History of slavery in the United States by state

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History of slavery in the United States by state

Following the creation of the United States in 1776 and the ratification of the U.S. Constitution in 1789, the legal status of slavery was generally a matter for individual U.S. state legislatures and judiciaries (outside of several historically significant exceptions including the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, the 1808 Act Prohibiting Importation of Slaves, the 1820 Missouri Compromise, the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, the Dred Scott v. Sandford decision of 1857, et al.)

Status of slavery in the United States, 1776–1865
Map of abolition of slavery in the United States as of 1800
Evolution of the enslaved population of the United States as a percentage of the population of each state, 1790–1860

As such, slavery flourished in some states (mostly southern), and withered on the vine in others (mostly northern). On the whole, the former Thirteen Colonies abolished slavery relatively slowly, if at all, with several Northern states using gradual emancipation systems in which freedom would be granted after so many years of life or service. (Vermont and New York had clear and absolute freedom dates; Massachusetts and New Hampshire were de facto free states with total abolition from the American Revolution forward.)

For many years after the establishment of the republic, new states were admitted in pairs, so-called free state–slave state twins, so that some states entered the Union with guaranteed "free soil" while their twin permitted the continuation and expansion of America's peculiar institution. Fifteen states (in order of admission, Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, South Carolina, Virginia, North Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Missouri, Arkansas, Florida, and Texas) never sought to end slavery, and thus bondage and the slave trade continued in those places, and there was even a movement to reopen the transatlantic slave trade. With the admission of California, Oregon, and Iowa as free states, and the prospective admission of Kansas Territory (likely as a free state), with the commensurate increasing political power of free-state legislators in the United States Congress, the political status quo began to disintegrate. This shift convinced the Slave Power's most influential and vocal leaders that secession was the only way to retain long-term control of both their wealth held in slaves and their political power. (Under the Three-Fifths Compromise brokered at the 1787 Constitutional Convention, enslaved people were considered additional population for purposes of apportionment. The prospective end of slavery would have thus deprived slave owners of the disproportionate representation of their interests in the national legislature, relative not just the people they enslaved but to free white male voters in other states.) Ultimately, a massive and devastating four-year-long war resolved the interstate conflict over slavery, and when rebel state governments were finally overwhelmed by force of arms, various civilian and military representatives of the U.S. government emancipated those people who remained legally enslaved. Slavery in the United States was legally abolished nationwide within the 36 newly reunited states under the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, effective December 18, 1865. Slavery in the Indian Territory was abolished in 1866 a series of treaties with each of the Five Civilized Tribes, agreements known today as the Reconstruction Treaties.[1]

The federal district, which is legally part of no state and under the sole jurisdiction of the U.S. Congress, permitted slavery until the American Civil War. For the history of the abolition of the slave trade in the district and the federal government's one and only compensated emancipation program, see slavery in the District of Columbia.

Color key:   United States-allegiance during the American Civil War   Confederate States allegiance during the American Civil War   Dual allegiance, disputed allegiance, or new state during the American Civil War

More information State, Civil War allegiance ...
States admitted prior to 1865
StateCivil War allegianceDate ratified 13th Amendment[2] Prior state-wide abolition Notes
Alabama CSADecember 2, 1865
Arkansas CSAApril 14, 1865
California USADecember 20, 1865 September 9, 1850 (statehood)[3]
Connecticut USAMay 4, 1865 1848[4] Connecticut passed partial abolition laws and time-delayed manumission laws beginning in 1784.[4]
Delaware USAFebruary 19, 1901 Delaware was a slave state but did not secede to the Confederacy.
Florida CSADecember 28, 1865
Georgia CSADecember 6, 1865
Illinois USAFebruary 1, 1865 April 1, 1848[5] Chattel slavery was prohibited in Illinois at statehood under the terms of the Northwest Ordinance; indentured servitude was not prohibited until the Second Illinois Constitution of 1848.[5]
Indiana USAFebruary 6, 1865 December 11, 1816 (statehood)[6]
Iowa USAJanuary 17, 1866 December 28, 1846 (statehood)[7]
Kansas USAFebruary 7, 1865 January 29, 1861 (statehood)[8]
Kentucky Dual governmentMarch 18, 1976
Louisiana CSAFebruary 1865 Louisiana ratified the Thirteenth Amendment on either Feb. 15 or 16.
Maryland USAFebruary 3, 1865 November 1, 1864[9]
Massachusetts USAFebruary 7, 1865 Massachusetts was for intents and purposes a free state with total abolition from the American Revolution forward.[10]
MaineUSAFebruary 7, 1865 March 15, 1820 (statehood)[11] The pre-statehood District of Maine was legally a part of Massachusetts; Maine was admitted as Missouri's free-state "twin" under the Missouri Compromise.
Michigan USAFebruary 2, 1865 January 26, 1837 (statehood)[12]
Minnesota USAFebruary 23, 1865 May 11, 1858 (statehood)[13]
Missouri Dual governmentFebruary 6, 1865
Mississippi CSAFebruary 7, 2013[14]
NevadaUSAFebruary 16, 1865 October 31, 1864 (statehood)[a] Nevada was admitted to the Union during the Civil War, thus its state nickname is Battle-Born.
New Hampshire USAJune 30, 1865 The legal status of slavery in New Hampshire has been described as "ambiguous,"[16] and abolition legislation was minimal or non-existent.[17] New Hampshire never passed a state law abolishing slavery.[18] That said, New Hampshire was a free state with no slavery to speak of from the American Revolution forward.[10]
New Jersey USAJanuary 23, 1866 April 18, 1846[19] New Jersey had some gradual manumission laws prior to 1846, resulting in a "continuum" of servitude statuses that persisted until the Civil War.[19]
New York USAFebruary 3, 1865 July 4, 1827[20]
North Carolina CSADecember 4, 1865
Ohio USAFebruary 10, 1865 February 19, 1803 (statehood)
Oregon USADecember 11, 1865 February 14, 1859 (statehood)[21][b]
Pennsylvania USAFebruary 8, 1865 March 1, 1780[22] Pennsylvania's gradual emancipation system meant that enslavement and indentured servitude continued until 1847.[22]
Rhode Island USAFebruary 2, 1865 1843[23] Rhode Island passed gradual emancipation laws after the American Revolution.[10]
South Carolina CSANovember 13, 1865
Tennessee CSAApril 7, 1865 October 24, 1864 (Moses speech declaration by military governor of Tennessee Andrew Johnson),[24] and state constitutional amendment certified February 27, 1865[25]
Texas CSAFebruary 17, 1870 June 19, 1865 (Juneteenth declaration by U.S. Army)[26]
Vermont USAMarch 9, 1865 March 4, 1791 (statehood)[27] Constitution of the Vermont Republic abolished slavery effective July 2, 1777.[27]
Virginia CSAFebruary 9, 1865
West Virginia Dual governmentFebruary 3, 1865 The Appalachian counties of Virginia separated from the rest of the state during the Civil War. Gradual emancipation was written in West Virginia state constitution of 1863.[28]
WisconsinUSAFebruary 24, 1865 May 29, 1848 (statehood)
Close

Slavery in states admitted after 1865

See also

Explanatory footnotes

  1. Abolition ordinance passed July 1864, and abolition clause included in original state constitution[15]
  2. Only free state admitted with an "exclusionary clause"; see Oregon black exclusion laws

References

Further reading

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