of the ])opulation of Maryland. White servants were then numerous, many of them mere adventurers and good-for-nothings. At the same time, transportation was made the penalty in England for various felonies, and English jails were in part emptied into the Colonies. Maryland had prohibited for some years the importation of these felons, and a further act was passed in 1723, to prevent the "great evils" arising therefrom, but the Lord Proprietor refused his assent. It was at this time that the law against petty thieving — of goods worth over twelve pence — gave the ordinary four-fold restitution, and branding or other corporal punishment, saving life, for a second offence ; when blasphemers could be punished, in addition to fine, with boring of the tongue, and branding and even death for repeated offences ; when prisoners " languishing " in jail for debt, were warned not to perjure themselves, at the risk of two hours in the pillory and the loss of their left ears ; and when men were executed for burglary and jail-breaking. It was unfortunate for the community as well as the blacks, that these Africans — fresh from Africa, with much that was brutal, very ignorant and very imitative — should have been thrown so much with the worst elements of the whites. Then, as the * We find mention of slaves tried for capital punishment in the Provincial Court, as all other persons were (as Council Record, Oct. 16th, 1G88, &c). In 1703, an Eastern f;hore Indian came before the Council at Annapolis with the complaint that his cabin had been broken into, and various things stolen tiierefrom by a certain negro slave, and demanded in return sixty-nine dressed deer skins. On Iiis agreement, iinally, to take sixty good skins, tlie Council ordered that the master of the .vlave should pay these to liini, and tliat tlie slave be whipped. Otlicrwisc the slave was to be tried in the rrovincial Court. (Council Ivccords, X, 327.) Slaves. 119 population was increasing, the plantations spread out more and more, making a sparsely settled country. One's neighbors were few and far between. The church may have been distant ; the court house and the jail were probably miles away. With the increase of the blacks we find — it may have been only because attention was thereby called to them as never before — a growino; difference between the leo;al status of the black and of the white. The act of 1715 provided for the discharge of all persons held as suspected runaways and not claimed within six months — except negroes and mulattoes.^ Constables had already been authorized to suppress with the ordinary whipping, of not over thirty-nine stripes, all fre- quent and noisy meetings of negroes and slaves.^ In 1717, whereas, reads the law, negro and Indian slaves often commit misdemeanors or steal, and escape without punishment, or else the owners are put to expense by bringing them to the county courts, — there was enacted that any one justice might try slaves for small offences, and might order as many stripes as he deemed fit, not exceeding forty .^ It was also found that some masters of slaves who had committed heinous offences, had concealed the crimes, thus hindering the execution of jus- tice, rather than lose the slaves ; so masters of slaves sentenced to death were paid three-fourths their loss. But masters were loath to lose, and the recompense was afterwards in- creased to the full value of the slave. It was at the same time that the testimony of Indians and negroes was declared ^ 1715, 44. By the act of 1715, also, masters were forbidden to give over ten laslies or to abuse or overwork "any servant whatever." The earlier acts of 1692 and 1704 forbade the abuse or excessive punislmient of Eng- lish servants and slaves. From the way in which slaves, and servants and slaves together are expressly mentioned in the act of 1715 in other clauses, Ave presume that the expression, "'any servant whatsoever," did not include slaves, who could be punished in the discretion of the master, unless, indeed, he was so harsh as to be prosecuted for cruelty. If so, this change in the law is very interesting. * 1695, 6; 1723, 15, &c. mil, 13. 120 The Negro in Maryland.. invalid in all cases concerning M'hites — and Indians and blacks, too, where life or limb were inv^olved. The act of 1723, enjoining constables to snppress noisy meetings of blacks, made any slave who should strike a white person at any time, liable to lose an ear by order of a magistrate. The owner of a plantation was authorized also to whip any slave who might be found thereon without proper business ; and this act pro- vided further, that slaves who might run away and remain out-lying in the woods, killing hogs and cattle, and who raight resist capture, could be shot lawfully by their pur- suers.' After 1729 — as there was some doubt as to whether those who broke and entered buildings not connected with dwelling-houses, might not plead benefit of clergy — any per- son convicted of breaking into any store-house and of stealing from thence to the value of five shillings, was to be executed. And \^•hereas, we read, several murders of masters and other cruel murders had been lately committed by negroes, which cruelties they were instigated to commit because they have no sense of shame or ap[)rehonsion of future rewards or punish- ments, and as the manner of executing offenders as prescribed by the laws of England, is not sufficient to deter from such offences a people who consider only the severity of a punish- ment, any slave, continued the act, convicted by confession or verdict of jury, of murder or of wilfully burning a dwell- ing-house, may be punished, in the judgment of the court, by having his right hand cut off before being hanged. And the body, in such a case, might be beheaded and quartered, and set up in the most public places of the county where the crime was committed.^ A few years later, benefit of clergy was taken away from all persons convicted of breaking into any tobacco-houses or other outhouses, reasonably built and secured, and stealing therefrom to the value of five shillings. And slaves found guilty in the county courts of rambling about at night or riding horses at daytime without leave, or of running M723, 15. « 1729, 4. Slaves. 121 away, were to be whipped, cropped or branded, or otherwise punished, but so as not to endanger life or to render them unfit for labor.^ A few years later, again, benefit of clergy was taken away from any person who might steal a horse or burn a boat of some size, or abet in these crimes. Servants and slaves who harbored or entertained their fellows, now be- came liable to whipping, by order of a magistrate.^ In 1751, the testimony of imported convicts was declared valid against other such convicts in criminal cases ; because, says the law, murders, burglaries and other oifences had been very frequent, endangering the lives and property of the colonists, — oifences generally committed by imported convicts and those whom they seduce to join them, which the convicts are encouraged to commit, as they know that they cannot be called on to tes- tify against each other.^ Closely following, is an act for the more effectual punisliment of slaves; because, says the pre- amble, the laws for that purpose are found insufficient to pre- vent great crimes, and to further the speedy administration of justice. Benefit of clergy, therefore, was taken away from any slave duly convicted of conspiring or attempting to raise insurrection, to murder or poison anyone, to commit rape on a white woman, or to burn any house or out-house containing any person or goods. Hitherto a slave, like his master or any wliite, would have been tried for a serious crime in the Pro- vincial Court. Now, there was enacted that he should be tried for any offence which might be punished with death, at the next term of the county court. And he might be con- victed on the testimony of other slaves, corroborated with such pregnant circumstances as should convince the jury of his guilt.* 1 1737, 2, 7. "1748, 19. M751, 11. * 1751, 14. If slaves testified, they were warned by the presiding judge to tell the truth, and were told the punishment they would incur by per- jury — the cropping of one ear and a whipping, and, the next day, the crop- ping of the second ear and another whipping. 122 The Negro in Maryland. It was at this time that the killing of a slave who should resist arrest for any serious offence, was declared not punishable. In the Council Records, about 1760, is a description of the judiciary of the Province. The Governor and Council formed the high Court of Appeals and Errors, and issued pardons where such were due. Besides the courts of chancery and vice-admiralty, there was the Provincial Court, held twice a year at Annapolis. Seven judges sat on this bench, having jurisdiction over civil cases of importance and all manner of criminal cases. Before them or special commissions, only, could white men be sentenced to loss of life or limb. County courts were held four times yearly by the justices of the peace of each county, to try certain civil matters, and all criminal cases not affecting life or limb, and even capital offenses when committed by negroes.^ By the close of the century, the courts and the jurisdiction of the courts had so changed that all persons, slave or free, were tried for serious offences before the same tribunal, as had been the case three generations before. The forms of punish- ment, too, had changed.^ The Governor, in addition to the old power of pardon, could commute death sentences to other punishment — in the case of slaves, to transportation and sale. The courts could give the old penalties, or could sentence free males, male servants and apprentices, to labor on the roads for not over seven years, and free women, women servants and apprentices, to picking oakum, sewing, or other suitable labor, for not over the same time. The value of a servant's unex- pired term was paid the master, and the county was reim- bursed from the sale of the servant, at the expiration of his term of labor, for as long a time as was necessary. A slave ^Council Proc, 1753-1707,323. There were also the magistrates, who exercised considerable power in the punishment of slaves anil servants for petty offences. Commissions of Over and Terminer and Jail Delivery were often issued. We find one commission trying a slave, some twenty years earlier, for stealing £2G. The jury actjuitted him. ^ See 1785, 87 ; 1787, 17 ; 17'Jo, 50; 1793, 57 ; 1795, 82, &c. Slaves. 123 convicted of a capital crime could be sentenced to death or to serve on the roads for not over fourteen years. In either case, he was bought by the State; but in the latter, as in case of transportation, the treasury could be somewhat repaid from the sale of him afterward. There M'as added, in 1808, that slaves in Baltimore county who might be convicted of man- slaughter, could be whipped — or put to labor in the work- house, if women, — in place of the other punishments.' In 1809, was enacted a general law on crimes and punishments. It gave such penalties, in general, as we are accustomed to, to-day — hanging for murder in the first degree ; limited terms of imprisonment for murder in the second degree and man- slaughter; indemnification for losses, and imprisonment for from three to ten years, for burglary ; indemnification and at least a year's term, for stealing to the value of five dollars; imprisonment for not less than three months, for being a rogue or a vagabond, &c. The only distinction between white or black was that a negro or mulatto slave, not sentenced to be hung for any crime, under the act, might be punished by imprisonment, or, in the discretion of the court, by a whip- ping of not over a hundred lashes, and also by banishment, by transportation and sale into some foreign country.^ This act on crimes, and the opening of the State penitentiary in 1811, finished and formulated the change which had been tailing place in public sentiment. Experience evinces, states the old-fashioned preamble to the act, that the surest way of preventing the perpetration of crimes and of reforming oJ9Pen- 1 1789, 44, &c. ; 1808, 113. ''' 1809, 188. The act gave the penalty of hanging for any person, white, free black or slave, convicted of raising insurrection of negroes ; and im- prisonment for between six and twenty years, for attempts so to do. The keeper of the Penitentiary was empowered to pnnish unruly or idle pris- oners by short solitary confinement ; the Board of Inspection could order more severe punishment, including whipping. For attempts to escape, the Court should give additional labor, confinement, and also corporal punish- ment. 124 The Negro in Maryland. ders, is by a mild and justly proportioned scale of punish- ments. By act of 1817, any colored person \f\\o would, under the act of 1809, have been sent to the penitentiary for less than one year, was kept in jail, or fined or whipped, or both fined and whipped. After the next year, the courts were forbidden to send any slaves to the penitentiary ; the punishments for them, for crime, being hanging, or not over forty lashes, or transportation and sale — not necessarily, now, into some for- eign country, but any where except into the District of Colum- bia. By a supplement of the following year, these were nar- rowed to either hanging or transportation.^ We find the case of one negro who was convicted of burglary and, being deemed a free man, was put into the penitentiary, of course. It was stated afterward that he was a slave ; and so the Governor was authorized by the Assembly to order his sale out of Maryland, provided that it was first proven to a jury that he was a slave. Whether these convict slaves sold out of the State found their lot any real punishment for their crimes, seems to have been a matter of some doubt. Certain it is that the blacks themselves attached a very unpleasant significance to the words "sold South." We cannot believe that convicts would have been purchased for any other purpose than the most rigorous field work.^ An act of 1833 allowed masters to sell out of INIaryland any slaves for a term of years, who were proven, to the sat- isfaction of the courts, to be notoriously vicious. These were sold for their unexpired term of service only, and the courts required j^roof that they had been previously warned duly of such punishment as the result of misbehavior. Slaves who M817, 72; 1818, 197; 1819, 159. * We notice an advertisement in a Baltimore paper of 1851, of valuable slaves for sale, for whom f^ood lionies ratlier tlian liigli prices were desired. Also, such fi;ood servants would be "exchanged for servants suitable for the South, with bad characlerx.'' Slaves. 125 gave much trouble by attempts to run away, might, under the same restrictions, be sold in or out of Maryland for their unexpired terms. The very next year, the committee of the House of Delegates on Colored Population was asked for leave to sell thus out of the State a negro girl eighteen years old, who was known to have run away several times from a previous owner and to have been in jail for other charges also. But the petition was denied, with the observation that the petitioner must have known the character of his purchase, and that the girl's subsequent conduct could not have disap- pointed his reasonable expectations. We refrain, continued the committee's report, from touching the moral obligations of the State not to send an unworthy and dangerous part of her population upon another community, uninformed of the character of the persons ; and we think, also, that sale out of the State for a term of years would, in most cases, although the black was given his right to freedom in papers under the seal of court, amount to nothing short of slavery for life. Two years later, the House of Delegates urged the Seuate to pass a bill allowing a certain woman to sell out of Maryland a slave who was notoriously vicious and incorrigible, but who had not been warned of the possibility of such sale. The policy of the law, said the House committee, is to permit the removal of slaves known for vicious habits or gross miscon- duct; and when these characteristics are shown so as to de- stroy all reasonable expectation of reform in conduct, the slave may justly be subjected to the punishment of immediate trans- portation. But no act seems to have been passed — although the slave was said to be so vicious as to be kept in jail, to pro- tect his mistress.' In 1845, Governor Pratt called public attention to the fact that the only punishments of consequence for slaves were either hanging or sale from the State — that is, reads the executive message, the substitution for his master of another master living without the limits of Maryland, 1 House Journals, 1834, 544, &c. ; 1836, 381, 569. Acts of 1833, 224. 126 The Negro in Maryland. Avhich would not be considered by the slave or the corauiunity as any punishment whatever. . The penitentiary was closed to slaves, and transportation would only defeat the ends of jus- tice. The attention of the Governor seems to have been espe- cially drawn to the matter by the case of a slave who had just been sentenced to death by the court of Charles county, for insurrection, but who was deemed worthy of clemency by a large number of citizens of the county. In accordance with the suggestion, the law was so changed that slaves, convicted of any of the higher grade of offences, should be punished as other persons were. On the expiration of their terms of im- prisonment they were sold at auction, to be carried out of the State.^ Petty larceny, of which the negroes as a class are guilty in large numbers, was not includetl in these offences, it is interesting to note. The executive message of 1858, tell- ing the Assembly that nearly half of the convicts in the ]ienitentiary were negroes, suggested that the courts should again be given the power of selling out of the State slaves convicted of certain felonies. This, it said, would relieve the institution of a large class, unprofitable and not to be reformed by prison discipline. The law was soon changed so that no negroes were sent to the penitentiary. Slaves could be given not over forty lashes, or be sold out of the State. The many acts which declared that "any person" or "all persons" who were guilty of specified offences were liable to punishment, were interpreted, as had evidently been intended, to include blacks as well as whites — slaves as well as free. The Court of Appeals affirmed this judgment, in 1859, when a slave woman tried to escape a sentence of a county coiu-t on the plea that an act forbidding "any person" to obtain goods under false pretences, did not affect slaves." We have noticed, and shall notice fiiilher, in the course of our study, the general ^1845,340. Masters were paid, of course, for slaves transported. 1849, 124. Code of 1860, 30, 194. M4Md., 135. Slaves. 127 laws declaring offences and giving penalties, which concerned negroes and slaves peculiarly. It would be tedious and useless to give more than a few examples of the many local laws. Varying in purport and in the penalties given, they show no general public policy, and reflect often, like much special legis- tion the world over, the whims and^bad rhetoric of the local " member." Yet they help to show us the customs of the times. ^ Thus, for selling provisions out of the market-house at Fredericktown, by act of 1770, a free man could be fined ten shillings, a servant or slave could be given not over fifteen lashes. Again, for destroying the gates which a certain resi- dent of Dorchester county was allowed to keep across the road, in 1846, a free man could be fined a trifling sum, while a slave who injured it or left it open wilfully, could be given not over ten lashes. Such cases came before a justice, of course. Other acts did not let off so easily the master of an offending slave. A free person who evaded toll on certain toll roads, was to be fined twenty shillings, by act of 1801, while the master of a servant or slave who evaded it, was to pay half that sura, in addition to the ten lashes which were to be given the culprit himself. If a servant or slave bought provisions out of market in Chestertown, his owner was liable to pay twenty-five shillings, half the fine for a free man. If a citizen attempted to avoid toll on the turnpike road from Washington to Baltimore, a law^ of 1796 made him liable to fine of two dollars, and if his slave offended, he was liable to pay one dollar. We find similar provisions on certain toll roads sixty years later; in one case, the parent of a minor being made equally liable with the master of a steward or slave.^ So, iu Baltimore, by law^ of 1843, the parent of a minor or master of ^When in 1731 the "Charming Molly" appeared off Annapolis with small- pox on board, the rule was made that no one should go aboard her and return without license. If a freeman offended, he could be sued for one hundred pounds ; if a servant or slave, lie was to be given at least thirty -nine stripes on the bare back and be sent back at once on board. * 1847, 220 ; 18G0, 267. 128 The Negro in Maryland. a slave or apprentice who might steal rides on vehicles, had to pay half the ordinary fine. The overseers of roads in Somerset county were authorized in 1799 to call out all males for certain work on the roads. If a slave or servant were not sent when duly called for, or if, when sent, he refused to do reasonable work, the master became liable to pay one dollar, the same fine as for his own failure to appear. At the very next session, this was so changed as to empower the overseers to compel the proper service from the slaves instead of fining the masters — a system, says the supplement, which had been found to be oppressive and injurious.^ It is interesting to note here that certain citizens from Baltimore county petitioned the House of Delegates in 1824, that slave owners should be made liable for theft and misdemeanors committed by their slaves. The report of the House committee was adverse. They thought it would conflict with the principles of justice to make the master responsible for any misdeeds done while the slave was not in the discharge of his duties as a servant. This was the doctrine, continued the committee, recognized by the law as to injuries of a civil nature by servants of any kind, and the same should certainly be applied to criminal cases. There were also many local laws which allowed the master to save his slave a sore back by paying a fine himself. Thus, by act of 1785, a free person convicted of wilfully destroying any lamp, sentry- box, &c., in Baltimore, was to be fined three pounds, and a parent or master was liable equally for damage done by his children or his bound servants or apprentices. A slave would be given not over thirty-nine lashes, unless the master chose to pay the fine or repair the damage. Afterward, according to the laws for the enforcement of the ordinances of Baltimore C'ity, slaves found guilty by a magistrate of breaking any ordinance were to be whipped, unless the fines and costs were paid, and magistrates were prohibited from trying the slaves »1799, 38; 1800, 5. Sfaves. 129 until the masters had been duly notified/ So the authorities of Annapolis and Frederick were allowed to punish by whip- ping those slaves who might disregard the town ordinances, unless the masters redeemed them. In 1792, the House passed a bill to fine free men who might beat the waters of the Patuxent at certain spawning seasons, and to whip slaves duly convicted of the same, unless the master would pay half the ordinary fine. The Senate amended so that no slave should be punished if he acted by his employer's order, but that the employer should, in that case, pay the full fine. A somewhat similar provision was made in 1800, to protect fish in the Great Choptank, but we notice that forty years later the law gave a whipping without any exception. Early in the century, three acts were passed at intervals of a few years each, to pre- vent the erection of seines and weirs in three rivers in different counties. One act, to prevent obstructions to navigation, fixed a penalty of twenty-five dollars for free men, and not over twenty lashes for slaves, acting without their master's direc- tions, provided always that the slave might be redeemed by anyone who would pay twenty-five dollars. Free man or slave, the case was tried before a magistrate. The second act — to prevent certain obstructions to the movement of fish — fixed a penalty of one hundred dollars for free men, and of not over thirty-nine lashes for slaves, provided that anyone might redeem a slave by payment of fifty dollars, and that a slave who had acted by order of his master should not be punished, but that the master, in such a case, should pay a hundred dollars. The third act — also to protect fish — gave a penalty of twenty dollars for a free man, and not over thirty-nine lashes for a slave, unless some one redeemed him by payment of thirty dollars. If the master ordered the slave to commit the offence, he was liable to the twenty dollars. Under this ' An exception seems to have been made in Baltimore, in that a slave convicted before the Criminal Court of cruelty to animals might be given a good whipping, if the court saw fit. 9 130 The Negro in Maryland. act, as under the preceding one, the free man would be tried before the county court, the slave by a single magistrate. Of these three acts, the first remained in force in 1860 unchanged ; the penalties of the second had been changed to a smaller fine and fewer lashes ; the third had been done away, the law forbidding simply any obstructions to be erected by any person under penalty of fine of not over fifty dollars. In all cases, of free man or slave, the trial was before a justice.^ To make any sweeping assertions as to the rigor or mildness with which this criminal code was enforced against the blacks, would be hazardous. Even if we had the records of all the courts, the few words of the docket entries would tell neither the circumstances of a case nor the fitness of a penalty. Yet we may hope to throw some light on the matter, to say the least. Death sentences were referred, we remember, to the Gov- ernor and Council ; so the Council records show us somewhat how the greatest oifences were dealt with.^ In the case of one negro woman sentenced to death in 1738, for attempting to poison her master, the Council recommended the warrant for execution. In the same year, in an adjoining county, a negro was found guilty of felony deserving death, but the reports sent the Council were not satisfactory, evidently, for the exe- cution was suspended until the Attorney-General could thor- oughly consider the indictment and the process in the case. Some weeks later, that officer reported that the proceedings were regular, and so the negro was executed — it appearing to the Council that he was " a notorious offender." Soon after ' 1801, 70 ; 1805, 31 ; 1808, 78 ; Code of 1860. *The Council records seem to be quite complete during the interesting period from 1738-1770, when, as we have seen, the criminal code became most rigorous. We note tliat in 1088, on the happy birth of the young Prince, tlie Council pardoned several negroes wlio had been lately condemned to death, and returned them to their masters, on payment of costs. (Council Book B., Oct. IG, 1688.) Slaves. 131 this, a court of Oyer and Terminer and jail delivery, of three men, commissioned for Anne Arundel county, reported that they had passed sentence of death on a slave, Isaac, for bur- glary and robbery, on another slave for murder, and on a white man who had committed the burglary with Isaac. As it appeared to the Council that Isaac had borne " a good char- acter and was a real object of compassion," he was recommen- ded to the mercy of the Governor ; but as the crime of the other slave was murder, and as the white man was a notorious oifender, the Council advised that they be executed ; and the Governor acted accordingly. On the receipt of the record from St. Mary's court of the conviction of two slaves for conspiring to poison the overseer, clerk and gardener of their master, warrants for execution were ordered. So, in the next year, two slaves of Anne Arundel were executed, one for bur- glary, the other for rape on a white woman ; and the body of the second, who had been a notorious offender, was hung in chains at some distance from the gallows. In 1742, seven negroes condemned by the Provincial Court, " on clear evi- dence," of the murder of their master, were executed. The court of Charles county passed sentence of death on two negroes for felony, but also recommended that the men were objects of mercy. In this the Council agreed, as the men had never before been charged with any felony, and the Governor issued pardon. In the next year, two negroes murdered an Indian, and they were hung in chains ; and two white men were hung for burglary and murder; while a white boy and a young mulatto slave, condemned for stealing, were pardoned as objects of mercy. In 1 747, two negroes convicted of horse stealing were pardoned; while another of an adjoining county, was executed for the same offence, as he bore " a very ill character ; " and a servant was executed for the murder of a mulatto slave. In 1754, a slave and a white man were sen- tenced to death for storebreaking and stealing, but were par- doned by the Governor at the request of several gentlemen, as they were both very young, and had never been convicted for 132 The Negro in Maryland. offences before. Negroes Pompey, Sambo and Jack were con- demned to death in Anne Arundel for entering a storehouse and stealing fifty pounds of bacon and ten gallons of rum. As Sambo was young, and might, in the opinion of the Council, have been influenced by his father Pompey, he and Jack were pardoned, but Pompey was hung. And a negro who mur- dered his overseer was hung in chains as near as possible to the scene of the murder. When, in 1761, the conviction of two negroes was sent to the Council without proper informa- tion, a letter was sent to the clerk of the coimty court, thus : " The Governor and Council upon hearing read the copy of the conviction of negro Tom for a felony and also of negro Nace for a felony in breaking open the meat-house of Cathe- rine Price of your county, sent up by you without any Letter or Report from the Justices of the county who were present at the Tryals, how the circumstances appeared to them, you are therefore desired to enquire of them in Relation to the same, and transmit their answer to me by the first opportunity, in order to lay it before the Council at their next meeting." At their next meeting was read the report of the justices and a petition from several of them and a clergyman, recommending the offenders as objects of mercy. They were accordingly pardoned. A negress, " Bett Pone," convicted of an attempt to poison her overseer, was also recommended to the mercy of the Governor by the justices, and was accordingly pardoned. When three negroes were sentenced for attempt to poison, in Calvert county, in 1764, the county clerk evidently neglected to send the full particulars to the Council, for the papers were returned with orders that he procure from the justices a report of the behavior of the culprits. Their owners were also asked if they chose to transport the negroes from tlie Province; but they requested the execution of the sentence. There were at that time a number of cases of poisoning or attempts to poison. One slave murdered the wife and child of his master. An- other slave was sentenced, in Prince George's county, for pois- oning a fellow-slave ; but a reprieve was issued, in answer to Slaves. 133 a petition from his master, on the condition that he should not stay in the county after five days from that date. In several cases, negroes were bound over to good behavior — instead of being hung.^ In 1766, a negro was condemned for attempting to poison his master ; convicted by confession and by testimony of a slave who was privy to his preparing a "Dose composed of Ground Poppies and other Ingredients which he supposed Poisonous." A young negress, slave of a citizen of Charles county, was convicted in 1766, of setting fire to a tobacco house, from which the dwelling house of her master was consumed. On asking information, the Council learned that the girl in the absence of her master, drew some cider and left the spigot open, for which her mistress threatened to tell her master and have her whipped. Several times the girl asked forgiveness of her mistress and begged that the fault might be concealed from her master. Then, in despair, she set fire to a tobacco house, and the dwelling house and offices were wholly con- sumed. After the trial, the mistress went to the house of one of the justices and begged him to apply to the Governor for pardon, saying that if the girl were executed, she never could forgive herseli' for obstinately persisting in her threats of punishment ; that she knew not but that the girl might have been intoxicated with the liquor she drew, and that she had before behaved herself " as well as negroes in common do." The master expressed himself as willing to have the girl pardoned. One of the justices testified to the fact that the court had inquired into the girl's character, that she seemed but little sensible of her situation at the trial, and that her youth and her confession of the crime appeared to be the only circumstances in her favor. But the attention of the Council was called, also, to the fact that two other cases of burning of ^ In 1762, a negro was condemned for a felony, in Charles county court ; but a reprieve for a month was issued by the Governor, and the sheriff was ordered to set the fellow free and acquaint him that unless he behaved, he would be called to his former sentence. 134 The Negro in Maryland. tobacco houses had occurred in the same county during the preceding winter. The Council evidently hesitated, considera- tion of the case was put ofiT for some days, and then the war- rant for execution was issued. A slave was convicted in St. Mary's county, the same year, of breaking into his master's store. The master asked for his pardon, stating that the slave had himself confessed, and had not before oifended ; a friend seconded the request, adding that the negro was a very valuable slave; and in addition, one of the magistrates wrote : " I am not fond of having rogues escape punishment, but on the contrary should rather choose they should suifer as examples to others, particularly negroes, among w^hom villainy and roguery is but too common, yet on this occasion I must hope your Excellency wall grant what is desired." So, the follow- ing year, the master of a negro convicted of breaking open a building, asked for his pardon, as the black was valuable and had had a tolerably good character ; while the owner of the building wrote — the master having told him that his consent, as the person injured, would be required — that "if your Excellency is inclinable to extend your mercy unto the poor wretch, I humbly submit." Again, a year later, a petition of twenty-nine names was presented for the pardon of a negro sentenced for burglary, stating that the crime was committed through over-persuasion, youth and inexperience; that the master could not purchase so serviceable a slave, and notwithstanding the high value the court was pleased to put on him, would be a great sufferer at that time if the negro must suffer death ; and that the petitioners would not fear for their property should the boy be pardoned — and again, a pardon was granted. In 1770, three negroes were condemned for murder in Prince George's county, one as having given the blow and the other two as abettors ; and the court stated that it seemed to be the opinion of many gentlemen of the county, as well as of the court, that it would be very pro})er to execute the law in its full rigor. Warrants were so issued, save that the two Slaves. 135 abettors were spared the part of the sentence which directed that the right hand be cut off before execution. This is the only case we find in the Council Records in which the law for the punishment of slaves for the highest crimes seems to have been executed to the letter.^ During this period many culprits, white and black alike, met with no clemency. One of the planters, for instance, who was said indeed to be no good char- acter, was executed for breaking and entering a store house attached to an inn, and stealing therefrom '' two Pair of women's leather Pumps " of the value of fifteen shillings current money. The Governor was empowered, a few years later, to commute death sentences to other penalties. We find mention of thirteen negroes sentenced to death between 1786 and 1 801 . Of these, one slave was hung for rape ; five, of whom at least three were slaves, were transported for rape, arson and other felonies; two slaves convicted of murder were put to work on the roads for fifty years, and two others for twenty years for other felonies ; and the death sentences of three slaves were commuted without specified conditions.^ •Anne Arundel county had a large slave population. We find five cases of slaves before the county court between 1760 and 176-4 — one for assault and rape on a woman, evidently a white; three for breaking and stealing; and one for firing a building. All threw themselves, as the old phrase went, on God and their country, that is were tried by jury, and all chanced to be acquitted and discharged. From 1768 to 1771 two negroes were tried. One, evidently a free negro, was found guilty of manslaughter for killing a negro, and was branded in the hand. The other, a slave, found guilty by a jury of stealing a coat valued at one hundred pounds of ^Act of 1751, ch. 14. By this, the criminal was to have his right hand cut off before execution, and his body quartered and exposed afterward. From this special mention of the execution of the law in its full rigor, we presume that slaves were ordinarily executed as others were. *See Votes and Proceedings, and Resolutions of the Assemblies. 136 The Negro in Maryland. tobacco, was sentenced to be hanged. About the same time, two white laborers, one of whom had stolen a sheep worth eighty pounds of tobacco, and the other various goods to the value of two hundred and eighty pounds, were sentenced to return those things and make four-fold restitution, and to stand in the pillory for five minutes, and to have twenty-five lashes on the bare back at the public whipping post. Of eighty presentments at two terms in 1790, several were for dealing with negroes, and in one case, a free black paid thirty shillings for an assault, but there were no slaves ; of thirty-nine at one term in 1794, one was a white for an assault on a negro and another was a slave woman for an assault, but both failed to appear ; of fifty-three, four years later, one seems to have been the same woman, one was a negro presented for murder, and there was one slave, who was referred to a single magis- trate. Among a multitude of civil suits and of bastardy cases, with an occasional assault or other criminal case, it is here and there only that we find a slave brought before the county courts. Among the papers belonging to the city of Annapolis are several books of proceedings of the mayor's court, which had apparently much the same jurisdiction as single magistrates had in the counties, and which dispensed justice to all persons who disregarded the ordinances of that little city. The court consisted of the mayor, recorder and several aldermen, but the mayor seems to have been absent often. The cases before the court were not, it must be confessed, of a very serious nature. One citizen who allowed his chimney to get on fire, was fined forty shillings ; another, who left broken bottles before his door, paid five shillings on submission, Nvithout trial. But when in 1720 a man had the temerity to utter four separate oaths, one after the other, he was put in the stocks for three hours, and fined for the first oath two shillings and sixpence, and five shillings for each of the others. At the January term of 1790, there were several cases of assault, and one white man was fined seven shillings sixpence and fees for assaulting Slaves. 137 another, and a fellow culprit, five shillings and fees for assault- ing a negro. The* most common offence under the city ordi- nances seems to have been the entertainment of, and sale of liquor to, apprentices, indentured servants and slaves. One person who ventured to sell a bottle of rum to a young Dutch- man in the Governor's service, had to pay five shillings ; and another, who sold a pint of liquor to a negro of Charles Carroll, Esq., without the required permission in writing from the master, atoned by forty shillings. This sum was the cus- tomary fine for thus selling without leave, or for keeping a disorderly house. We find one item of fines due in 1754, from a woman, to wit, to entertaining six slaves, two hundred pounds of tobacco each, or a total of five pounds sterling. At a session in 1765, the grand jury found indictments for entertaining and selling liquor to servants and slaves,tothenumber of sixty- five against one person, of forty-two each against two others, and some forty and more beside. The first mention of negro culprits is at a session of 1783, when of twenty presentments, five were slaves. One, for suffering hogs to go at large, does not appear to have been brought to trial. Two of them, women, appeared and confessed to carrying fire through the street, whereupon one was excused on payment of costs, and the other — probably because she had neither money nor indul- gent master — received the only corporal punishment of which we find mention in these dockets, to wit, one lash on the bare back. She was handed over to the sheriff, who soon informed the court he had executed the judgment. The two others were men, who paid the court each ten shillings and costs for gal- loping on horseback through the streets. The negro boys seem to have taken great delight in fast driving and riding. Sev- eral years later, a free black accused of the same offence, plead not guilty, but was convicted by jury and paid the customary fines. One grand jury of this little court desired to be no respecter of persons, for they presented in 1813, for allowing his sleigh to be driven at improper speed, no less a personage than Charles Carroll of Carrollton ; but the case was dismissed 138 The Negro in Maryland. on motion of the prosecutor. Another citizen was presented, as his slave had over-driven or overworked a horse. Of nine- teen presentments in 1785 one was a black; of twenty-three in 1789 two were blacks, but the cases were not brought up till the following year evidently. All three were accused of forcing horses ; one case was declared ojff, and fines were paid in the others. Two of these were slaves. Of over two hun- dred cases mentioned between 1790 and 1805, twelve were of blacks. Of tM'O, of free blacks, accused of keeping a disorderly house and of letting hogs go astray, we find no further notice. That of a slave for assaulting a man — a white apparently — was quashed. A free black paid ten shillings and costs for riding in a cart unlawfully, and the case of a slave accused of the same oifence was declared off by the court. Two free blacks and two slaves were fined for forcing horses, while the indictments against three slaves for the same offence were quashed. In 1812, there is the mere mention of a negro ac- cused of an assault. The next year, a certain white man was fined eight dollars for assaulting another, and was also found guilty by a jury of assault on a negro, and w^as fined one cent therefor. There is no mention of a case against a negro in the .dockets from 1813 to 1818.' With the abolition of capital punishment except in extreme cases, with the decay of the pillory and the stocks, and with the building of the penitentiary, we find the slaves convicted of serious offences in the circuit courts, ordinarily imprisoned or sold out of the State, and those convicted of minor offences, before these courts or a magistrate, receiving a whipping. Thus in Baltimore, in 1858, a white man was fined three dol- lars and thirty-three cents, and committed in default, by a justice, for pitching cents on Sunday; and a slave brought before the same justice for the same offence, was given fifteen lashes. Another slave, for throwing a brick, contrary to ordi- ' These docket books seem to cover very largely, if not wholly, the work of tlie mavor'H court for the time. Slaves. 139 nance of the city, got the same punishment ; and another atoued by twenty lashes for a threat to shoot a colored lad. One slave who pleaded guilty to stealing a large quantity of iron, was given ten lashes, by request of his master, instead of being sold South. The case of two slaves of Prince George's county, charged with robbery, was dropped on condition that they be sold South. For more serious offences, — a slave boy was given ten years in the penitentiary for setting fire to a stable ; while a young slave girl who tried twice to set fire to her employer's stable, in order, as she confessed, to see the fire engines come up, was released by order of the grand jury of Baltimore criminal court, as not being bright. A slave con- victed in Talbot county court, in 1851, of a violent assault with a knife on a white man, was given five years in the peni- tentiary. A young slave girl presented in Caroline county, in 1855, for causing the death of her mistress by putting arsenic in her coffee, and found guilty of murder in the second degree, was sentenced to eighteen years imprisonment. And a slave of Queen i^nne's county was given nearly the same time, for the murder, in the second degree, of a white raan.^ We see that the letter of the law alone is not sufficient tes- timony to the customary administration of justice. But we ^The local paper adds that a mob was seen about the jail, and that the negro was at once taken to the penitentiary. That part of the old act of 1723 (ch. 15) which allowed the cropping of the ear of a " negro or other slave," convicted before a magistrate of strik- ing a white person or of certain other offences, was formally done away in 1821 (ch. 240). Whipping, limited to thirty-nine lashes, was substituted. Mies' Register for September, 1826, states that a white man had recently undertaken to chastise a black woman who was not his slave, and, when she resisted and whipped him, had had her arrested under the old law which provided cropping of the ear of a black who should make defence against the assault of a white. But the magistrate dismissed the case. " Several severe and very uncouth laws," added the report, "yet remain on 140 The Negro in Maryland. must remember that the court in ^vhich the slave was most liable to meet injustice was that of the local magistrate, who might be called away from business or pleasure, when drunk or sober, to give sentence within a few hours perhaps of the commission of the oflPence, while the injured neighbors were still angry. Of these courts there are no records ; nor are there of those countless courts to which slaves were liable for their every-day conduct — the master or the overseer. Slavery used often to be spoken of by those who favored it, as a patri- archal institution, under which the slaves were subject to the master's judgment and guidance, somewhat as were his chil- dren. There is every reason to believe that the great majority of slaves in Maryland were properly and kindly treated. But as some parents seem to be devoid of that affection which is so common, and which is called natural, so not even the usual kindly feeling of men and their natural disinclination to injure their own property, were sufficient to keep masters occasion- ally from maltreating their slaves. If the white servant was unjustly or abusively treated by anyone, he could enter complaint before the authorities, like any of the colonists. And he could testify in any case as freely, of course, as if he were free. In the records of the our statute books in full force, being unrepealed, but unenforced, because of the ameliorated condition of society, and the changes that have taken place in public opinion." The writer evidently did not know that the law had been changed — we are by no means sure that the magistrate did ! In 1829 was repealed that part of an act of 1793 which allowed the sale at auction, for terms of service, of persons remaining in prison for a month, for non-payment of fines, unable to give recognizance. (1793, 57 ; 1829, 38.) We notice the sale, as servants, of a white woman and her bastard mu- latto child, in 1790; and of white Avomen for having colored children, in 1793 and 1794. The {)unishment of such bastard children, for the sins of their parents, was abolished in 1796. (1796, 67.) When the act for the punishment of criminals was before the House, in 1793, a motion to strike out the clause allowing female prisoners to be given not over fifteen strij)es, for misbehavior, was carried by vote of 40 to 10. Males could i)e given thirty-nine stripes. Slaves. 141 Provincial Court for 1658, for instance, there is mention of two such complaints. But the Council, a half century later, did not allow a servant, we remember, to have his master put under bonds to keep the peace, saying that such a custom would be inconvenient. In 1692, the attention of the Assembly was called to the fact that a certain resident had " most barbarously " cut off the ears of a "mulatto girl, a servant for a long terra of years. A special act thereupon manumitted the girl, as a recompense for the injuries. And there was further enacted that the county court should thereafter set free at once any slave who should be dismembered or cauterized by the master, or by the overseer with the master's consent. And any master or over- seer who should deny to any English servant or slave suffi- cient meat, drink, lodging and clothing, or should unreason- ably burden them with overwork, or refuse to them necessary rest and sleep, should be fined for a first or second offence, in the judgment of the court ; and on a third offence, the servant or slave should be freed. The fines were soon afterwards limited to not over one thousand pounds of tobacco, but there was added that servants and slaves should not be excessively beaten or abused. But the general act of 1715, which super- seded earlier acts on servants and slaves, provided the fine of a thousand pounds of tobacco, and loss of the servant for a third offence, against any master, or overseer acting by the master's orders, who should fail to provide sufficient food, clothing and lodging for, or should unreasonably burden or abuse or keep from proper rest, or give more than ten lashes for any one offence to, "any servant whatsoever." If a master thought his servant deserved more punishment, he could take him before a maoistrate, who could order thirtv-nine lashes. This evidently applied to servants only.^ But before and ' Acts of 1692, 1699, 1704, 1715, 44, on Servants and Slaves. In some sections of the act of 1715, slaves only are mentioned ; in others, both servants and slaves are expressly mentioned ; other sections, still, 142 The Negro in Maryland. after these acts — whether or not the act of 1715 applied to slaves as well as servants — very cruel masters were liable to be brought before the courts. We find notice of an inquest held by the court of Kent county in 1652, over the death of a Scotchman, a servant, with the verdictof the jury that his death was caused by fever, and that the stripes given him by his master, not long before his death, were " not material." Some six years later, a woman was tried in the Provincial Court for causing the death of her servant, and was found not guilty. A planter of some note was brought before the Provincial Court, about the same time, for causing the death of a slave who died under his correction. This case was tried at length, the accused being held over from one court to the next in the sum of one hundred thou- sand pounds of tobacco. The jury gave a verdict of ignoramus, the evidence not being found sufficient to convict.^ If we turn to the latter days of slavery, we find that a resident of Talbot county, complained of to the grand jury by his neigh- bors, was fined a hundred dollars and heavy costs, for cruelty to a slave. When another report of cruelty came to another mention, and apply evidently to, servants only. Herty's Digest of 1799 gives this section in question as applying to servants by indenture or other- wise. (Herty, 476.) By the Code of 1860, a master who did not provide his slave sufficient food, lodging and clothing, or who unreasonably over- worked him or kept him from necessary rest, or excessively beat or abused him, was liable to a fine of twenty dollars for the first and second ofi'ences, and to the loss of the slave for the third. After 1793, the penalty for ma- liciously maiming or dismembering any one was hard labor for years, at least. > See Hanson's Old Kent, 22, 223. Provincial Court Records, 1658-1662, 146, 161, 493. In the case of the planter we read, on the one hand, how the negro was put in chains by order of his mistress for some misdemeanor; how he refused then to work, and pretended to be in a fit ; how he was whipped with a little switch, had hot lard poured down his back, and then, when he got up, was tied to a ladder. Still being stubborn, he was left tied ; a cold wind arose, and he soon died. On the other hand, the over- seer testified that tlie negro would not do even as much work as to get his own food, and had run away and lived by stealing, and was withal " an ugly, yelling, beast-like brute." Slaves. 143 grand jury of the same county, an examination showed that the master, who had recently moved there, had been sold a number of troublesome negroes, that he had suspected one of setting fire to his barn, and had handled them rather roughly, attaching to one of them a ball and chain. The jury de- cided after careful consideration that there was no ground for prosecution. In 1843, there was some little excitement in Baltimore county over the case of a slave boy who was found hung after he had been whipped by his master. The coroner's jury found it to be a case of suicide; and the master recovered in a libel suit, by jury trial in the county court, the sum of one hundred dollars from one of the prominent Baltimore papers which had mentioned the matter, at first, with some slight suspicion as to the circumstances. In 1847, the atten- tion of the Criminal Court in Baltimore was called to a negro boy who was held as an apprentice by one of the superin- tendents of chimneys there. He wore a strong iron collar riveted about his neck, which, the master said, had been put on some six months before, as the boy had run away. The boy himself did not complain of any bad treatment other than this collar. The court examined the indentures of apprentice- ship, and found them wholly invalid, and so ordered the boy's discharge from servitude. Later, in the same court, a man was fined ten dollars and costs, amounting to nearly twenty dollars, for an excessive assault on a slave. Again, a colored chimney sweep, aged only ten, was thought by the coroner's jury to have died from exposure. The sweep-master was then brought before a justice and held over to answer the grand jury in the sum of five hundred dollars. He was tried a month later and found not guilty.' But there were other cases of cruelty than of white to black. In Howard county, in 1858, a man was fined one hundred dollars and costs, and given a keen rebuke besides, for abusing an apprentice boy. A colored ^ Baltimore Stm, Feb. 21st, 1845; Oct. 20th, 1847; Oct. 29th, 1853; Feb. 10th, 1858; Sept. 25th, 1860. 144 The Negro in Maryland. woman of Baltimore was convicted of manslaughter in 1858, in causing the death of her niece, a colored girl, and was given imprisonment for over nine years — the full extent of the law. A white man of Baltimore was put in jail for three months and fined in all over seventy dollars, for severely whipping his daughter. We find here and there in the court records, those expressions of the brutal side of human nature which are to be seen the world over. But the presence of a servile class, of a race deemed far infericn* to the whites, added temptations t(j the man who might be quick m temper, drunken in habit, or ci-uel in nature. And it was often impossible — however tlie best elements in the community may have desired it — to have cruelty punished with deserving rigor.^ ^ Leave was given in the House of Delegates, in 1818, to bring in a bill on assaults and batteries committed on slaves. All we know of it is that it was to apply to certain counties only, that it was reported by a committee, and that the matter then ended by its being referred back to the committee with instructions for a bill for the summary punishment of slaves using provoking and insolent language. (House Journal, 13, 36.) Note. — As personal property, slaves were subject to sale at their masters' will. Many masters, as is well known, avoided any sale of their servants, especially faithful ones. In some cases — in the distribution of estates most likely — there was attached to the sale the condition that they siiould not be taken from the State. Thus we find in the Eastern Shore Whig, 1S30, the notice of a trustee's sale of negroes, not to be sold to persons out of Maryland, or to those who would sell them out Again, in the Baltimore Sun, 1858, a negro is advertised, sound, sold for no fault, and not to be taken out of the State. A certain resident of Baltimore had bought a girl for a term of j'ears, on condition that she sliould not be sold away ; but finding her vicious and of troublesome habits, lie applied to tiie court, and got leave to sell her in or out of the State. A firm of slave dealers on the Eastern Shore advertised in the Easton Gazette, in 1845, under a large heading, Casli ! Casii I " We have returned from tlie South, and are again in the market with a plentiful supply of the needful, which we will exchange for every descrip- tion of negroes," but those who did not care to sell servants out of tlie State were assured that their wishes would be followed. Tiie same firm offered for sale a woman, slave for a term of years, and two young diildren, on con- dition that they be not .separated. Of goods and chattels to be sold at shcrifl's' or constables' sales, notice was to be given for ten days previous to sale, by posters in at least three Slaves. 145 public places, except for slaves, who, like lands and tenements, were to be posted for twenty days and published in a newspaper. (1816, 129, &c.) A wife's property was not responsible for her husband's debts, unless acquired from him in prejudice of creditors. The control and management of slaves owned by a wife were in the husband, and at the death of the wife, the slaves and any increase born up to her death, went to her children, subject to the use of the husband during his life, without liability to his creditors. The increase of the slaves born during the survivorship of the husband were his in absolute right. If the wife died without leaving chil- dren or their descendants, the slaves went to the husband. (1842, 293. 17 Md., 352.) Slaves had frequently to be sold or separated in the settlement of estates. The Provincial Court, in 1749, had decided that the issue of slaves born during the life of one who held the slaves for life only, passed with the slaves to the remainderman ; but the Court of Appeals, three years after, held that the legatee for life was entitled to the increase born during the continuance of the life estate. This was on the principle that the bequest for life of the use of a female slave vested in the tenant for life a property in the issue born, as " a part of the use." Thus, in the ease of an ante- nuptial contract by which the husband was to be entitled, on the death of the wife, to whatever profit or issue accrued to the wife's property during her married life, the Court of Appeals held that the slaves owned by the woman at marriage went to her representatives, but the children of the negroes, born during that time, belonged to the surviving husband, being " issues and profits." (1 H. & McH., 109 ; 7 H. & J., 194 ; 10 G. & J., 299 ; 10 Md., 251.) But a case which came before the Chancellor in 1850, in which land and negroes and other property were left in trust, the " income " to be applied to a certain person during life, was held to be different, and the increase of the negroes was deemed the property of the person for whom the estate was held in trust. " To separate the i.ssue from the mother," added the Chancellor, " involves the necessity of determining at what age this may be done. The infant cannot be torn from its mother. . . . No one would buy, and humanity would cry out against it." Appeal was taken on this decision, the Court of Appeals was divided, and so it stood confirmed. (4 Md., 532). The general principle in such cases was as before stated. (4Md. Chan., 162.) In 1886, also, the Court of Appeals,— reversing a decree of the Court of Chancery, — decided that the issue of a mortgaged slave born after the title of the mortgagee had become absolute, although the slaves were in the pos- session of the mortgagor, was liable for the payment of the debt as well as the parent, and might be sold, in the process of law, with the parents. The mortgagee being legal owner of the parent must also own the offspring born during his title, subject to the equitable right of the mortgagor to redeem. " We are happy to find," said the Court, " that in this instance, the law of 10 146 The Negro in Maryland. the land and the law of nature .... are in perfect harmony." (8 G. & J., 24.) No slaves, the subjects of an action of replevin, could be sold during the action. The House of Delegates urged on the Senate the passage of the prohibition, as slaves had been replevied from their owners and sold at once out of the State. (1833, 274.) There is mention of a bill reported to the House in 1856, to prevent the sale of slaves at the suit of creditors, or for payment of the owner's debts. It i(» nut uninteresting to note that at the Assembly of 1671, a bill for the "Preservation of Orphans' Estates" was carefully considered. Objection was made to the provision that the guardian should deliver to the ward, on bec-oming of age, negroes of like ages and ability, "because no man can be sure iiereafter to purchase any negroes," and guardians might also take or Bell the negntes of the estate to their own use. So it was enacted that no negroes should be disposed of in any way as long as there were other goods of the estate suHicient to satisfy all just debts; but all slaves should be appraised to the guardians or administrators and employed to their benefit, and the like number and of like ability returned to the wards out of the increase ; any deficit to be made good in money or tobacco, under the appraisement of the county courts. And if the guardians did not wish to attfpt the slaves on these terms, the courts should so let them out as to best prvKTve them and their increase, that the wards might have the original stock made good to them " in number, value and ability." (Md. Arch., II, 317, \.c.) The act of 1729 (eh. 24), which was in force apparently to 1798, provided that no slaves should be sold by an executor or administrator, or n-MTved for iiis own use for |iayment of any private debt; nor should slaves be taken in execution for debt so long as there were other goods. We shall »t.-v, in the chapter on manumission, the protection that was given at law to slnveN ninnumitted. \n act of 1662 declared as taxables, all male children born in the Prov- in\)r u hundred years and mure after the settlement of Mary- land, tliere were no regulations by law for the manumission of slaves. There was simply the declaration that baptism did ruit give freedom. Some masters freed their slaves, and some slaves |>etitioned the courts for freedom ; but such cases were f«'W. The forms and solemnities by which freedom was vested in the negro depended, probably, on the legal ideas of the rn.Tster or of the local magistrate, as was the case in some Northern States always, where the number of slaves remained insignificant. Claims for freedom were tried, as far as we know, in the Provincial Court or the General Court only, for many years. Thus, in 1693, the Provincial Court received the jM-tition for freedom of a negro woman who had been born in New England and brongiit to Maryland, as she claimed, as u servant. But the jury found her a slave, and such she remained.' In 1747 a citizen of Queen Anne's county raanu- nnttenl several slaves by his will and gave also to them and, their heirs a tract of land, A hundred years after, the heirs sold a portion of this land, but doubts were expressed as to the validity of the title given, as the original bequests had been made at a time when manumission by will was not authorized by law. So a sj)eoial act declared the will valid, and the heirs 'C.urt lU-4-onlH, Libor C, 162, 361. Tho inovision of the act of 1715, thm till* I'rovim-iiil iind county courts could determine complaints between inulcm riiwl mrvjinU by wiiy of iK-tilion, may have brougiit petitions for frwioni U'forr iho counlv courts. (See 2 II. iK: McII., 2i) ; 4 (Jill, 257.) Manumission. I49 of the negroes free and in full possession of the land, so as to give a good title.^ In 1752, when the slave population may have been forty thousand, was enacted the lirst law on manu- mission. Some masters had used their slaves as long as they were profitable, and had then turned them adrift to burden the community or to perish through want, to the great scandal of Christian society, as the act tells us. It was enacted, there- fore, that all slaves unable to support themselves should be supported by their masters ''in fitting food and clothing," and kept from begging. Delinquent masters could be put under bonds to do their duty. And slaves to be manumitted must be sound in body and mind, capable of labor and not over fifty years of age. And in order that there might be an uniform way of granting freedom, there was enacted further, that all manumissions must be in writing, under hand and seal, with two witnesses ; the papers to be acknowledged and endorsed by a justice, and then to be recorded within six months in the clerk's office of the county. This need of two witnesses, said the Court of Appeals in 1835, was to surround grants of manumission with such form and solemnity that slaveholders might be guarded against hasty and inconsiderate action. And the grant of freedom to slaves was declared null and void, if by a will or deed or any order, during the last fatal illness of the master; inasmuch, says the law, as the right to give freedom by last will may be attended with many evils. Manumission was also declared illegal when it woukl operate in predjudice of creditors.^ This act was entitled, an act to prevent disabled and superannuated slaves being set free, or the manumission of slaves by any last will or testa- ment. It dates from the time when an interesting case was before the authorities at Annapolis. By the will of a certain citizen, made shortly before his death apparently, in 1747, nineteen slaves were freed and given also a great part of 1 1845, 327. ' 1752, 1 ; 7 G. & J., 183 ; 5 H. & J., 253. 150 The Negro in Maryland. his real and personal estate; but a niece of the testator began legal i)rooee< lings against the executors, to prove the will null and void. The executors, who made no claims to any- thing under the will, neglected to produce testimony or have witnesses examined in favor of the negroes, so a petition was pix-sentcd on their behalf to the judge of probate, Daniel Dulanev, Esq., asking that they might be admitted defendants " to defend the said libel," and that they might have the wit- nesses to the will. In answer, though the petition was not shown until after depositions were in and the probation closed, tlu-v were allowed two months in which to have depositions taken, in (^rder that all legal rights and advantages might be given them. Over a year later, in 1751, Mr. Dulaney gave the npiniun that the will was the result of the influence of the slaves — rather the will of the slaves than of the master. Such a will, he said, was contrary to law, and to pass it would be the greatest encouragement to the slaves of a person in the situation ol" the testator, to compel their master to give his property to them in prejudice of his own relations. The will was there- fore declared V(»id. On the prayer of the negroes, a court of delegates was appointed by the Governor to review the decree of Mr. Dulaney ; and this court closed its work some six niiMiths later, divided in opinion, two for and two against a confirmation. Finally, in 1752, another court of commis- sionei-s was appointed; the case was reviewed, the decree of Mr. Dulaney declared null and void, and the will established ami freetlom given, and all costs ordered to be paid from the tcHtator's estate.' In 1780 a petition for freedom of several Hlaves eaine before the General Court. Their master had |irojM-rly executetl a deed of manumission, but it was done during his Ia.st illnes,s, only eleven days before his death. Two wwks ejulier he had spoken of manumission as desirable, '"" '" ■'" """•■' to the public; but he had since, he said, ' l{doni, nhould remove them in order to injure their claim, the court of the it)nnly in whidi thev liad lived would still have jurisdiction of the case. » 1^.11 -J Is Manumission. 155 sion to the contrary, would be slaves. When this bill was considered in the House, an attempt was made to change it so that such issue should in all cases serve the owners of the mother, twenty-five years for males and twenty for females, and should then be free ; but this was defeated bv a laro-e majority. As has been seen, no deed or will was valid to grant manu- mission to slaves who would be over forty-five years, or unable to gain a support, at the time of becoming free. The law, if carried out to the letter, would then operate to shut out not only the old or infirm, but also infants, who were plainly incapable of work. A certain young negress was manumitted by deed in 1803, to receive freedom when she became thirty years old, and any children born to her before that time were to be free at birth. A child of this woman, born during the terra of service, was treated as a free person until she was nineteen years old. On her petition, Baltimore city court confirmed her right to freedom ; but the Court of Appeals reversed the judgment, as no child was capable at birth of self-support, and hence of receiving freedom. Again, a certain negro woman and two children were manumitted by deed in 1825, when the children were very young. When, some ten years later, it was represented to the Assembly that those children might therefore be enslaved, and that their mother had supported them until they were able to support themselves, a special act was passed to ensure their freedum." 1 1809, 171. 8 H. & J., 431. * 4 H. & J., 199 ; 6 H. tSc J, 17 ; 8 G. & J., 19 ; 1834, ch. 246. At tlie Assembly of 1808, the House received a petition for leave to man- umit a slave who was above the age limited by law. A bill was passod, but was defeated in the Senate. In 1825, a special act allowed the manumis- sion by deed of a slave above the age of forty-five, with the proviso that if the negro became unable to maintain himself, he should in no case come on the county for support, but should have the same claim on his old master or the master's estate, as if the act had not been passed. An act of 1827 also made valid a deed of manumission to a negress, as if sh- win- under 156 The Negro in Maryland. A deed of numumission, in order to grant freedom, must not only be properly executed before a magistrate and wit- nest. .\l8o, 12 Md., 274 ; 17 Md., 508. • .Md. (linn., I, -"JO. ' \» Kcnd on his status as slave or free, we find counsel assigned the prisoner, and the right of appeal further assured liim, by order of the Asseml)ly. There was enacted in 1856, that when proceedings should be entered into, for declaring void a inipriHonnient, itc. *S«' lt.-|Kirl to Houst' of DeU-Kiitcs on tlie Baltimore Abolition Soc, 1791, 1 II. .V .1., 'JiiH. A bill was intnxluced in the House of Delegates in 1795, to |ircvrnt thf n-nidval from the State of those who had petitioned or might jitlilion for frewioni, but it was defeated by eleven voices. 3fan iimission. i C) 3 lem- the law," should defend his wards as they might defend the selves, if free, and the court on full hearing should i)ass such judgment as would be given if all the parties to the case were free men. And all costs, including a fee of twenty or thirty dollars to the guardian, in discretion of the court, should fail on the complainant.^ When a certain petition for freedom came before Baltinjore county court, in 1848, there was stated to the court that the petition was in the slave's name but was tiled without his authority. The slave, on examination, stated that he did not Avish to have the case pursued ; that his only hope of freedom lay in his mother's effort to purchase him. So the case was dismissed. In the same court, the next year, it was suggested by counsel that the free parent of a petitioner for freedom who seemed to be under age and whose petition was about to be dismissed, might have interests which would allow her to maintain the petition, but the court held that the right to free- dom was strictly a personal one. And in another case, in Avhich a father petitioned in behalf of his children, a new peti- tion had to be filed, in the name of the parties asking frealom, by their next friend. The cost for recording a deed of manumission was the ordi- nary trivial fee for record. And a certified copy of a deed was always deemed good evidence of freedom. A bill was juissed in 1805 to prevent, as we read, the great mischiefs which had arisen from slaves who had gotten possession of certitiralcs of free blacks, and had so passed as free. Certificates of free- dom were to be granted only by clerks of the county courts and registers of wills, and were to contain the particulars for iden- tification of the negroes and statements of the time at which ' 1856, 140. We notice that in two cases, county officers were onlcrod liy the Assembly to pay jailors for taking care of and feeding neveral peti- tioners for freedom. It is mentioned in one case that they belonged U> an insolvent estate. Experience has fully shown, said the Court of Ai)iKal«, that negroes before the courts as petitioners for freedom have nt-ver lo-.t their rights from the want of generous professional aid. (S (iill, ^ol.) jg4 The Negro in Maryland. freetlom had been acquired. No other person could give a cvrtifi«\nte, under ])onalty of five hundred dollars, and clerks and registers were lial)le to the same amount if they issued any illegally. A negro applying for a certificate must prove that he was the person manumitted, and no second paper would be given unless he took oath or j)roved by some credible and disinterested \yitness that the original was lost. Another act, two vcars later, provided that papers could be given only in the counties where the deeds or wills had been recorded. In 1831, the records of St. Mary's county, and, a few years later, tht.tse of Worcester, were destroyed by fire. In the acts of the Assembly allowing documents to be recorded over again, and the existence of rights and possessions to be established, there is no special mention of certificates of manumission. But an Hf't of 1852, after the burning of Dorchester court-house, ^•(piircd the commissioner appointed to re-establish all records and legal documents, to take all testimony as in other cases, ill n-gard to the rights of such free negroes as might apply to liini in wi-jting, and to report this evidence to the circuit (siiirt, which should decide on the validity thereof. From this judginrnt the negro could appeal, as in cases of petition for free who wort' ftitilletl to freedom under deeds already recorded or wilU iilnndy |»rol.nleld not be deemed evidence of the execution previously of any deed or will granting freedom, nor be taken as a ground for presuming freedom.^ ' 6 G. & J., 86 ; 8 do., 102. » 9 Gill, 120; do., 483. =« A bill was reported by a committee to the House of Delegates, in 1821, for an act of limitations, to prevent slave owners from reclaiming female slaves and their posterity, after having allowed them to marry free men and live as free; but it was referred without result to the next Assembly. 174 The Negro in Maryland. A ctTtain negro woman who liad been given certain lands bv will of her deceased master, was granted a certificate of fretnluiu by Prmce George's county court, which was confirmed by the Court of Appeals, in 1821, on the ground that a de- vise of property, real or personal, to a slave by his owner entitles him also to freedom, by implication. A certain resi- dent of Charles county devised by his will, probated in 1857, that a ne««-ro woman and her four children "shall work for themselves, by paying my executors, annually, one cent per vear hire." The balance of his property was left to certain j)arties, by a residuary clause. The executors claimed the freedom of the negroes, the residuary legatees o]iposed, and the circuit court, in equity, gave them to the legatees. The Court of Appeals affirmed this judgment, as the intent of the testator was evidently that the negroes should be discharged from servitude, and be free in fact but not in law — a state entirely contrary to the policy of the law, and in plain viola- tion itf the act of 1831 touching manumitted slaves, and of that of 1817 prohibiting owners of slaves to allow them to go at large and hire themselves out.^ ' 'y II. \ J., I.')! ; 17 >f,l.^ 23. Tlie negroes licre (17 Md.) were notdeemed |>«r(icH lo iliu jircK't'iiliiigs, being dealt with by the courts as property. CHAPTER V. The Free Negro. To end a study of African slavery with manumission would be neither thorough nor just. For the status of the freedman shows most clearly the distinction that was felt, aside from the relation of master and slave, between Anglo-Saxon and African ; and the growth of the free black population affected more and more all questions of slavery and emancipation. If we find, on the one hand, slaveholders anxious for the repres- sion or banishment of the free-black, as dangerous to their interests, we find also many zealous opponents of slavery una- ble to believe that the whites and blacks could live together in freedom and in peace. We have left those laws which affected all negroes, free and slave alike, to be noticed under the head of the free negro, to emphasize the better this race distinction.^ The number of free colored persons was small and there was little mention of them, tmtil the close of the eighteenth century. The population of Baltimore county — including the later Harford county— in 1752, was given as over eleven thousand free whites, nearly a thousand white servants, be- tween five and six hundred convicts— the imported felons, one hundred and sixteen mulatto slaves, one hundred and ninety-six free raulattoes, and four thousand and twenty-seven 1 The subject can be studied to great advantage in Maryhmd. In several of the lower counties there were more slaves than whites, wliile tl.e total free black population was larger than that of any other slave Slate. ^ * 175 176 The Negro in 31aryland. iipgro slaves and eight free negroes/ In the lower counties, the proportion must have been less. The census of 1790 gives about eight thousand free colored persons in the State. Some of these, or their ancestors, had come as freemen, most had been manumitted.^ From this time on, the number increased with surprising rapidity. In January, 1807, was begun the permanent policy of forbidding the removal of free negroes or mulattoes into Maryland. The bill passed the House by a vote of forty-three to eight. No free black coming in, except sailors, wagon drivers and messengers in the actual service of a non-resident, could stay over two weeks, under penalty of ten dollars a week. And those failing, on convic- tion, to pay the fines or give satisfactory security for departure within two weeks, w^ere to be sold by the sheritF for a term sufficient to pay fines and costs. No one could employ or harbor a non-resident free black without liability to a fine of five dollars a day.^ But the blacks continued to come. In 1814 and 18 IG, bills for further legislation passed the House, tiie second by the casting vote of the Speaker, and were de- feated in the Senate. In 1822, sundry inhabitants of Wor- cester county jX'titioned that the free blacks coming into their county from Virginia might be fined or whipped. The next year, a supjdcmentary act declared that no length of residence would ex('m])t from punishment, and that those who might re- tinii or rniiaiii alter IxMug punished, should be again arrested, and ordcri'd the magistrates and officers of nine counties to enforce the law.* (Officers could be fined ten dollars for neg- lect. Tlie Senate at first rejected this bill, but yielded to the reprenentJition of the House that the evils against which the '<;riiruli'H Anijiils of Baltiinire, 88. Tlio distinction hotween negroes Kixi iiinhitlocM In interesting. • Wf (in.l the mere mention u( tlie reading in tiio House of Delegates, in H<'-J, uf n petition from tlie rr<<>liurn people of eolor in Maryland. ♦ lH'j:i. |C,1. The eoiuities named were Allegany, Anne Arundel, Calvert, Charlus Kent, .Montguntery, Prince George's, Somerset and Worcester. The Free Negro. ]77 act of 1806 bad been directed, bad increased in ten-fold ratio in tbe counties on tbe Virginia line. We find mention of peti- tions for residence on bebalf of some twenty negroes, between 1806 and 1831, but eight of these only were favored. One fellow, for exam])le, from Virginia was given legal residence, as it appeared that he had lived in Maryland fo"r some time' usefully employed in boating, and had proven his good char- acter. In 1824, the House passed a bill in favor of a certain black who had moved from Virginia into Charles county, but it was rejected in the Senate. The man seems to have then moved into another county and to have renewed his petition at the next session of Assembly, but with the same result. A colored woman of Pennsylvania asked leave to move to Mary- land in vain, — the House refusing, on reconsideration of the bill, to admit her on condition that she should procure a bond of fifty dollars, conditioned for her good behavior. The next year, 1829, leave was refused for a bill to allow a member of the House to import a free black to work at his forge. Later in the session, the bill was again brought in, but so amended as to limit the residence to five years; and was then defeated. On the other hand, several free blacks were allowed to bring in their wives. More stringent legislation followed the Nat Turner insur- rection, in 1831. The fine for remaining in the State after ten days was fifty dollars a week — half to the informer — on conviction before a justice; and sale, as before, in default. For harboring or employing the black, the fine was raised to twenty dollars a day after the expiration of four days — half to the informer — to be recovered before a justice, with the right of appeal to the court. And any negro who might leave Maryland and remain away over thirty days, would be deemed a non-resident and liable to the law, unless before leaving he should deposit with the county clerk a written statement of his plans, or on returning, could prove by cer- tificate that he had been detained by sickness or wercion. Wao'oners, hired servants with their masters, and sailors on 12 178 The Negro in 3[aryland. vessels having white officers, were exempted, as were those who might euter the State and be prevented from leaving by 8ickne.s8 or accident. And, to encourage colonization, persons might go and come at will between Maryland and Liberia. Each Assemblv received some half dozen petitions for resi- dence. One bill, to allow a black to bring in his wife, passed the House and was thrown out in the Senate; while, several yem-s later, a black of Washington county was allowed to brin«j- in his wife, on condition that she should uot leave that county. One negro was allowed, in 1833, to move mto Charles county from Virginia, on paying fifty dollars to the State, and giving bond with two securities, citizens of that county, in the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars, for his gocid bi'iiavior for a year. Another was given residence, in 1H37, on i)ayment of fifty dollars for the State Colonization Society, and a bond of two thousand dollars. Out of six applications fi)r residence, in 1835, one only was granted. F(HM- petitions were rejected the next year. And the next year, again, seven were rejected and one granted. Some were .signed not only by the negroes but by friendly citizens. In 1830, iM'titions were presented in the House of Delegates from sundry residents of Baltimore and Harford counties, anH,")(); Sopt. Dtll, IH^S. The Free Negro. 185 transporting them fraudulently from the State until 1800, when the act on crimes gave imprisonment between two and ten years for transporting or arresting with intent to transport a black known to be free. We find the Society of Friends and others asking for further legislation, in 1815, and again in 1816, when the grand jury of Baltimore county presented a memorial to the Assembly to the same effect. These efforts seem to have been directed against the transportation both of free negroes and of those to be free after a term of service. A lengthy bill was introduced in the House in 1816, to for- bid the purchase of any slaves for transportation, except under certain forms and conditions. Also, it ordered magis- trates to hold for the courts all parties suspected of fraudu- lent purchase, and to require the defendent to give special bail, should the black file a petition for freedom and institute a suit for false imprisonment. And, further, as there was repre- sented that negroes committed as runaways were sometimes free persons, and were prevented by imprisonment from pro- curing evidence of freedom, it provided that all negroes held as runaways and duly advertised, aud held then for a limited time after the notification of the reputed owners, should not be sold as heretofore, but should be set free, all costs being paid by the public. This bill practically failed to pass the House then, for these two vital clauses were lopped off; but the next Assembly passed a bill embodying its essential features, except the mention of suits for false imprisonment. Three memorials were read at that session against kidnai)pmg. The Senate passed the bill with one opposing vote only, hut there was considerable opposition in the House, directed pro- bably against the discharge of unclaimed runaways. The preamble to the bill states that servants and slaves had been sometimes removed by fraud from the State, and the children of free negroes sometimes kidnapped aud sold as slaves for life in distant places.' In 1824, the penalty of death was 1 See House Journals. Journal of ISIG, 97, &c. Act of 1817, 112. Si-e Kunaways and Sale of Slaves. 186 The Negro in Maryland. prescrihcil f-.r tlie nuirder of any person known to be free or entitled to freedom, committed in arresting such with the iiitnitioii of transportation beyond the State. There were .-(•v. nil motions for further legislation, with no result; and a bill to repeal the act of 1817 was left on the table.^ The files of Niles' Register and of the Baltimore papers, show what we might expect, that the laws and the stronger public opinion of all good citizens were not able to prevent kidnap- ping entirely. Niles say.<, in 1821, after the notice of a kid- napper just sent to the penitentiary for five years, that "this infernal business" was carried on to a great extent, owing, in his oi)ini(m, to ineffective laws; and again, in 1826, that a number of colored children had been stolen.^ This most aboujinable of all trades, he adds, had revived with scarcity of UKjney. V.'e find notice of several suspected kidnappers given over to the police by slave dealers in Baltimore. In IHOO, when the Baltimore police were making special efforts to execute the law, there were ten arrests at least for kidnap- ping. In several of these cases, the blacks kidnapped were of tlinse who had been sentenced to service for limited times by th(.' c«turts — a punishment which increased, surely, the oppor- tunities for abuses.^ By the Constitution of 1776 the right of suffrage was given to all freemen of age who held a certain amount of property. It is certain tliat some free negroes voted in the early yeare of the State. Ft»r instance, evidence was given in Baltimore 'Houw JoiimnlK, 1822, 127; 1825, 260; 1845, 465; 1826, 355. •Sw .Vi7,- r i v See the valuable memoir of Benj. Banneker, by J. H. h. LatroLc, l-xj. (Md. Hist. Soc. publications, 1845.) Mt is interesting to note that the House committee on Grievances, &c., reported to the House, in 1798, that they had found in the ja.l of Anne 18g The Negro in Maryland. ^Faiiy free negroes owned small houses and pieces of land, and some (jf the most indnstrious not a little personal property. Tiie acts of incorporation of some savings banks limited de- positors to white persons, others could receive from any jKM-sons. In Annapolis, for instance, several free blacks were depusitors at the savings bank, and one at least owned shares of the bank stock. The act of 1852, allowing the formation of homestead or bnilding, and of other associations, to promote economy and frngality among the people and an increase of the taxable property, expressly excluded free blacks. There were evidentlv doubts as to whether real estate could be held legally by blacks, or the descendants of blacks, manumitted after the act of 1831. In 1848, the chancellor held as void a devise of certain real estate to several negroes, by the will under which they were freed, as such frcedmen could not remain in the State on terras compatible with sure and unrestricted enjoyment of the property. Ten years later, however, the Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment of the circuit court for St. Mary's county, that the taking of real estate in trust for the benefit of manumitted blacks was not inconsistent with the ])olicy of the State. A devise of land, added the court, might j>romote this, indeed, by giving negroes the means to emigrate, if called on to do so by officers of the law ; nor would it give any rights not enjoyed by other free blacks.^ The act of 1H.31, as we know, was not executed. When a certain negro jM'titiniied in 1835 for leave to dispose of real estate to his Arundel county a negro claiming to be free, who had been committed by a juHti<-«' of piMice by an order not under seal and which did not specify the oflt-no — in Hhort, witiiout those forms and solemnities wliicii warrants kIk.uM hnv«', by the law, "to liave the effect of depriving a citizen of his |M-p><)h!il lib«Tly." Tiie committee advised the passage of a resolution, to onItT ihe lilui'k lo be brought bv writ of habeas corpus before a judge of the Md., Hi. Wc li.ul propeif. IrUI iu trust for The Free Negro. 189 children, the House committee on Grievances answered tliat the laws did not prevent free blacks from holding real estate, or from transmitting it to their legitimate issue. In 18.3G, when it must have been plain to many that voluntary emigra- tion was not likely to succeed, a member of the House moved an inquiry by the committee as to the expediency of forbidding free blacks to acquire or hold real estate, with the suggestion that two years at the utmost would be time for those already holding real estate to dispose of it. This was laid on the table. Two years later, a motion to the same effect wa.s evidently allowed in the Senate, but we find no further men- tion of the matter. A petition presented in 1849 by seventy- six citizens of Caroline county, for a law to allow free blacks to inherit and hold property, may have been signed as a pro- test against the recent decision of the chancellor, or else lor exemption for freedmen from the law of descent, which hin- dered transmission of property to children not born in lawful wedlock. The fact that the marriage of a slave was not rec- ognized at law, as well as the looseness of the marriage tie araons: the free blacks, would have caused the estates of some negroes to have devolved to the State. There are a dozen or more acts in the statute books, relinquishing the rights of the State in favor of colored families. For instance, a certain freeman died about 1832, leaving a house and land in Fred- erick county, and some personal property. His reputed and acknowledged wife, unable to furnish legal proof of marriage, was freed by special act from danger of having this forfeited, to the school fund of the county, in default of heirs. One act allowed eight colored families to inherit and enjoy the property of their respective fathers. By another, the property of a free negro was allowed to descend to his only child, sub- ject to right of dower of the wife.' 1 1832 204; 1834, 183, 187 ; 1849, 475 ; 1856, 337 ; 1858, 75, 296, 351, Ac. There was a favorable report in the House, in 1860, on making the luw giving certain allowances to widows, apply to free negroes as to wliites. A 190 The Negro in Maryland. ^^^• have seen in the chapter on manumission that free negroes not infrequently owned as slaves their wives and chil- dren — whom they feared, perhaps, to manumit, lest the right to residence might be questioned. It would seem, also, that other free negroes owned and hired slaves, as did their white nei<,dil)(»rs. We hear of one free black, of Dorchester county, receiviui: payment for a slave, whom he had bought for a term of vears, antl who was sold out of the State for crime by the court. In 1827, a member for the same county had intro- duced a bill to forbid anyone owning slaves for life or a term of years, from hiring such to a free negro there. Kent and Somerset were ailded to Dorchester and, later, Worcester and Anne Arundel were added, and Kent struck out; and then thec<»mmittee on Grievances, ordered to inquire into the expe- diency of preventing free blacks from purcliasing slav^es under any circumstances, reported that any legislation on the subject was inexjH'dient.^ The law of evidence in the Code of 1860 was very simple, and based strictly on the color line ; colored persons, free or slave, cx>uld testify for or against colored, but not in any case regular marriage between free negroes was duly recognized, of course. We find two cjiscH in which colored men were brought before Baltimore city criniinul court for bigiuny, but were dismissed from lack of proof of second niarriagf. (Haltimore Sun, February 5th, ISoG; August 11th, 1860.) On tin- oiht-r haml, an indictment against a black for bastardy was quashed in llallimore county circuit court, the judge holding, after consultation with the Courl of Aj.peals, that the act of 1781, 13, against fornication, and other Bimilur iici«, did not apjily to negroes. (Baltimore Sun, .Jamiary ISth, lh.'>;{.) We find mention of a marriage license for blacks; and of an appli- cjition by u colored woman for divorce, to the city circuit court. ' 1S,VJ. 1 l-J ; House Journal, lS-27, 11, 73, 358, 382. Persons having free tUck np|.renlice« were forbidden by 184G, 355, to allow them to remain in ll..- .-niploynu-nt or custody of free blacks. This may have been to prevent llirir rimuining ut home with their parents. The Free Negro. 191 in which a white person was concerned. But tlie law liad not always been so simple, and the history of its growth is most significant. In 1717, there was enacted that no Indian or negro, slave or free, nor mulatto slave should be admitted as evidence before court or magistrate in any case in which a Christian white person was concerned. This was at a time when ship-load after ship-load of the rudest Africans were imported yearly, and it must have been long before many of them learned even the English language. But the law was not to protect the whites only, for these Indians and negroes were not allowed to testify against their fellows excoj)t — w here other evidence was lacking — in petty cases not punished by loss of life or member. Nor, apparently, could a slave testify against a free black. And further, while the child of a white man and a mulatto slave would be during life incapable of witnessino; ag-ainst a white, the child of a black man and a white woman — there were not a few cases of such oflf'spring — wouhl be so disqualified during the limited term, only, for which he was put to service. A free mulatto was good evidence against a white person. In short, the status was not dependent on color only. In 1751, as heinous felonies had been committed, the testimony of slaves was allowed against slaves accused of capital crimes, where there were pregnant circumstances to confirm it, in the judgment of the court. And slaves were always to be warned by the court of the severe corporal punishment to be given them, if they perjured themselves. The imported convicts, mostly felons from England, were at the same time declared good evidence against one another; as they had been encouraged to wicked- nesses, we read, by the fiict that they were not legal witnfss(>s. In 1792, the House of Delegates considered a hill to prevent stealing by free negroes, which provided, among other things, that any slave over fifteen years of age might testily to con- vict a free negro of illegal dealings with a slave; as tiicre had been great inducements for slaves to steal and dispose-of the goods to free negroes, who could be convicted by the testimony 192 The Negro in 3Ianjland. of white persons only, who were seldom privy to such deal- ings. Tiiis clause was struck out by a vote of thirty to twenty- .soven. But nine years later, slaves were declared good evi- dence for or against any colored person on trial for stealing or fur dealing in stolen goods. A few years later, in 1808, the grand jury of Queen Anne's county asked the attention of the A.sscnibly to inconveniences which had arisen from the ina- bility of a free negro to testify against anotiier free negro iu capital cases; and it was therefore enacted that in all criminal cases any negro or mulatto, slave or free, could testify for or av«- thfir raws. Nor could nuinumitted negroes, as we have seen, make •fliilnviiH, in railing on the courts to marsliall assets of their masters' estates. CJ n. A: .1.. Vl\ ■ V> M.I. L'7l; Md. Chan. I, 296.) The Free Negro. 107 " negro " being enough to notify the opposite party of tlie fact of color, and thus to afford hira " an opportunity to show the condition of slavery, if such be the case, by pleading tliat dis- ability." The question, added the Court, is one of great practical importance, and all doubt should be removed. Tliore are but two cases in which, at law, a negro suffers a disquali- fication because of the presumption arising from his color — when brought forward as a witness in a case in which a white is concerned ; and where the question is his freedom vd non, when he must bear the burden of proof. From the earliest history of Maryland, free negroes have been allowed to sue in courts, as well as to hold both real and personal property ; and as long as they remain there could be no greater incentive to thrift and respectability than the protection of their earn- ings.^ The Court of Appeals also refused to allow a man who had treated a negro as a freeman in a lower court, to turn about and try to prove him a slave, on an appeal, so as to deprive him of a legal status in the higher court.^ Some of the English serving women imported early into the Colony, married negro slaves, and a law of 1664 gave pen- alties for " such shameful matches." The marriage of such women with free negroes was also soon forbidden — a.s soon probably as attention was called to the presence of free negroes. The master who allowed the marriage, and the minister or 1 Baltimore Sun, July 9th, 1855; 12 Md., 450. This decision confirme.l the judgment of the circuit court for Dorchester. •7 Gill, 211, (1848). In a case (8 G. & J. 53) involving the status of a. colored man, in an appeal from an orphans' court, in l.s;5t), the Court of Appeals held that however it might be urged that the man wns from liis color presumably a slave, the facts that he had not been clain.e.l by an owner, that he had engaged on a voyage at sea as a saih.r an.l recovered wages in his own name, were sufficient to repel that presumption so far as to justify the courts in granting an administration. The Negro in Maryland. raafistrate who performed it, could each be fined ten thousand pounds of tobacco. This heavy fine dates from about — if not immediately after — the time of the marriage of an Irish ser- vant, brought over by the Calvert family, to a negro slave. After 1715 there was a fine of half that amount for the min- ister or magistrate who should marry with a white person any negro whatever or a mulatto slave. But a law of 1717 pro- vided that any white who should marry any colored person should serve for seven years, and that a free negro or mulatto inter-marrying with a white should become a slave for life — except mulattoes born of white women, who should serve seven years only. The fact that this old law is found in the Code of 1860, with this distinction in favor of certain mulattoes, and with the disposal of white culprits as servants for the benefit of the public schools, shows that public attention could have been seldom, if ever, called to it in the nineteenth century/ The militia act of 1777, like all previous acts, confined the service to whites. In the next few years, there were urgent demands for more troops for State and Continental service but recruits seem to have come forward slowly. In 17.S0, all males, those previously exempt included, were made lial)le to draft, and able-bodied slaves were received as recruits with their own and their masters' consent. The following y»':ir, when one-fifth only of certain quotas called for months before for the Continental service had been raised, two extra ' 1681 ; 1G92; 1715, cli. 44 ; 1717, 13 ; Code of 1860, Art. 30. The status of the freo mulatto uniler these laws is very interesting. We note that by tlie acts of ir.e- ciallv exempted from school taxes. Sundry citizens of a district in Caroline county petitioned, in 1843, for exemption for tlie 11715, 43; Oct., 1780; May, 1781. 2 Sparks' Correspondence of tiie Revolution, June, 1781. Document quoted in Williams' Negro Race in America, I, 3(32. 3 After 1852. liig The Negro in 3Iaryland. free )>lacks of their district, and a bill in answer was passed l)V the House, but was defeated in the Senate. The chairman of the House committee on Education reported a bill two years later, to exempt a certain free black of the same county, but this was rejected by the House/ The act of 1818, empowering the orphans' courts to bind out as api)rentices those free black children who might be neglected or not usefully enii)loyed by their parents, provided that the courts might require as a condition in any indenture that the child should be taught to read or write, or in lieu tlicreof that a sum of not over thirty dollars should be given in adtlition to the ordinary freedom dues. The Code of 1860 stated that it should not be necessary in binding out colored children, by the orphans' court or trustees of poor, to require that any etlucation should be given them. A petition of thirty-two citizens of Frederick county, in 1858, for a law to pK.hibit free blacks from holding schools, was referred to a coiumittee, without result. Schools w^ere held, from the African Institute, with its hundred or more scholars, on Sara- t<>ga street, Baltimore, to the half dozen urchins learning their words under the counter of the little tobacco shop in Annapolis. The census of 1860 stated that thirteen hundred and fifty-live free black children were attcndino- school, in the State.^ »183«, 827; 1849, 221; House Journal, 1848, 401, 411,446; do., 1845, 224, 2o3, 2o4. In si-vfral counties, free l)lacks who did not pay taxes to any utiiotint or were not hired out reguhuly to a taxpHyer, had to do some extra lalnir on tlit- roads. Tims, for two days, in Anne Arundel, Ciiarlcs, Kent, Moiiixonu-ry and Prinee George's eouulies; for one day more than nnas- iMi»4- lo bring in a bill to prevent free blacks and slaves from aUciuiliig musters or drills. 200 The Negro in Maryland. five to twenty dollars. But the act did not interfere with relifrious exercises held bv slaves at home, with their masters' consent; while in Annajwlis and Baltimore — and the growing free black population in Baltimore made this an important (•xccpt ion— negroes could hold their services by themselves, up to the hour of ten at night, with written leave of a white license, for :i leju-al of the restrictions on religious meet- ing* ; but with no ^l>^ulus. The Free Negro. 201 were authorized to disperse any assemblage of blacks whose proceedings and objects were not lawful, and to carry partici- pators before a magistrate, and peace officers could summon as large posses as were necessary. Any officer who neglected his duty could be fined not less than one hundred dollars, and any citizens who refused to serve on a posse, between tweiUy and a hundred dollars.^ In 1844, the committee on Colored Pop- ulation was ordered to enquire into the need of imposing still heavier penalties than those provided for constables who neg- lected to disperse unlawful meetings. In 1845, negro camp- meetings and other protracted out-door meetings were forbid- den, as being deemed nuisances to the public. In addition, all meetings of blacks for religious purposes, except those held at regular houses of worship under the provisions of 1831, Avere forbidden — including evidently Baltimore city and Annapolis; but this was repealed at the next session. Negroes were still allowed, of course, to attend regular camj)- raeetings held by the whites.^ In most of the incorporated towns, free negroes wandering about the streets after certain hours of night — as, for instance, nine in winter and ten in summer — were liable, as slaves were, to be taken up and given a moderate whipping or be shut up till morning, by the con- stables, by virtue of local ordinances. But in Baltimore, free blacks were evidently subject in their movements, as whites were, to the single police rule of orderly behavior.^ It is easy to see here, again, that the demand for stringent laws was often a very local matter, and that the strictness with which they were executed depended much on variable public feeling. A goodly number of citizens of a certain dis- trict of Prince George's county petitioned the Assembly of 1828 for the correction of evils arising from frequent assera- ' 1842. 281. These acts were in force in 1860. »1845, 94; 1846, 166. 3 See, for example, the law for Ea.ston, 1790, 14; tlie onlinanccs for An- napolis; and the powers of bailiffs in various towns, in Code of 1860. 202 The Negro in Maryland. blaort to the cause of good order among the blacks and of friendly relutionH with tlie whites, and states that they have no sympathy with any- tliinj,' wliich tended to disturl) those relations. It states, also, that the free blacks (if Haltirnore lind then 3.5 or 40 benevolent societies, numbering each from ',V) to l.'Kt mt-niliers, whose fune given at Zion's Independent Chnrch in Halliiiiore, a Mia;;i>trate and several police attended and dispersed the luwtiny, iintliT authority of the act of 1831, as the church was not under \\\v control of, nor tlie preachers licensed by, any regular conference or r«-li((ioiii» Uxiy, and tlie exercises were conducted mostly by blacks (Balti- nmrr .Vun, July "JOth, iSoS). The Free Xegro. 207 over eighteen years of age, would be forfeited — half to the informer, half to the State. On information nnder oath, a justice might seize the boat, summon the parties and try the case, and sell the boat at auction, unless the owner appealed. The preamble to the act declared that great inconvenience and injury had resulted from the navigation of vessels entirely hv negroes, by which a clandestine trade was carried on and slaves had found facilities for running away.* It is interest- ing in this connection to note that the House, in 1787, had struck out from a bill under consideration the provision that no slave, except pilots, should be allowed to manage any boat, over twenty feet keel, conveying goods which belonged to any one but the owner of the boat. J, In 1838 a free black asked leave to sail his own boat, but the House committee reported unfavorably. But, the year before, citizens of Baltimore and Anne Arundel counties had been specially exempted from the act of 1836, and so able to navigate their vessels by their slaves or by hired blacks only. A bill to repeal this exemp- tion was passed by the House in 1844, but defeated by the Senate; and not till nine years later still was it done away with.^ In 1856, a bill passed the Senate, without opposition, to allow two free blacks of Harford county to run their own vessel to and fro between Baltimore city and the Bush and Gunpowder rivers, but the House threw it out by a vote of forty-four to five; and the petition of another black, two years later, to run a vessel without a white on board, was leit on the table.^ In May, 1854, the Baltimore Sun, under the heading "Novel Action," stated that a schooner was condemned uiulcr the law of '36, and that the owner had appealed. And there is mention, in October, 1859, of the trial before a justice of a colored captain. 1 1836, 150. , , n837, 23; Journal of 1844; 1853, 446. A bill was reportcl, the next year, to allow owners of vessels to employ colored men as cai.lams in cor- tain cases, but was not evidently considered. 3 House Journal, 1856, 358, 445; 1858, 35. 208 The Negro in Maryland. A l»ill was passed, in 1858, in answer to a petition from siindrv citizens of Ciiarles county, forbidding any colored person in Charles or Prince George's counties to keep or use any boat on the Potomac, without license, — from a master to a slave, from a justice of peace to a free black. To obtain such a license, a free black must get a written certificate of good character from two respectable landholders of the neigh- borhood ; and if any two landholders of the Potomac shore rwpiested in writing the suppression of the license, the justice was l)oiiiid to ,-iimiiion the black and hear the matter fairly. No license could i)e renewed when once forfeited. The pen- alty for using a boat without leave was a fine of from five to liltv dollars and costs, and loss of the boat, on conviction before a magistrate. A slave who crossed the Potomac or took a trip to the District of Columbia, without leave, could lx» given IVom ten to twenty lashes by order of the magistrate; and his boat was forfeited, unless the owner was a white citi- zen, and ignorant of its use.' Free negroes coidd sell licpiors and fermented drinks, with the customary license. But after 1831, licenses were granted to them by order of the coiu'ts only, not by clerks of court, as in the case of whites. The act of '31 urged the courts to exer- cise a sound discretion as to the continuance or withdrawal of licenses, and empowered them to require, if advisable, satisfac- tory securities from the blacks. In 1852, — in answer to sev- eral local petitions, one of which was signed by as many as one hundnMl and twenty-four citizens, — was passed, with little op|>osition in the House and none in the Senate, a bill by which free blacks of Somerset, Worcester and Anne Arundel counties \vcr<' forl)iddon to sell ardent spirits, and were re- quired to obtain licenses for the sale of all merchandise. Licen-es were to be gotten oidy by special order of the courts, on the re<-oMnneudation of not less than twelve respectable fn-^'hoMers ill the neighl)orhood in which the black proposed The Free Negro. 209 to do business. Beside, no white person in partnership with a black could get any license, nor could a white cinj)l()y a free black as a clerk in any business, under penalty of five hundred dollars.^ In Annapolis, the thrifty black found no trouble in getting his recommendations, nor is it likclv that one lacked friends, elsewhere. In May, 18G(), a resident of Baltimore was indicted, under the act of '52, for employing as his clerk in a retail store in Annapolis a colored man of that city. On pleading guilty, before Anne Arundel circuit court, he was fined the five hundred dollars and costs — for the pay- ment of which, the father of the clerk, a prosperous and re- spected mulatto of Annapolis, became his surety.^ At the session of 1827, a memorial was presented the House from sundry citizens of Baltimore, for such legislation as would forbid colored persons there from obtaining licenses to keep hacks, carts or drays, as well as from driving such vehicles. The very next day was presented a counter-memo- rial from sundry merchants and citizens of Baltimore. The committee, consisting of the two members from Baltimore and one from Allegany, reported that such matters should be left to the city government, which would know best the special wants and interests of the city. And a considerable source of city revenue might be affected by any such prohibition, sug- gested the committee. In 1836, the committee on Colored Population was ordered to inquire into the expediency of requiring additional security from the blacks licensed as 1 1831, 323 ; 1852, 288. House Journal, 1852, 92, 141, 318, 553. 619. The petition from Anne Arundel, with forty-four signatures, speaks of tlie serious injury inflicted on the honest industry of a large portion of our white fellow citizens by the presence of the free blacks, and of the utter destitution in which thousands of this anomalous class are plunged by idle liahits and vicious propensities. The idle should be hired out and the children apprenticed to learn useful arts and avocations before emigrating to Africa. ''Baltimore San, May 5th, 1860. An act of 1827, to protect public wor- ship more effectually, forbade any negro to sell liquor or l)eer or cider within a mile of a camp-meeting, under penalty of a wiiii>ping, on conviction by a justice. The whipping could not be given also witiiin the mile cinl... 14 210 The Negro in Maryland. traders and inn-keepers, or of wltliholding licenses from them altojretlier. A stringent bill, evidently to prohibit licenses, which j)assed the House, four years later, was twice rejected by the Senate.' In 1837, the committee M^as ordered, on mo- tion of a member from Prince George's county, to consider the expediency of forbidding free negroes to pursue for a live- lihocxl any business, mechanic art or trade, in order to encour- age them to emigrate. Later in the session, the committee reported, tiirough the same member, a bill entitled an act to encourage the emigration of free negroes and to advance the interests of tradesmen, mechanics and other laboring persons. After some amendment, the bill was killed by striking out the enacting clause — though by a vote of thirty-eight to twenty-four only.^ In 1840, a member from Baltimore ob- tained leave to bring in a bill to prevent the employment of negroes in the State tobacco warehouses at Baltimore, but the bill, reported at the next session, was left on the table. In 1844, two petitions came from divers citizens of Prince George's county — one to prohibit free black carpenters from working there, the other to impose a tax on free black me- (•hanics ; but the House committee reported adversely. Three years later, a memorial from a number of citizens of Balti- more for a law to prevent free blacks from huckstering hay or straw was referred, without result, to the committee on Ways and Means ; and no better fate seems to have met the jM-titions of a large number of citizens of Baltimore, in 1860, that fV«'(' blacks of that city be barred from pursuing any nuH-hanical braiidi of trade.^ The signers were said to be — wliat we should expect — white mechanics! 'MoiiH.- .Iciiri.al, IS'JT, 111), 11).-,, 410; Senate Journal, 1840, 68, 147. ' Ili.nm- .Journal, ISMT, 2'), 447, r)27. • lluiiM- Journiil, 1K44, L'")'.!, 2(11, 370; 1860, 309. The colored ship caulk- en. «.f I ill 111 mure seoni Id have met willi niiich injustice at tlie hands of Ihrir wliiif rivulK, in IH^H, the police being required to keep the peace. Hui thf pu|Mr luld.s liiat Iho winic disposition was shown the German caulk- er* who hnccucdcil Kome of the blacks. See Baltimore Sun, 1858, May 18th, The Free Negro. 211 Those of the free blacks who went into business anti were unfortunate, or otherwise got into hopeless debt, had appa- rently the benefit of the insolvent laws as fully as their white neighbors. Several citizens of Caroline county petitioned in 1829, for a law to prevent negroes from taking those benefits, but in vain ; and the petition of some citizens of Dorchester, in 1858, for sale of free blacks for debts of their own making, was as ineffectual. Two years later, when a similar petition was received from Anne Arundel, leave was given the com- mittee on Colored Population to bring in a bill for the sale of free blacks for debt in certain cases, but no further action seems to have been taken. ^ As early as 1792 an attempt was made to pass a bill to pre- vent free blacks from stealing and selling stolen goods. In 1805, a bill to prevent them from selling corn, wheat, tobacco or other articles, without a license for the purpose from a justice, passed the House, after an attempt to refer it to the next Assembly, by a margin of three votes only. As finally amended, evidently by the Senate, it required a certificate of good character, under hand and seal of a justice of the county, for the sale of any corn, wheat and tobacco oidy. Such a license should be good for one year, and the black who sold these articles without it, was liable to a fine of five dollars. Any purchaser became liable to twice that sum. 'i'he preamble to the act states that much inconvenience had been felt from the sale by free blacks, as the product of their labor, of corn, wheat and tobacco received from slaves. Two years later a June 9th, July 5th and 22nd; 1859, June 28th. We may note, in passinjr, that an act of 1811 (ch. 100) on county surveyors, required chain and pole carriers to he free white males over 21 years. And the sale of lottery tickets was forbidden (1856, 195) to colored persons or minors, doubtlew to protect them against fraud. 1 House Journals, 1829, 487 ; 1860, 44, 192; Acts of 1822, ch. 185. The Commissioners of Insolvency discharged in 1834, for instance, 140 wliiles and 17 free blacks; in 1835, 134 whites and 30 blacks, &c. See Baltimore Jail Eeports. 212 The Negro in Maryland. supplonipntary and more stringent bill was brought in ; pro- vie sold— as estimated from a written statement of two respecta- ble neighbors of the black, of the probable amount which his lands could produce during the year— and that every purchaser shoidd endorse on the certificate the quantity of his purchase, under penalty of five dollars. This bill, after consideration, was defeatcil Ijy thirty-three to twenty ^\ In 1825, there was enacted that no one, under penalty of one hundred dollars, should buy of anv free black any quantity of tobacco in transfer or parcels, uidess the black produced at the time a certificate from a justii^ of the county giving the quantity and quality of the tobacco. And a certificate could be gotten only on proof of a resjK'ctable citizen of the neighborhood that the black had come honestly by the goods, and on payment of twenty-five fvnts.- The act of 1831, which was permanent in this respect, provided that no one should purchase from any colored person anv l)aei»i). ])()rk, beef, mutton, corn, wheat, tobacco, rye or oats, unless the blacks had a permit — in case of a free black, from a justice or from three respectable persons of his neighbor- hinA, that he was believed to have acquired the goods honestly. The |)eiialty was a fine from the purchaser of five dollars or a ftuni equal to the value of the goods, should they be worth more — half to the informer and half to the county.^ By act of 1H42, a free black convicted of dealing in stolen goods should be S4»l' service, and be forbidden ever to return, under penalty of the law. Half the proceeds of the sale went to the informer.* ' Huum; Journal, 1S05, 17, 04, 80, 98, ch. 80; 1807, 19, 28, 36. •IS'iri, 199. '1831, 1123, 9. Slaves liad to liavc a iicriiiit from tlieir masters or over- iMcn.. Tlu- iiUfMlioii was ruistd without result in the House in 1844, as to whfiluT frr<- hhuks hIiouUI bo forliiililen to ship on vessels any produce without |M-rniil)t from jusliit-s. ♦ A Hlavc wah sold out for life. 1842, '279. This act appears to have been in fortf uiuil ISGO. Sec Crimes ami I'luushments of Free Blacks. The Free Negro. 213 The act of 1831 forbade also, under the same pcnahy, the sale by anyone of ardent spirits to any black wlio had nut a permit — in the case of a free black, from a justice of peace of the county in which the black lived, and directed to the seller. At the session of 1832, the statement was made by a memU-r from Dorchester county, which had a large free black as \vell as slave population, that this provision of the law had been in its practical effect, as was manifest to every person who had given the slightest attention to it, " a complete and entire failure." His motion for an inquiry into the matter and for further measures was adopted ; but nothing was reported then. A bill to repeal that provision of the act of '31, reported at the following session, was left on the table.^ The Assembly of 1817 passed a bill entitled, an act for the better protection of slaveholders in Calvert, Anne Arundel and St. Mary's counties. Its provisions applied to those countieg only, and exempted travelers and blacks emi)loyed as wag- oners. No retailer or distiller of liquors was to allow any col- ored person, except servants or slaves with proper permits, to be on the premises where liquors were sold, between sunset and sunrise. The penalty was fifty dollars, half to the informer, and imprisonment for not over three months, in default. And the fact that a black w^as on the premises after sunset was suffi- cient to convict the proprietor, unless he could prove igno- rance of it on the part of himself or his agent, or that all possible means had been taken to eject the black. And no one could receive any goods whatever from any black wh(» did not hold a permit from a justice, under the same penalty of fifty dollars fine or the jail.=^ This bill had first been rejected by the House, but was passed on reconsideration. At tlie next session came a vigorous appeal from the citizens of Annapolis, seconded by the members of the House from Anne 1 House Journal, 1832, 55; 1833, 110, 197. 2 This is evidently tl.e meaning of Section 5 (1817, 227), the peraiil to be under 1805, afterwards 1831. 214 The Negro in 3Iaryland. Arurultl, to exempt Annapolis from the act. A bill for that piirpoH- (luickly i)assed the House, but was rejected by the Senate. Two weeks later, the House requested the Senate to ret-onsider its action, stating that the bill was desired by the citizens of Annapolis "with an unanimity of voice seldom erpiallcd ;" but the Upper House not only adhered to its first decision, Ijut refused to appoint a committee of conference on the matter.' But at the same session, the act was extended to Prince George's, Somerset, Dorchester, Charles and Talbot counties, with the addition that no liquor should be sold either on Sunday or after sunset, to any free black, or to any slave without leave from his employer.^ The next year, another petition was received from Annapolis, and a bill was finally ])assed to exempt that city from the restrictions as to hari)oring blacks, so that retailers and distillers should be governed in that respect by city ordinances only, but keeping the fine of fifly dollars or the jail for buying unlawfully from a black. The entire act had already been repealed, early in the session, for Talbot and Dorchester counties. Four years later it was re-enacted for Dorchester, only to be done away at the next session, in answer to a protest from sundry citizens. A bill to repeal it for Prince George's county, in 1824, was defeated. It is to be found in the Code of 1860, in force iu the other counties mentioned, except Somerset.^ More rigor- ous provisions still against the harboring of blacks by liquor dc:der8, were enacted in 1854 for Anne Arundel, Calvert, Charles, Howard, Prince George's, Saint Mary's and Somerset cutinties, but were repealed two years later.'' A bill was intro- >1 • 171.-, .(t. The Free Negro. 217 dently more stringent legislation were made from timo to time, and in 1824, free blacks were absolutely forbiildtn to carry fire-arms. The next year, in answer to a petition from Kent, to restore the privileges under certain conditions to the free blacks of that county, the House committee rejiortcd that they had been under the impression for some time, as these intelligent and respectable petitioners then were, that such privileges might be allowed under careful provisions, but had concluded that action was not then advisable. Several years later the House concurred again in a similar unfavorable re- port from the committee on Grievances.^ The restrictions were evidently directed chiefly against injury to sheep and other farm property. By the act of 1831, free blacks could carry fire-arms, if they could obtain licenses from the courts. These licenses were to be renewed yearly, and could be withdrawn at any time by the court or by any one judge. The right to carry powder or lead was included; and a black who might be convicted by a justice of carrying arms or ammunition without leave, had to forfeit such to the informer and j)ay costs; and for a second offence, to be subject to ])unishment for a felony, or be whij)ped. And the sale of gunpowder or shot or lead to a free black was prohibited, under fine, unless he had a permit from a justice, directed specially to the seller.^ At the next session, there was added that any fire- arras taken already and not forfeited to the informci-, should be sold by the officers, and the proceeds, after expenses, be given the blacks. We find mention in the paper in March, 1859, of the arrest for examination of two blacks, coming to Baltimore in a Pliiladelphia train, with a gun. After the John Brown attack on Harper's Ferry, the courts in several of the lower counties, with large slave populations, withdrew M824, 203 ; House Journal, 1825, 241 ; 1830, 198, 222. M831, 323. A slave had to have a permit from his omi)loyer. This provision, like that against the sale of liquor to hlaoks, could not have bcvn enforced in Baltimore city. See above. 218 The Negro in Maryland. all licenses for arms. In many places, search was made for fii-e-arms on the premises of blacks.^ In 1838 and again in 1852, petitions were sent the Assembly, in vain, from Som- erset county — one bearing the names of one hundred and one voters — to protect the inhabitants thereof from the evil conse- - prentices, but the orphans' courts had general oversiglit, everywhere. In Worcester and Somerset counties, free bhick apprentices niiwht be Mreil out, by leave of the courts, for not less than a year. 1856, 78; 1860, 75. 2 Denton Journal, quoted in the Baltimore Sun, July 31st, 1855. 222 The Negro in Maryland. together there was, in the same round numbers, about one free black to seven whites.^ In 183G, the inquiry was made — evidently without answer — in the Senate, as to the expediency of compelling free blacks of the laboring class to hire themselves out by the year. The House committee reported, the next year, in reply to the sug- gestion of a member from Calvert county that all free blacks be forced to labor by the year, that such a measure would be at war with all preconceived opinions of propriety, as it would bring the free blacks in direct contact with the slaves — a state of things to be carefully avoided.^ In 1845, a bill was intro- duced in the House, to compel the free blacks of Prince George's County, capable of labor, to hire out by the year. Calvert, Charles and St. Mary's, all large slaveholding counties, were added, but the bill was rejected by the Senate. Two years later, leave was given for a bill to better the condi- tion of the free blacks in Prince George's, but we know noth- ing of the plans proposed. In 1852, the House committee was ordered to report a bill to enforce the provisions of the several acts of Assembly for the suppression of vagrancy among the blacks. There is mention, at that session, of a bill for "the government, regulation and disposition" of the free ' The alnisliouse was for the city and county. We i»re.sijinc that idle or vagrant free blacks were not — certainly not as a rule — sold in Baltimore under the act of 1S39, from the fact of these com- niilments under the acts of 1818, 169, and 1S54, IIG, for Baltimore, and as we have not seen mention of any sale in the daily papers from 1850-lSGO. The chanKi' in proportion between white and black inmates of the alms- house, and between whites and blacks committed to it as vagrants, may be «hif to tin- fail tiiat efllirts were made to enforce the laws, and — if we may U-lievf all reports of that time — the vast majority of the rowdies and dis- ordrrly persons in Baltimore were whites. See the papers, the messages of the mayor, iw in IS.jU anil ISoS, and the reports of the marshal of police. ThuH, of 1()0;{ piTsons arrested for violations of law in May, 1859, 907 were while and 1 Ki colored. Of o;{7 police " lodgers," the next month, only 48 vnn- black. 'Houm: Journnl, 1837, 108, 173. The Free Negro. 223 blacks, which was referred to the next Assembly. It seems from what is said of its contents, to have given means for tlie stricter binding out of free blacks, and to have forbidden man- umission except on condition of emigration to Africa. Brou*^^ up in the House, at the next session accordingly, it was tiiree times rejected.^ At the same session, a bill to furnish a rem- edy against free blacks who might quit service after hiring out, was first rejected by thirty-six to eight, was reconsidered and passed by forty to ten, and then finally rejected again. At the next session, 1854, the same or a similar bill was rejected by twenty-six to nineteen, was then reconsidered and rejected by twenty-eight to twenty, and was finally passed by forty-one to nineteen. In the Senate, it M-as first rejected by eight to four, and afterwards passed without opposition. This act declared guilty of misdemeanor any free black who might leave without proper cause, before the expiration of the time agreed, the service of one to whom he had hired him- self. The black could be arrested on a warrant, and judgment on the case was to be given by the magistrate according to equity, each party having the right to produce witnesses. The oath of the employer and the evidence of some other person that the black had engaged in such service, was declared prima facie evidence of the contract; but the justice must be satis- fied that the wages were reasonably secure to the black, and that he had not left service from improper treatment or other good cause. If convicted, he had to fulfil his agreement, compensate for lost time, and pay costs. If duly convicted of a second offence, he might be put in jail for not over a week, and be treated as a free negro apprentice. If a black were con- victed of having agreed in writing, or by supplement of two years later, of receiving wages in advance on a verbal agree- ment, to hire out, and of having then hired out to another without cause for breaking his agreement, the first empK.ycr could sue to recover two-fifths of the wages agreed on. Txit House Journal, 1853; Feb. 5th— May. 224 The Negro in Maryland. it was specially provided that nothing in the act should be con.strued to delwr any free black from prosecuting any action lor cruel treatment or improper usage on the part of his employer/ In 1850, the Kent county News had complained that laborers were scarcer than ever before, and attributed the fact to the refusal of free negroes to hire out on the farms as they used to do. In the winter of '55, there were complaints in the counties of scarcity of labor. Likely negroes were bringing high wages, and several farmers of Queen Anne's, according to the Centreville Sentinel, had gotten apprentices from the Phil- delphia house of refuge. There were the same complaints the following summer. The Cambridge Democrat says that some farmers of Dorchester had called a meeting to consider what wages should be paid, as high rates were expected. Another local paper wisely regretted, the next year, that the farmers could not get hold of the able-bodied men who were loafing about the cities.^ It was during the winter of 1829-30 that Mr. William liloyd (iarrisoM was editing in Baltimore the Genius of Uni- t-erna/ Kinaiicipaiion, declaring that to hold slaves longer in bondage was both unnecessary and tyrannical, that justice demanded their liberation, and that to recompense slave owners for emancipation would be paying a thief for giving up stolen jiropci-ty.-' JJut the press was free, and for such ' 1854, 273 ; 1866, 252. Tlierc were also penalties against those who might knowin^;ly fni|)loy freu Ijhuks convicted under the act, within a limited time nfler cotivictiiiii. Tlie first employer would have a lien on the earnings of the hhirk. •S-e llnltimorc Sun, ISoO, Jan. loth; ISoo, Jan. 3rd, Feb. IGtli, June Ittlh; IHTK], Jan, 7th, &c. •Life of (Jarriwn, Vol. II, 143, lol. Tlie indictment under which Mr. (Jnrrimin wuh impriHoned in Raltirnore Jail, in 1830, was for libel against «vrtiiin pepsontt. lie hft I!:illim,)re8ome weeks after his release. The Free Negro. 225 general statements, however displeasing they may have been, there was no redress at law. In 1835, a supplement to the act of 1831 declared it to be a high offence, to be pnnishe;et liini into trouble. * We find mention of tlie arrest of two other whites in the sprinc: of 1860. S«e Ilaliiiiiore Sun, for May ."rd and May 24th. The Chestertown News says thill tlie ^'•^Mnd jury of Kent thought it the duty of postmasters to read evervthing in papers received, but the judge said the general character of a pHper was suliicient. See Haltimore Sun, April 24th, 1860. It is inter- tilling to note tliat the Baltimore city Police Commissioners were not allowetl to employ on the police any "black Republican" or endorser of thp " ll.lp.r ll.>litionihih to ikhint from spreading inflammatory papers, which could only eniUrriwH tlic l)lacks, slave and free. In 1847, the House of Delegates laid on till- ubie petitions from the citizens of Cecil county, both to allow and to prevent ttboiition lecturea in Maryland. The Free Negro. 227 and punishments— provided that slaves convicted of crimes for which the penalty M-as not hanging, might, in the discre- tion of the court, be whipped and banished by sale into some "foreign country"; but there was no line drawn between free- men, white and black. In 1817 there was enacted that no colored person should thereafter be sentenced to the peniten- tiary for less than one year ; and that in all cases where the term prescribed was less than a year, or where the court, in the exercise of its discretion, might deem so long a punish- ment as a year unjust, the black should be whipped, fined or imprisoned in jail, as the court might adjudge. The next year the penitentiary was closed entirely to slaves who, in non- capital cases, were to be whipped or banished from Maryland. In 1821 a bill was introduced in the House to forbid also the punishment of free blacks by imprisonment in the peniten- tiary, but it was referred to the next Assembly. The question does not seem to have come up again until 1825, when a bill for that purpose was passed, after some opposition. No person was to be sent to the penitentiary for less than two years, and no free black for any terra. For any crime not punishes! by hanging, a free black would be sentenced, in the discretion of the court, to not over forty lashes on the bare back — a slave could be given up to one hundred, by the act of 1800 — or to banishment from Maryland and sale as a slave for the same number of years that a white would be imprisoned. The convict was given an official copy of the judgment. The j)ro- ceeds of the sale paid for expenses, indemnified any injured parties, and the balance went into the county or city treasury.' Within a few days of the beginning of the next session, a res- olution was offered to refer the operation of this new law to the committee on Grievances, to report amendments, if desir- able; as it was obvious that great abuses would prevail under it, inasmuch as — the record of judgment being liable to be 11809, 138 (9); 1817, 72; 1818, 197; 1825, 93. The District of rolum- bia was excepted in the acts of 1818 and 1825. 228 The Negro in Maryland. destroyed by the purchasers— it was feared that in most cases the sentence of sale for a year would in effect amount to sale f )r life. This resolution was adopted after two readings; but uii.Mi the mover asked leave, two months later, to introduce a bill to repeal or modify the act of 1825, the House voted a>:ainy a justice. For many petty offences, notably under local laws, free blacks could be whipped where whites Would Ir? put ill jail.-' Tlie next important general law was ' 1826, 2'2U; IIouhi- Journiil, 47, 422. ' I8in, li'SS, H. Tlius liy lS.i2, rjT, any negro wlio took oysters unlawfully ill WorcwiiiT county, and wlio could not pay the fine, might be given not oviT ihirly-nine lashcM. In Haltiniore jail, under act of 1831, 58, prisoners The Free Negro. 229 that of 1885, which ordered the criminal courts to examine every free black convicted before them, and empowered them if they found that he, or she, had been previously sentencrd to the penitentiary for any crime, to have him sold for a term of years without the State. The proceeds of sucii sales, after paying the expenses of prosecution, went to the public treasury. Three years later this was changed so as to pay one-fourth the net proceeds as a reward to the officer who apprehended and prosecuted the black.' In 1842, as we saw, the penalty for any free black convicted of dealing in any stolen goods was fixed at banishment and sale as a slave for from five to tea years, and that for a second offence in taking part in unlawful societies, was sale for life. Also, by act of 1849, the i)eualty for a second conviction of certain frauds on the revenue, might be sale out of the State. In 1836, leave had been given for the introduction of a bill, to punish by sale as slaves for life out of Maryland, free blacks convicted of felony in general — the old act of '25 revived with greater harshness. The com- mittee on Colored Population was opposed to the plan, but were worked with tlieir own consent, but vagrants, slaves and free negroes had to work without option, if ordered. By 1837, 228, the penalty for injuring certain gates on public roads in Charles and Prince George's coun- ties, was fine of not over ten dollars, or not over thirty-nine lashes for a slave, on conviction before a magistrate, and "any white person " aggrieved could appeal to the county court. By many town ordinances, free blacks as well as slaves could be wiiippid for roaming about at night, &c. 11835, 200; 1 838, GO. Tiiis must have been intended to recnforco tlie act of 182G, which had banished from Maryland all free blacks .li-^chargcd from the penitentiary, under penalty of sale for the benefit of the fimler. A petition from sundry citizens of Caroline, for a repeal of this provision of the act of 1826, was presented the House in 183S; but it is foiuid in the Code of 1860, art. 30, 99. In a case before Baltimore county court, in 1841, the counsel for the negro claimed that the identity of a negro punished under the act of 1835, was a question for a jury to decide ; but the court held that tiie act was merely for the regulation of the court in inflicting punishment, and raised no new issue. (See iS77e«' Register, Vol. LXI, 217.) 230 The Negro in Maryland. advised its reference to the committee ou Crimes. This com- mittee reported favorably, but the matter was postponed. In 1842, some one suggested, to no result, an inquiry into the j.lan of banishing to Africa all free blacks liable to imprison- ment, and in 1845, certain citizens of Charles county asked ft)!- wliipping and transportation for them ; but the committee on Crimes did not evidently apjjrove of any change. In 1853 there were two requests for enquiries into the wisdom of changing the laws so as to sell free black convicts for the benefit of the counties, instead of supporting them in the peni- tetitiary. In 1856, a bill was introduced, to sell out of Mary- land for the balance of their terms, all the free negroes then in that institution, the proceeds to go to the State treasury; and to sell the slaves for life, the proceeds to go to the coun- ties which had already paid the masters.^ Baltimore city and ci.uiity had sent to the penitentiary, in 1852, twenty-nine whites and eighteen blacks, slave and free; in '53, forty-seven whltc-s to twenty-one blacks ; in '54, sixty to nineteen ; in '50, thirty-eight to ten ; in '57, twenty-eight to nineteen. A number of blacks were sold out of the State, most of them as having been already prison-birds, probably. At one term of Haltimdre criminal court, in 1853, nine were sold; at another, two. The next year, two were sold at one term, four at an- other, and one at another. At the following winter term, four were sold. The number of blacks committed to the peniten- tiaiv had not iiicicased in proportion to the whites, though slaves had been again imprisoned for serious offences after 1815, hut the accommodations of the institution were insuffi- cient for till- total number of inmates. The executive message of 1H54 called attention to the fact that for twenty years, with three exceptions, the annual exi)enditures were in excess of tiie receipts from hd)or. At the next Assembly, the bad condition 'lloiiM- Journal, 1S:50, lOS; 1S42, 39; 1845, 27; 1S53, 27, 2So ; 1S5G, CIH, 083. The Free Negro. 231 of the buildings was carefully pointed out. The message of 1858 declared the institution in great financial embarrassment, one wing of the building having been burned, in addition to the usual deficit, and advised a change of the law so that slaves might be transported, as before 1845, in order to reduce the four hundred and more inmates, of whom from a third to a half were negroes. A special House committee reported at the same session the need of fifty thousand dollars, and declared boldly that the over-crowded buildings were almost a " pest house." Something must be done, and a change in the punishment of petty larceny was suggested.^ The Assemi)ly chose to change radically the punishment of the free blacks. For stealing any goods under the value of five dollars, or for breaking into any store, barn or outbuilding and stealing goods under the value of one dollar, or for simple larceny above five dollars, the penalty for a free black was sale as a slave for from two to five years.^ For wounding or killing wilfully a horse or mule not trespassing on his land, from two to four years. For stealing any horse or mule, sale for from two to fourteen years ; for stealing a vessel or a slave, from three to twelve years ; for persuading or aiding any slave or black apprentice to run away, for not less than five years — in all three cases, either within or beyond the State. For arson, instead of hanging or not over twenty years' imprisonment, a free black must be hung or sold as a slave for life, within or beyond the State. In cases of robbery, only, the choice was left to the courts between the ordinary imprisonment in tiie ' 1858, Doc. O. "Should a contagion," added the committee, "visit the prison, which may God in his mercy avert, no prediction can be made as to its consequences, not only as to the prison, but to the city in general." If the solution of the problem was to be the reduction on a large scale of tlie inmates, it is obvious that the Governor's suggestion would be insum.ient, for the larger part of the negroes were freemen convicted of larceny— an offence for which slaves were not imprisoned. »The minimum term for which anyone could be sentenced to the |>en!- tentiary had been fixed at eighteen months (1839, 37). Imprisonment for enticing or aiding a slave to escape was from two to live years (1844, 80). 232 The Negro in Maryland. penitentiary for from tliree to ten years, or sale for ten years. The j)r(»«'e('(ls of the sale of any black paid for the expenses of prosecution and any just claims for damages, and any balance was given the county or city for the use and maintenance of any indigent child or wife he might leave. Not only was the convict furnished with a certified copy of the judgment, but tlie sheriff was ordered to give notice in the paper of the neigh- borliood where he had been convicted — or by posters in each election district of the county, if there was no paper published there — of the coming expiration of the term of service, for three successive weeks preceding the ex[)iration. There was provided also the penalty of not less than one hundred dollars fine, or not over two months in jail, for a sheriff or clerk of court neglecting wilfully the duties of the act. And anyone who sold a convict for a longer time than his term, or in any- way deprived him of freedom, when it was due, ^^'as liable to Ik' fined double the sum paid for the black, and in default, to be imprisoned fi)r from thirty to ninety days, or to be fined and imprisoned. During the two years following the passage of this act, eighty-nine free blacks in all M-ere sold, twenty-four by the courts of Baltimore city, eleven in Baltimore county, eight in Harford, seven, each, in Dorchester, Frederick and Talbot, Ac. Four of these were sold for life ; but the average term was between four and five years. The crime seems to have IxH'n invariably larceny of some degree. Without the act of 1858, said the conmiittee on Colored Population in their report to the House, the number of free blacks in the penitentiary woiilil have been two hundred and ten instead of one hun- <\w\\ and twenty-one. The number of slaves imprisoned was ordy thirteen.' During the year 1800, sixteen men and ten ' Ue|H)rl of Hoii«e committee, Feb. 7th, ISGO. IJaltiniorejail had twenty- one froe hhtrkH niul two 8hivc«. In 18G1, there were seventeen bhieks soM ami one lihick and thirty-seven wliites Kent to the penitentiary from Balti- riiorc jiiil. The Free Negro. 233 women were sold from Baltimore jail, and one negro only sent thence to the penitentiary— against fifty-three whites. It is obvious that the objections raised in 182G, that tlie sale of free blacks for a term of years out of the State amounted often, to say the least, to sale for life, were equally patent against this act of 1858/ For larceny and two other offences, the act of 1858 ordered simply the sale as a slave. One black, who was sentenced for simple larceny by the circuit court for Baltimore city in 1859, to be sold out of Maryland for five years, carried his case to the Court of Appeals, which held the sentence to be illegal, as allowing the black to be purchased by a non-resident only, instead of by a resident or non-resident, according to the chances of sale at auction.* In 1860 the law was changed in so far that a free black con- victed of any offence for which a white man would be sent to the penitentiary, was sold either in or out of Maryland, at the discretion of the court, for as long a time as a white man would be imprisoned. The proceeds went, as before, after paying the expenses of prosecution and damages, to the family of the convict, but if there was no family, to the county or city.^ The number of Whites "| and Blacks coinnaitled \ to Baltimore jail for... ) 1852 1853 1854 1857 1858 1869 1860 W. 24 208 241 B. 8 27 125 W. no, X07 225 B. 1 71 132 \V. 11 349 374 B. 1 86 138 W. 28 38:i 337 14% B. 2 100 108 "liis W. 51 485 417 isso B. 2 72 115 690 W 32 318 3.M 1730 1353 B. 6 61 loy 19.'. 433 W 28 eoi 203 610 2577 B. 4 For assault and battery... 47 150 133 Peace warrants 460 The population of Baltimore in 18G0 was 184,520 whites, 25,680 free blacks, and 2,218 slaves. iRow could a black sold to a Louisiana planter be lielpcd in his claim to freedom, years after, by the sheriff's notice in a Maryland county paper? *14 Md., 412. The offence in this ca.se was larceny of a silver wat.h valued at six dollars. The black was discharged, the judgment being held to be more than a technical amplification of the law. A free black sold in Maryland for a term of years would, of course, have the bcnetit of the law regulating the transportation of slaves for terms of years. 3 Code of 1860, Art. 30, 194. 234 The Negro in Maryland. Such, in general, was the legal status of the free negroes in Maryland. One is not likely, in studying it, to lose sight of the influence of slaveholding; but it would evidently be most unjust to measure all this legislation by the gauge of hostility to the free black. The easy license system for the sale of liquor to free blacks in the counties, must have injured the liquor dealers only and been of real service tl)al.ly tlu- writer of tlie coiniinniication to Penii- Bjflvnnia, us tin- Houm- asked iiini to continue tlie correspondence. The Free Negi^o. 237 of the State. Several of these, signed by many and highly respectable citizens — notably one from Baltimore — askcil for abolition of slavery. Others desired to have manu- mission made conditional on the removal of the freed men. Others, still, more stringent police regnhition of the free blacks. A motion to have all these memorials printed for the use of the House, was lost by a large majority, but a thousand copies of the report of the committee were ordered. After several weeks, the committee introduced a bill on the free black population, which, after some amendments, became the act of '31 on free negroes and "slaves. Copies of the l)ill were distributed, and it was laid on the table for several weeks by request of the committee. After careful consideration, it passed the House by a vote of forty-five to ten.* We are familiar with its general provisions — restrictions on the immigration of free negroes and the importation of slaves, on the use of fire- arras by blacks, on the sale of liquor and other dealings with them, on religious meetings; and the grant to the courts of the power to banish free blacks convicted of non-capital, serious offences, and to punish like slaves such free blacks as might be convicted of petty offences with slaves. But harder questions for the committee to answer were those relating to abolition of slavery and to the black population already in the State. That this population was injurious to the prosperity of the State, they frankly granted. Recent events had ])roven to the people that there must be a separation of the races. The question was to find a remedy which the State could apply, consistent with its honor, and with a due regard to the welfare of the blacks, that unfortunate class of the i)opnlati.»n. Emancipation, as it had been tried, had been a doubli'ul gift to all concerned ; economic benefits, especially in the value of lands, would result to the State from the removal <»f slavery; and so the committee advised the plan of colonization in Africa, of manumission conditional, as a rule, on emigration. 1 1831, ch. 323. House Journal, 94, 114, 304, 310, 467, 544. 238 The Negro in Maryland. An annual expenditure, they asserted, of forty thousand and two hundred dollars, would remove entirely the colored persons in Maryland within a generation.' Such was the policy proposed for the State. Meantime, the Maryland Col- onization Society w^as being formed by a number of gentlemen, for tlie removal to Africa of those free blacks who might be willing to go, and of slaves freed for the purpose. The act of 1831, embodying these suggestions of the committee, provided fur the appointment by the Governor of a board of three man- agers, members of the ^laryland Colonization Society, to take charge of the removal from the State of such blacks already free as should consent to emigrate, and of all those to be there- after manumitted, whether they consented or not, unless they obtained annual permits to remain from the orphans' courts. Manumissions were to be reported to the board, and all sheriffs were to report a complete census of all free blacks, under penalty of two hundred dollars, and to keep the board informed of any who might be willing to emigrate. And the State appropriated then the sum of twenty thousand dollars for the exj)enses involved in the work during the current year, and pledged itself to further sums, not to exceed two hun- dred thousand dollars in all. An annual levy was ordered on the various counties and on Baltimore, in proportion to the free bhick jxipnlation. Tiie vote on this act in the House was thirty-seven to twenty-three.^ The publication of these acts on nognw'S was ordered by the Assembly, in two of the news- pa|MTS in Baltimore and in one in every county. A resolution haintiil didejjaifs were not present, evidently, or at least did not remain, for on the WMond day there were only eighty-five. A reporter for a Northern alMtlition paper, who ventured there, was saved from summary punishment by the police. lie was juit in jail, and defended on his examination by one of ihf nu'ml)erH of the convention, of Annaiioli.s. The president of the «-«inventiuM wum of Prince CJeorge's. The Free Negro. 243 whites, we are forced to look to the sliiekl of Uiw to protect us. The increasing demand for relief from every part of the State calls for some action — to be, however, in a true spirit of justice to all concerned. We must at last appeal to the peo- ple, for laws have failed, and must fail, unless they have the sanction of the whole people of the State. The work of the convention was a long list of suggestions for legislation, to be presented to the Assembly then in session. The most impor- tant of these were, — prohibition of manumission except on condition of instant transportation at the expense of the manu- mittor, to some place out of the country.^ Prohibition of all manumission by last will ; as well as by deed, if prospective. No free blacks to enter Maryland except as servants of trav- elers ; and strict regulations against the return of anv who might once leave the State. No free black to be carried on any train or steamer out of the State, unless vouched for as a freeman by some one known to the conductor or captain ; and the courts to appoint bailiffs, monthly, to watch the arrival and departure of all "common carriers," to prevent the escape of slaves. High rewards to be paid by the State for the convic- tion of those inducing or aiding slaves to escape; a-s well as rewards to be paid by the owners, according to the distance from home W'hich the runaway had covered, when caught. The State to pay all expenses of any cases which might arise from the conflict between the laws of any State and the Fugi- tive Slave Law, in order to test the constitutionality of the law. No free black to be allowed to hold any real estate, or any leasehold interest running for more than a year. No sales or gifts of slaves to free blacks, under penalty of fine to the master conveying, and of sale out of the State to the black so conveved. 'Every free black to give security, to be renewed iThis clause provoked some argument. One member— lie who lia.1 defended the Northern reporter— op|x)sed it as tending to entail slavery. Another said the blacks had long been invited to leave, but ha.1 refusi>.l to o-o. One member urged no manumission at all. 244 The Negro in Maryland. annually, for good behavior, under penalty for neglect of being hired out by a magistrate ; ten dollars of his wages being paid the person who had taken him before the magistrate; and attempts to run away being provided against by a penalty of sale out of the State, if caught. After 1843, the children of all free blacks were to be bound out by the courts, from the ages of eight to eighteen or twenty, when males M'ere to receive seventy-five dollars and females twenty-five, from the masters, on condition of leaving Maryland. All free blacks to register themselves and get new certificates, yearly, in the county offices. Sale out of Maryland or banishment, as punishment of free blacks for all offences not capital.^ No meetings of negroes for any purposes whatever, after sunset; and fine and imprisonment — with sale out of the State for a second offence — for any black having a license to preach, who might attend any illegal meetings. A fine of one hun- dred dollars, half to the informer, for any retail dealer who might give or sell, in any way whatever, any wine or liquors to any negro. And an increase in the cost of a license for a traveling pedlar. Such were the recommendations of this con- vention, which adjourned sine die, on the third day of sitting, after having named a committee of five members to present memorials to the Legislature. The House committee on Colored Population had been asked already to take some action, and leave had been granted them, two weeks before the slaveholders met, to briuo- in a bill "for the better govcrmnent of the free colored population of the State, and for tlie pi-otcction and perpetuation of negro slavery tJKivin." The memorial of the convention, duly presented a week or so after the adjonrnment, was read and referred to tlic same committee, and over a hundred copies were printed for the iii.iiiIhis and senators. Memorials and petitions ' 'i'lii» onN to liliiekN, The Free Negro. 245 against the work of the convention soon began to come in ; the Honse received twenty-six, and the Senate some eight others. Pnblic meetings were held in Baltimore, Centreville in Queen Anne's, Chestertown in Kent, and elsewhere; and a series of letters, signed Vindex, in the Baltimore Amancan, called attention to the fact that the convention, which sought to perpetuate slavery and to crush down large numbers of colored men, did not probably represent a seventh of the people of Maryland/ Meantime the committee's bill had received many amendments in the House; and the title was changed, to an act " for the better security of negro slaves in this State, and for promoting industry and honesty amongst the free people of color." It included — so much we know — an annual 'registration of free blacks; the sale for a year of all those " without visible means of support" and *' not of good and industrious habits," and the binding out of children whose parents were not of good character or could not honestly employ them. Every black manumitted should leave the State within twenty days, under penalty of sale by the year. Blacks could attend religious meetings after dark, provided there were present some authorized white clergyman, resident in Maryland, and at least three respectable slaveholders. And lockmen on the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal were to stop all boats whose captains were blacks. The bill passed the House, late in February, by a vote of forty to thirty-t)ric. On the day before, three memorials against such extreme measures were received from sundry citizens of Baltiinore. ^See Niles' Register, Vol. LXI, 368, &c.; LXII, 16, &c. Some of tliese petitions were not signed by many names, and some of the meetings may not have been large ; but it is safe to say that llie action of the convention was disapproved by the majority of citizens. In the petitions, oppo.sition was directed noticeably against llio prolnbil.on of religious meetings after dark. See House Journal and Senate .lournal. 1841, February Ist-March 8th. The Vinde.x letters begin in Hallimon- American, January 22d, 1842. There were few public c.xpres.sion» xu hivor of the suggestions of the convention. 246 The Negro in Maryland. All the petitions on the files of the House, together with one or two which came in later, were then sent to the Senate. The hill was rejected by the Senate, ^March 8th, by fifteen to six. We have already noticed that Baltimore city was not foirly represented in the Legislature. The solemn claim ^ of the slave- holders' convention at Annapolis to be "a meeting of citizens of Maryland appointed in conformity with public notice to represent the wishes and feelings of their respective counties and cities, to thus constitute a general convention," may well turn us to study the matter more closely, as a matter indeed of vital importance. Under the constitution of 1776, each countv Mas entitled to four seats in the House of Delegates, and Annajwiis and Baltimore to two seats each. The Senate was a body of fifteen, chosen at large by electors, the only restriction being that nine must live on the Western Shore (/. e. of the Bay), and six on the Eastern Shore. This system continued until 1838. After that, and until the adoption of tlie constitution of 1864, each county and the city of Baltimore chose one senator; and each county, until after 1851, sent from tlirec; to six delegates, according to population, counted in " federal inunbers," and Baltimore was entitled to the same number as the most populous county. After the adoption of the constitution of 1851, the smallest counties had l)ut two members, and Baltimore was given ten. In 1840, fully one- (piaitt-r of all (he Mhites in the State were in ]5altimore city, and iii.'iiiy more than a (piartcr of all the free blacks. By 1850, the proportion of both races had risen to one-third. As Delaware and New York were ecjually rejiresented in the natioiinl S.hmIc, so in the Maryland Senate, after 1837, Cal- vert • •uiMity, with some thirty-five hundred whites, fifteen hiiiidred iVee blacks and forty-five hundred slaves, had equal ' .^f ilio iiitiiiorial iHTst'iiUd to tlio Ast^embly, The Free Negro. 247 weight with Baltimore— with one hundred and forty thousand whites, twenty-five thousand free blacks, and three thousand slaves. In the popuhu' House, the delegation from Bahiuiore, at its largest, was less than a seventh of the members. Thus it might happen that large majorities in the Assembly would be a gross misrepresentation of the people of the Suite.' In 1842 the House passed a bill to require blacks to take out new freedom papers, at charges proportioned to their age, but the Senate rejected it.- At the session following, the ques- tion was asain raised, without result, of taxint>; all able free blacks, for the support of the State; and a bill to require them to be registered was considered, and the enacting clause finally struck out. The same questions were brought up the next year again ; and a committee bill for the registry of free blacks passed the House but was rejected by the Senate.' But of greater moment seems the report of a special committee of the House appointed to consider evidently a proposition tliat the free blacks of Charles county be removed — that measures be taken to cause all the free blacks in Maryland to emigrate. At the next session the delegates from Charles county, to whom the matter had been referred, presented a lengthy re- port. The presence of the free blacks, they said, is deemed an evil by almost everyone, and with continued increase in their numbers, the whites must eventually amalgamate with them, or leave the State, or be reduced to slavery. All plans for removing the blacks with their own consent were destined perhaps to prove illusory, as the negro iiad shown an invinci- ble indisposition to go. The testimony of the agents ul' the 1 Constitutions of 1776, 1851, 1864; amendment of 1S37. * House Journal, 1842, 144, 550. 3 House Journal, 1844, 42, 60, &c. Tiiis or another similar l.ill was up affain in the House the next year. 248 The Negro in Maryland. (nloiiization Society, indeed, showed that force alone conld remove them. And that the Assembly could force them to go, followesiral)le, and to provide pleasant accommodations for those al)out to sail, during the necessary tarry in Baltimore. In ' l«r)2, 202. • li.'ihiriiore paper-;, M:iy 2.")tli, July 20111, Sec, 1852. A gentleman promi- ni'iil in lilt' work of tiie Maryland Colonization Society, wrote in an open lelttT, in iK'jl, "The hlaek man's heart — capable of the highest improve- ment, III* Liberia lias already proved, clings to the natale solum with vast tenuriiy, more stj even than the white man feels, and the black man cannot, therefore, be expected to remove from familiar faces and familiar places, wiilioiit n dinging liold, yielding only to the sternest circumstances." (Itultiniore American, September lllh, 18)1.) There had been a raoveuient ill favor of eoloniuition in 1841 (A'lVes, LX, 227). The Baltimore Sun for May ITlli, 1H')1, speaks of similar ellbrts among the blacks in Baltimore niid in Cambridge. The Free Negro. 251 accordance with the address that was issued, tlie convention met in July, in Baltimore. The ol)jeet, as given, was to con- sider the present condition of the free blacks, and to adopt such measures as might tend to its amelioration. Several delegations at once asked leave to withdraw, as they wore convinced that any action by the convention, instead of im- proving the condition of their people, would produce an agita- tion among them, to their injury. This was greeted with cries of approval from all parts of the house, and although the statement was plainly made that the convention had no direct connection with the work of colonization, but was for the improvement of the social and intellectual condition of the blacks, the sitting ended without accomplishing anytliing. In a melee without the hall, where a crowd of blacks ha«l gathered, one boy was cut in the face with a tumbler, and a dozen men were arrested. And as the reporter of the aboli- tion paper at the slaveholders' convention had barely escaped a laying on of hands, so here, a minister of one of the black consreffations of Baltimore, a zealous advocate of coloniza- tion, had to be escorted home by the police. The next day — a strong police force being present — officers were chosen, and the resolution adopted, that all men are equal, and tiiat free inquiry should be given to all matters affecting their wel- fare; and that while the zeal of those who had labored for twenty years to put the whites and free blacks of tiie country on a social and political equality, had been fully appreciated, the fact was evident that the condition of the free bhicks as a class was less desirable than before. At this sitting and tlic next, there was a lively discussion as to the advantages of emigration to Liberia. Earnest and able speeches were tiiadc. showing considerable knowledge of Liberia and liayti. but some felt that to recommend emigration woidd only l)e to destroy anv good influences of the conventi..n among the blacks. It was resolved, finally, that the "disparity of tl.ongbt, feeling and intellectual advancement" which was mvu to exist between the white and black races, showed that mutual preju- 2 52 The Negro in Maryland. dices could never be sufficiently overcome for the two races to dwell together in harmony and equal privileges, and that a separation from the whites — many of whom the blacks could not but love and admire— was therefore devoutly to be desired, as tending to the advantage of both whites and blacks. To these resolutions there was but one opposing voice, and the convention adjourned after having named a permanent com- mittee and recommended the formation of local societies, to estal)lish schools for black children, and to find out all useful information about colonization/ The Governor's message to the Assembly of 1858 spoke of the favorite policy of coloniza- tion suo-trostino- the use of further inducements to make the free blacks of the counties leave, and emancipation conditioned on immediate removal — before those who were freed might become contaminated by their new associations — or on pay- ment of a sum sufficient to ensure the colonization of others. At that session, the renewed appropriation having expired, there was voted for the work under the managers, five thou- sand a year for four years, and in addition, seventy dollars for every black above ten years and thirty-five for younger ones, safely started for Africa — the entire expenditure not to exceed the previous appropriations often thousand a year. In September, 1858, a goodly number of the slaveholders of Worcester county met together to recommend the calling of a general convention of the Eastern Shore, in the following ' Al ii iiiitional convention of colored }>eople in Pliiladelpliia, in October, 1S5."), II letter was read from a black of Haltiinore eulogizing Liberia. Sev- eral nieiiil)ers tliereiipun spoke against colonization, determined to demand llu'ir rights in the conntry where they were born ; and a motion to burn the letter was curried by a large majority. So reported the Baltimore Sun of OcIdIkt Uttth. The author of this letter appears to have been the temporary cliuiruian of the convention in 15altiniore in '52. The Baltimore conven- tion mljiHirned to the following year, but the papers have no mention of niiy further meetings. See the reports of the National Colored Conven- tiouH, ill Philadelphia in 1S;U and 1832, opposing emigration to Liberia and llayti, and asking the .\inerican Col. Soc. to desist from its "unhal- lowe«l iK-TM^-cuiioii." Williams' Colored Race, 11,(31. The Free Negro. 253 November, and to pass resolutions for the strict enforcement of the hiws and police regulations concerning slaves, especially to prevent runaways and the spread of abolition pajx-rs. This was to be helped by empowering postmasters in all the slaveholding States — for the resolutions looked to action by Congress as well as by the State Legislature — to open all letters and documents addressed to slaves and free blacks.^ In response to this call, delegates from Caroline, Dorchester, Somerset, Talbot and Worcester met at Cam- bridge. A committee of ten reported resolutions the follow- ing clay, which were adopted. It was evident, they said, to the people of Maryland that it was an impossibility under the existing laws, to control and regulate the black popu- lation in a proper manner. Attention was called to the great number of free negroes; to their habits of idleness and dissipation ; to the heavy cost to the public of criminal prosecutions against them ; to their well known tampering with slaves and aid in inducing slaves to abscond ; and to their evil example and influence on the slaves, whom they made dissatisfied with bondage and comparatively worthless to the owners. Maryland is, and should be, a slaveholding state, true to the interest of herself and her Southern sisters. A system of legislation was needed to protect slaveholders and reo-ulate all negroes — for their own interests as well as for the whites. Free blacks and slaves could not exist side by side, and the 'Wicious habits" of the free blacks, "their refusal to labor, their incapacity for self-government," leave the ahcrna- tive of making them go from the State or go int.* slavery. Public feeling was ready for the question, and delegati's of all the people should be called together to consider these propo- sitions and make recommendations to the Legislature. A 1 Baltimore Sun, Sept., 21st. 1S58. iVi/es' Register n,enti..n8 local meotings of slaveholders in Anne Arundel, Charles and St. Mar/s count u-., m Ks45 (Vol. LXIX, 52). There was a meeting in Queen Anne's (Jounly, also, in February, 1845. 2o4 The Negro in Maryland, committee of seventeen was named to draft an address to be printeil, before the convention, in newspapers throughout the State.' In tile following June, 1859, the general slaveholders' con- vention met in Baltimore. The plan had been to have each county and Baltimore city represented by as many delegates as each sent to the Assembly. And the meeting indeed seems to have been a large one. Allegany appears to have been the oidy county not represented. A meeting of citizens of Balti- more interested in the movement had been called shortly be- fore, but so few responded that no organization was made. However, a delegation from Baltimore was nominated by the convention, the chairman stating — in response to the question of a member from Calvert, as to whom the city representatives represented — that on failure to choose members, after proper notice, the people would be voiced by those who Avere pres- ent. A large committee of twenty-one, from the various counties, was chosen to report action. But the committee Wits divided in opinion.^ Two questions, in general, are be- fore us, reported the majority, — first, the proposed expulsion of the free blacks from the State, and secondly, whatever leg- islatiim may be necessary to give vitality to the law of 1831, iii:ikiiig nianumission conditional on emigration. It is highly int'xpcdicnt to try to remove all the free blacks. They are inl<)liti..ii, oflbrts for, .52, &c., 237 Maryland society for, 52, &c., 57 g(K"iety in Baltimore for, 152, 184 of slavory in Maryland, 262. Aljolitioii matter, spread of forbidden, 224. Annapolis, records of Mayor's court of, 13»). Anne Arundel County Court, study of old records of, 135. Apprentices, colored children bound i»ut as, 108, 219; efforts to force certain free blacks to become, 200. Baltimore, unfair representation of, in as.>;fmbly, 246. Barliadoi's, notice of slave code of, 147. Brown, John, patrols called out after raid of, 97, 111. Carroll, Charles, efforts of, for aboli- tion, 53, 54. Charles county, effort to remove free blacks from, 247. Coloiii/.ation, the state policy, 66, 165, \c., 2.'17, iVc, 252, 260; decisions of c-ourt nf aj)pi'als unfavorable to, KiU; Maryland society, 71, 165, 235, 23S; American society, 235; wnvenlion of blacks on, 250. Convfp.roii to Christianity does not Kive freedom, 2>i, ttc. Cruelty to servants and slaves, efforts to prevent, 140, «S:c. ; to slaves, 141, \c. IX-liiwnrv, escape of slaves to, 85, Ac. IV»j<*, numlivr of hdil bv free blacks limited, 216. iJulii* on nluvu« iniiKirtod, 42, Ac. 266 Education of blacks, not provided for, 197. Entertainment, of servants and slaves, restrictions on, 100; by blacks in Baltimore, must be licensed, 204. Evidence, law of, 190, &c. See Tes- timony. Exportation of blacks, efforts to pre- vent, 57, <&c. False imprisonment, suits by manu- mitted slaves for, unsuccessful, 162. Felons, importation of, 118; testi- mony of, 121 ; numbers of, in Bal- timore county, 1752, 175. Freedom, petitions for, 36, 148, &c. ; removal oftrial on petitionsfor, 153. Free blacks, numbers of, 175, 249; entrance of, forbidden, 176, &c., 178, 181, &c. ; entrance of, allowed by special acts, 178, 180 ; liable to detention as runaway slaves, 183 ; right of suffrage once exercL'sed by, 186; legalstatusof, 187, 194; pro- perty held by, 188, &c. ; occupa- tions of, 206; restrictions on trading and dealings by, 208, 211, &c. take benefit of insolvency laws, 211 idle and indigent, bound out, 218 efforts to force, to hire out, 222 law to prevent, from quitting ser- vice, 223 ; punishments of, for un- lawful meetings, 199 ; for belong- ing to secret societies, 200; for dealing in stolen goods, 212, for handling abolition matter, 225; laws on crimes and punishments touching, 226 ; sale of, as punish- ment, 227, &c., 232, &c. ; not . deemed a desirable part of popula- tion, 234, &c., 237, 240, 242, 253; efforts for increased restrictions on, 240-260. Index. 267 French West Indies, importation of slaves from, 48 ; insurrection in, 96. Friends, society of, efforts for aboli- tion, 52, &c. ; against exportation of blacks, 57, &c., 60; for unre- stricted manumission, 151, &c. ; against kidnapping, 184. Garrison, Wm. Lloyd, and the Genius of Universal Emancipation, 224. Guns and ammunition held by blacks, restrictions on, 216. Indentured, idle free blacks, &c., see Free Blacks. Indians, the Spaniards and the, 5, &c., 9 ; the colonists and the, 11, etc. ; enslavement of, prisoners, 12, 19; mention of slaves, 13, 20; trials of white offenders against, 15 ; restrictions on, 17 ; conversion of, 18 ; trials and punishments of, 116. Insurrections, rumors of, of papists, Indians and negroes, 91, &c., 97 ; in West Indies, 96 ; local, 96 ; rumors of, of slaves, 97, &c., 202. See Southampton. Introduction of slaves to Marvland, 26. Jacob's Bill, against free blacks, 260. Jail treatment of blacks, 81. Kidnapping, 34, &c., 61, 148, &c. Liberia, 165 ; convictions for larceny in, 234 ; removal of blacks to, 239, 241, 249. Liquor, sale of to servants and slaves, restrictions on, 102, 213, to slaves and free blacks, 213, &c. Manumission, 55, 60, 148, &c. ; not valid in prejudice of creditors, 168, &c. ; allowed bv special acts, 167 ; conditional, 169, Ac, 237 ; by presumption, 172 ; by devise of property, 174. Manumitted slaves, powers of, to secure freedom, 161 ; status of, 162. See Slaves for terms of years. Marriages between blacks and whites forbidden, 32, 195. Meetings of blacks, restrictions on, 93, &c., 100, &c., 11)9. &•., 205. Military service, exemption of blacks from, 110 ; enlistment of free blacks in, in Revolution, 196. New Jersey, escape of slaves to, 85, &c. New York, escape of slaves to, 88. Occupations of free blacks, 206. Pardoning power, exercise of by Gov- ernor, illustrated from old council records, 130, &c. Passes, use of, for blacks, 89. Patrols, 97, &c., 110. Pennsvlvania, escape of slaves to, 85, _cS:c.,"88, 235. Pinkney, Wm., eflbrts for abolition, 53, 152; against exportation of blacks, 57. Population of Marvland, in 1860, 265. See also 38," 175, 249. Prisoners, ransom of Christian, 3 ; enslavement of heathen, 4. Propertv, of slaves, 104; of free black8j^l88. Protection societies, for insurance of slave propertyT^l. Punishments, laws on crimes and, see Servants, Free Blacks and Slaves. Ransom of prisoners, old custom of, 3, itc. Religious bodies of blacks, 199, 205. Runaways, white servant**, 72, Ac, 78; slaves, 72-91; Indians, 74; black servants, for terms of vears, 78. Servants, black, see Slaves for terms of years. Wiiite servants, 20, Ac, 72; restrictions on entertainnuMil of, or dealings with, 100, 102; punishments of, 114, 119. Slave ccnle, on crimes and pun- ishinent^;, studv of growth of, 112-126. Slave trade, by Euroi)eans, 4, <>, Ac, 9 ; African, 38, Ac, 40 ; growth of opposition to, 43, 46; prohibition of, 45. f^S 268 Index. Slavery, in antiquitj, 2; early treatises on war, &c., touching, 7, &f. ; basis of, in Maryland, 26-37 ; legalized, 37 ; abolished by State constitution of 1864, 262. Slaves, introduction of into Mary- land, 26; in England, 27; con- version does not alter status of, 28, &.C. ; increase in numbers of, 3S, «*to. ; restrictions put on intro- duction of, 45, Ac, 64, (Sic, 66, &c., lessened, 71 ; eftbrts to prevent ex- portation of, 67, &.C. ; outlawry of, for certain oflences, 76, 81 ; pun- ishment of, for absconding, 76, 78, Ac, SI, 91, for absence from home, 100, Ac, for sale of li(iuors, &c., 103 ; laws on crimes and punish- ments touching slaves, 117-130, 138 ; refttrictions on transporta- tion of, by common carriers, 82, &c ; efforts to restrict, from act- ing as free, 104, &c., 174; restric- tions on dealing or trading with, 102, Ac ; religious instruction of slaves, 108, Ac. ; care of old or dis- abled, required, 107, 149 ; sales of, Ac, 144 ; issue of mortgaged, 145 ; owned by free blacks, 190. Slaves, for terms of years, restric- tions on exportation of, 60, Ac ; restriitions on sale of, 61, Ac; runaways, 78 ; exportation and sjile of, as punishment, 124; status of ih-sue of, 154. Slave-holders' conventions, at An- napolis, 242, of Eastern Shore, 252, at Baltimore, 254. Society of Friends, see Friends. Societies, secret, of blacks, forbidden, 200 ; beneficial, allowed in Balti- more, 203. Southampton insurrection, 65, 66, 96, 99, 165, 177, 199, 236. Suffrage, right of, once open to free blacks, 186. Taxables, slaves, 146. Testimony, of blacks illegal against whites, 119; of convicts, made valid against convicts, 121 ; of slaves made valid against slaves, 121; of white servants, 140; growth of law touching evidence, 190, Ac. Tobacco, growth of, as affecting slavery, 39. Trades and shipping, as affecting slavery, 39. Turner, Nat., see Southampton in- surrection. Vagrant free blacks, sales of, 218, Ac, 221, Ac; committed to Bal- timore almshouse, 221 ; children . of, bound out, 198, 219. Villeinage in Europe, 2. Vindex letters in Baltimore Ameri- can, against the slaveholders' con- vention, 245. War, laws of, as affecting slavery, 2, 4, 7, Ac. Whites and blacks, status of issue of, 32, Ac. ; marriage between, for- bidden, 32, 195. "^ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 003 436 919 7 A