Free Negro

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A free Negro or free black is the term used historically to describe African Americans who were not slaves prior to the abolition of slavery. Although almost all African Americans came to the United States as slaves, from the earliest days of American slavery, men and women were set free for numerous reasons. Sometimes an owner died and the heirs did not want slaves, or a slave was freed as reward for his good service, or he worked his way out of slavery by paying for his freedom.[1] Free blacks in the antebellum period--those years from the formation of the Union until the Civil War--were quite outspoken about the injustice of slavery.[2]

Free blacks in America were first documented in Northampton County, Virginia, in 1662. By 1776 approximately 8 percent of African Americans were free. By 1810 4 percent of blacks in the South and 75 percent of blacks in the North were free. On the eve of the American Civil War 10 percent of African Americans nation wide, close to half a million people, were already free.[3]

Black men enlisted as soldiers and fought in the American Revolution and the War of 1812. Some owned land, homes, businesses, and paid taxes. In some Northern cities, for brief periods of time, black property owners voted. Blacks were also outspoken in print. Freedom's Journal, the first black-owned newspaper, appeared in 1827. This paper and other early writings by blacks fueled the attack against slavery and racist conceptions about the intellectual inferiority of African Americans. [2]

Free blacks were often mixed-race people; many were born in North America. A half-white free Negro was called a mulatto (male) or a mulatress (female). Negro is a Portuguese and Spanish term that means "black." The term colored was ubiquitously employed by 1820 to describe mixed-race free Negroes.

In Virginia and North Carolina most free negro families were the descendants of white servant women who had children by slaves or free African Americans.[4] Very few families that were free descended from white slave owners who had children by their slaves, perhaps as low as 1% of the total. Under the law of partus, male slave-owners were not required to free their children by their slaves. Many free African American families in colonial North Carolina and Virginia were landowners.[4] Some of them became slave owners themselves. For example, a freedman named Cyprian Ricard purchased an estate in Louisiana owning 100 slaves.[5] [6]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Freed In the 17th Century Reprinted from Issues & Views Spring 1998
  2. ^ a b Free Blacks in the Antebellum Period
  3. ^ Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience By Anthony Appiah, Kwame Anthony Appiah, Henry Louis Gates Page 299
  4. ^ a b Freedom in the Archives Paul Heinegg and Henry B. Hoff.
  5. ^ Meltzer, Milton (1993). Slavery: A World History. DaCapo. ISBN 0306805367. Retrieved on 2007-10-16. 
  6. ^ Franklin, John Hope; Moss, Alfred A. (1994). From Slavery to Freedom: A History of African Americans. McGraw-Hill, p. 156. ISBN 978-0679430872.