Newtown Square Friends & Neighbors magazine, August 2020

Page 26

History Spotlight

Newtown Square Friends Meeting

Quakers and Abolition

Photo courtesy of the Newtown Square Historical Society

by Doug Humes I’ve spent days searching for records of slaves in Newtown and Marple townships, from the first census in 1790 until 1860, the last census before the Civil War. There was one slave reported in the 1790 census for Newtown. By the next census in 1800, there were no slaves in Newtown. That is the only slave that appears in either township for that time period. Why was that? Beginning in the 1680s, Newtown and Marple were settled by Quakers. Their religion, Quakerism, born in the 1650s, was relatively young, and Quaker thinkers were still exploring what it meant to be Quaker. In 1688, six years after Pennsylvania was founded, Quakers in Germantown presented a petition urging their local meeting to support the abolition of slavery. That was the first protest against slavery made by a religious body in the English colonies. Generations of Quakers continued the assault on the “peculiar institution” of slavery. They pressured their members to free their slaves, and also worked to eliminate the importing and sale of slaves.

Original Springfield Friends Meeting House Photo courtesy of the Marple Historical Society

In 1775, Quakers led the charge in founding the Pennsylvania Abolition Society, the first in the country. The legislature, responding to pressure for change, passed the Gradual Abolition Act in 1780, providing that any child of a slave mother born after that time was free; prohibiting the import of slaves into the state; and placing registration requirements on slave owners. Failure to register resulted in freedom for the slaves. The law was revolutionary: the first time in human history that a democratic government took affirmative steps to abolish slavery, which had existed in the world since the Biblical age

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Newtown Square Friends & Neighbors

August 2020

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