Fugitive Slave Convention
The Fugitive Slave Convention was held in Cazenovia, New York, on August 21 and 22, 1850. It was a fugitive slave meeting, the biggest ever held in the United States. Madison County, New York, was the abolition headquarters of the country, because of philanthropist and activist Gerrit Smith, who lived in neighboring Peterboro, New York, and called the meeting "in behalf of the New York State Vigilance Committee." Hostile newspaper reports refer to the meeting as "Gerrit Smith's Convention". Nearly fifty fugitives attended—the largest gathering of fugitive slaves in the nation's history.
This was one month before the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 was passed by the United States Congress; its passage was a foregone conclusion, and the convention never even discussed how its passage could be prevented. Instead the question was what the existing fugitive slaves were to do, and how their friends could help them. Many resolutions and position statements were passed; this was the first time slaves still in bondage were publicly encouraged to abscond, stealing their master's fastest horse and money, and using violence if necessary. Participants included Frederick Douglass, until recently himself a fugitive slave, the Edmonson sisters, Gerrit Smith, Samuel Joseph May, Theodore Dwight Weld, his wife Angelina Grimké, and others.
The original plan had been for William L. Chaplin, the General Agent of the New York State Antislavery Society, to make a dramatic appearance with some fugitive slaves that he was to spirit out off the South. It was not to be; things went awry.
The meeting was chaired by Douglass. The local links with the abolitionist movement were Theodore Weld's brother Ezra Greenleaf Weld, who owned a daguerrotype studio in Cazenovia and to whom we owe a picture of the principal attendees, taken to show Chaplin his supporters meeting. Even more important, the abolitionist philanthropist Gerrit Smith, one of the Secret Six that years later would finance John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry, lived only away, in more rural Peterboro. The first book on Madison County, of 1899, says much of Smith, but mentions neither the Convention nor Ezra Weld.
The meeting was forgotten until a daguerrotype was discovered in the archives of the Madison County Historical Society in 1994. Judge Hugh C. Humphreys, who found the daguerrotype, identified the meeting through period newspapers.
Madison County, New York, a haven for slaves
New York was the safest state for fugitive slaves, according to Gerrit Smith, the richest man in New York State and organizer of the convention. He made of Madison County in particular a place where slave catchers did not dare show their faces. "The vicinity of Cazenovia and Syracuse was such a locality where the enforcement of the fugitive slave enactments was vigorously and violently opposed." He helped every fugitive that reached his home in neighboring Peterboro—feeding them, sheltering them, and helping them get to Syracuse, also safe, and from there across nearby Lake Ontario to Canada.A visitor in 1841 described Peterboro thus:
Between 1840 and 1843 three different abolitionist weeklies were published in Cazenovia: the Cazenovia Abolitionist, Onondaga and Madison Abolitionist, and Madison County Abolitionist.
There was a colored conventions movement, but these were free blacks that were meeting. The Convention in Cazenovia—Peterboro was a "tiny hamlet", too small for the number of visitors expected—is the only "Convention of Slaves" ever held in the United States, as it was called by Douglass in The North Star. Douglass, a Black man, presided.
Peterboro is since about 2005 the site of the National Abolition Hall of Fame and Museum.
Call for the convention
The following announcement appeared in the August 1, 1850, issue of the National Anti-Slavery Standard:It was promptly reprinted in Frederick Douglass's North Star, William Garrison's Liberator, and other anti-slavery papers. It was also reprinted, with outrage, in a number of Southern and pro-slavery Northern newspapers.
Venues
The convention opened at what the announcement called "the Independent Church", later the Free Congregational Church of Cazenovia and then Cazenovia College's theater building. The capacity was 400, and there were hundreds who could not get in. There was an unsuccessful attempt to move the meeting to the Methodist church, and a resolution by Gerrit Smith to move the meeting to nearby Peterboro was defeated. As no other church would host the meeting, it moved the next day to "the orchard of Grace Wilson's School, located on Sullivan Street." Although there were in 1850s no railroads in Cazenovia, it was said to have had 2,000 to 3,000 participants. In the 1850 census the population of Cazenovia was 4,800.Convention activities
Two newspapers, the Madison Daily Whig and the Utica Daily Gazette sent reporters, who with the Cazenovia weekly provided detailed, session-by-session accounts. The Gazette's reports were reprinted nationally, although the New York Tribune got much of the credit. The official minutes were quite abbreviated and the newspaper reports add significant details.William Chaplin
A feature of the convention, as originally planned, was that William Chaplin was to make "a dramatic appearance", together with some enslaved who he had helped escape.Chaplin was a radical political abolitionist who helped plan the escape of 77 slaves from Washington, D.C. This plan ultimately failed and Chaplin was later arrested after he was caught driving a carriage with two escaped slaves. His fiancée, Theodosia Gilbert, attended the convention. There was a resolution by James C. Jackson that was adopted to create a committee to raise money in order to liberate Chaplin. He advised them to raise $20,000 in 30 days. They also called upon the Liberty Party to nominate Chaplin as its candidate in the 1852 presidential election.
First day activities
Morning session
The meeting was called to order at 10 a.m. "at the Free Church" by James C. Jackson. Samuel Joseph May was chosen President pro tem and temporary secretary Samuel Thomas Jr. May then appointed Samuel Wells, J.W. Loguen, and Charles B. Ray to a committee to nominate official officers. Later in the convention, official officers were appointed by this committee to major positions. Frederick Douglass was appointed to president. Joseph C. Hathaway, Rev. Francis Hawley, Charles B. Ray, and Charles A. Wheaton were appointed for vice presidents. Charles D. Miller and Anne V. Adams were appointed for secretaries.Joseph C. Hathaway, William R. Smith, Eleazer Seymour, and James C. Jackson were appointed to nominate people for the "Chaplin Committee", "whose business it shall be to adaopt such measures, as they shall judge fit to effect his liberation," which might well "require the expenditure of large sums of money."
This committee ended up consisting of around 19 people. Some of the committee members included James C. Jackson, Joseph C. Hathaway, William R. Smith, and George W. Lawson.
A group of women including Mrs. F. Rice, Phebe Hathaway, and Louisa Burnett were appointed to nominate a committee of females. This committee would obtain a silver pitcher and two silver goblets to present them to William C. Chaplin, in honor of "his distinguished services in the cause of humanity."
Afternoon session
The meeting was called to order by C. B. Ray, prayer by Rev. Mr. Snow.During the first part of the afternoon session, the Chaplin affair was addressed, with a lengthy oral report by Joseph Hathaway, who had visited Chaplin in jail. On the conclusion, the Address Committee reported on two proposals: one "to the slaves of the South from the fugitives of the North," and one to "the Abolition party", recommending Chaplin be chosen as their candidate for governor. The convention got down to the main item of business, the letter to the slaves. The Committee on Resolutions presented a report, and a committee of 23 was appointed to raise money to aid in Chaplin's defense.
Since no larger church would allow the meeting, Gerrit Smith moved that they meet the next day in his home town, Peterboro, 10 miles away, which motion failed. A grove was obtained for use the next day.
It was 10 pm when the convention adjourned. The main item of business, the Letter to the Slaves, had been adopted after hard and protacted debate. Much of it was telegraphed to the New York papers that night.
Evening session
Prayer by the Rev. Mr. Snow, after which the evening was spent on the address and resolutions.Second day activities (August 22)
According to the Madison County Whig, on the 2nd day, at the point of greatest attendance there were 700 present.A circular from the Chaplin Fund Committee was issued, dated the 22nd.
On the last afternoon, the question of free produce was examined. Mr. Smith declared himself an abstainer from slave produce.
Resolutions and letters passed
"A Letter to the American Slaves from those who have fled from American Slavery"
What distinguished this convention from other anti-slavery meetings was the open letter titled "To American Slaves from those who have fled from American Slavery", written, "it is said", by Gerrit Smith, who introduced it to the attendees; Smith's authorship was confirmed by Garrison in The Liberator. This letter encouraged those still enslaved to run away, saying it was their duty to do so, and exposing the lies of their owners about life in the North. It recommended those escaping enslavement steal their owners' fastest horses and their cash. It quotes the state motto of Virginia—"Death to Tyrants"—and says it should be the Black man's motto as well. "You are prisoners of war...and therefore, by all the rules of war, you have the fullest liberty to plunder, burn, and kill, as you may have occasion to do to promote your escape."It was reprinted in part in many papers, especially the passage endorsing violence, and in full in the abolition newspapers. This—not the meeting itself—was national news.