CHAPTER XXII.
Slavery under the Confederation. — Emancipation by the States.
The number of slaves in the United States at the time of the Declaration of Independence has been estimated at half a million. The following table exhibits their numbers in each state. It appears that slavery existed in all of the thirteen states at the commencement of the revolutionary war; but shortly after its close, as we shall see hereafter, slavery and the slave-trade were abolished in some of the states:
NUMBER OF SLAVES IN THE UNITED STATES IN 1776. | ||||
Massachusetts | 3,500 | Delaware | 9,000 | |
Rhode Island | 4,373 | Maryland | 80,000 | |
Connecticut | 5,000 | Virginia | 165,000 | |
New Hampshire | 629 | North Carolina | 75,000 | |
New York | 15,000 | South Carolina | 110,000 | |
New Jersey | 7,600 | Georgia | 16,000 | |
Pennsylvania | 10,000 |
No distinct provision on the subject of slavery appears in any of the state constitutions of the period, except in that of Delaware, which provided "that no person hereafter imported from Africa ought to be held in slavery under any pretense whatever;" and that "no negro, Indian, or mulatto slave ought to be brought into this state for sale from any part of the world."
Legal proceedings commenced in Massachusetts prior to the revolution to test the legality of slavery there, and though resulting in favor of the claimants of freedom, failed, however, to produce a general emancipation. Some attempts made at the commencement of the revolution to introduce the subject into the provincial Congress of Massachusetts were defeated; and that body seemed to recognize the legality of slavery by a resolution that no negro slave should be enlisted in the army. In 1777, a prize ship from Jamaica, with several slaves on board, was brought into Salem by a privateer. The slaves were advertised for sale; but the General Court interfered, and they were set at liberty. The declaration, presently inserted into the Massachusetts Bill of