
Thehistory of slavery in Delaware began when it wasDelaware Colony and continued until the ratification of theThirteenth Amendment in December 1865.[1] TheDelaware River was an important waterway used for bringing slaves inland toPennsylvania.[2] In 1776, Delaware prohibited the importation of slaves, and on December 7, 1787, prohibited both imports and exports of slaves from the state.[3] Delaware never abolished slavery and in the order of admission to the Union, it was the first of the 15slave states. However, it did not secede from the Union during theAmerican Civil War.[4] There were 1,798 enslaved people living in Delaware at the time of the 1860 U.S. census.[5]
A state with a mix of enslaved people and a large population offree people of color that lay in close proximity to theslave jails of traders in Baltimore, Maryland and Washington, D.C., legally free blacks were sometimeskidnapped into slavery, and "freedmen found it wise to deposit apprentice and freedom papers with thePennsylvania Abolition Society in Philadelphia."[5] For example, theJohnson–Cannon gang, whose tavern and slave pen stood on the border between Maryland and Delaware, were notorious slave stealers and murderers in the early 19th century.[6] The state also hosted stations of theUnderground Railroad to assist with escapes from slavery such as theAppoquinimink Friends Meetings House.[7]Thomas Garrett of Wilmington, Delaware, a businessman of the Quaker faith, reportedly assisted in the escapes of between 2,000 and 3,000 slaves.[5]
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