{{Short description|Historical American social class}} {{Distinguish|Freedman|Free people of color}} {{Use American English|date=April 2022}} [[File:Free Woman of Color with daughter NOLA Collage.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Free woman of color with [[quadroon]] daughter (also free); late 18th-century collage painting, [[New Orleans]].]]

In the [[Colonial history of the United States|British colonies in North America]] and in the [[United States]] before the [[Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|abolition of slavery in 1865]], '''free Black''', '''free Negro''', and '''free colored''' described the legal status of [[African Americans]] who were not [[Slavery in the United States|slaves]]. The term was applied both to former slaves ([[freedmen]]) and to those who had been born free ([[free people of color]]), whether of African or mixed descent.

==Background== Slavery was legal and practiced in every European colony in North America, at various points in history. Not all Africans who came to America were slaves; a few came even in the 17th century as free men, as sailors working on ships. In the early [[Colonial history of the United States|colonial years]], some Africans came as [[Indentured servitude|indentured servants]] who were freed after a set period of years, as did many of the immigrants from [[Europe]]. Such servants became free when they completed their term of indenture; they were also eligible for [[headrights]] for land in the new colony in the [[Chesapeake Bay]] region, where indentured servants were more common. As early as 1678, a class of free black people existed in North America.<ref>{{cite book |last= Frazier |first= Edward Franklin |title= The Free Negro Family |year= 1968 |page= 1}}</ref>

Various groups contributed to the growth of the free [[Negro]] population: # children born to [[Free people of color|colored free women]] (see ''[[Partus sequitur ventrem]]'') # [[mulatto]] children born to [[White people|white]] indentured or free women # [[Black Indian|mixed-race]] children born to free [[Native Americans in the United States|Native American]] women (the [[Slavery among Native Americans in the United States|emancipation in the 1860s]])<ref name="amslav">{{cite web | url= http://www.slaveryinamerica.org/history/hs_es_indians_slavery.htm|title= Slavery and Native Americans in British North America and the United States: 1600 to 1865 | first= Tony |last= Seybert |access-date= 14 June 2011 |date= 4 Aug 2004 |publisher= Slavery in America |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20040804001522/http://www.slaveryinamerica.org/history/hs_es_indians_slavery.htm | archive-date= 4 August 2004}}</ref> # [[Freedmen|freed slaves]] # [[Maroons]] (or escaped slaves)<ref>{{cite book |last= Frazier |first= Edward Franklin |title= The Free Negro Family |year= 1968 |page= 2}}</ref> # descendants of free black people who were never slaves

Black people's labor was of economic importance in the export-oriented tobacco plantations of [[Colony of Virginia|Virginia]] and [[Province of Maryland|Maryland]], and in the rice and indigo plantations of [[Province of South Carolina|South Carolina]].<ref>[[Betty Wood]] (2013). ''Slavery in Colonial America, 1619–1776'' (link: [https://www.amazon.com/Slavery-Colonial-1619-1776-American-ebook/dp/B00C0WEEUS/ excerpt and text search]).</ref> Between 1620 and 1780 about 287,000 slaves were imported into the [[Thirteen Colonies]], or 5 percent of the more than six million slaves brought from Africa. The great majority of transported Africans were shipped to sugar-producing colonies in the [[Caribbean Islands|Caribbean]] and to [[Colonial Brazil|Brazil]], where life expectancy was short and slave numbers had to be continually replenished; this could be done at relatively low costs until the [[Slave Trade Act 1807]].

{|class="wikitable sortable floatright" |+ Slaves imported into Colonial America |- ! Years ! Number<ref>Source: Miller and Smith, eds. ''Dictionary of American Slavery'' (1988), p . 678.</ref> |- ! 1620–1700 | align="right" | 21,000 |- ! 1701–1760 | align="right" | 189,000 |- ! 1761–1770 | align="right" | 63,000 |- ! 1771–1780 | align="right" | 15,000 |- ! Total ! align="right" | 287,000 |}

The life expectancy of slaves was much higher in the Thirteen Colonies than in Latin America, the Caribbean or Brazil.<ref>{{Cite web |title=American Slavery in Comparative Perspective |url=https://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/disp_textbook.cfm?psid=3044&smtid=2 |publisher=Digital History, University of Houston |access-date=19 August 2025}}</ref> This, combined with a very high birth rate, meant that the number of slaves grew rapidly, as the number of births exceeded the number of deaths, reaching nearly 4 million by the time of the [[1860 United States census]].<ref> [https://www2.census.gov/library/publications/decennial/1860/population/1860a-46.pdf 1860 Census total of the slave population]: 3,953,763, p. 595.</ref> From 1770 until 1860 the rate of natural population growth among American slaves was much greater than for the population of any nation in Europe, and was nearly twice as rapid as that of Britain. This was sometimes attributed{{by whom|date=July 2020}} to very high birth rates: "U.S. slaves, then, reached similar rates of natural increase to whites not because of any special privileges but through a process of great suffering and material deprivation".<ref>{{cite journal |first1= Michael |last1= Tadman |title= The Demographic Cost of Sugar: Debates on Slave Societies and Natural Increase in the Americas |journal= The American Historical Review |volume= 105 |issue= 5 |year= 2000 |pages= 1534–75 |jstor= 2652029 |doi= 10.2307/2652029}}</ref>{{clarification needed|date=November 2023}}

The [[Southern Colonies]] ([[Province of Maryland|Maryland]], [[Colony of Virginia|Virginia]], and [[Province of Carolina|Carolina]]) imported more{{vague|date=July 2020}} slaves, initially from long-established European colonies in the [[West Indies]]. Like them, the mainland colonies rapidly increased restrictions that defined slavery as a racial [[caste]] associated with African [[ethnicity]]. In 1663 [[Colony of Virginia|Virginia]] adopted the principle in slave law of ''[[partus sequitur ventrem]]'', according to which children were born into the status of their mother, rather than taking the status of their father, as was then customary for English subjects under [[common law]]. Other colonies followed suit. This meant that children of slave mothers in colonial America were also slaves, regardless of their fathers' ethnicity. In some cases, this could result in a person's being legally white under Virginia law of the time, although born into slavery.

According to Paul Heinegg, most of the free black families established in the Thirteen Colonies before the [[American Revolution]] of the late 18th century descended from unions between white women (whether indentured servants or free) and African men (whether indentured servant, free, or enslaved). These relationships took place mostly among the [[working class]], reflecting the fluid societies of the time. Because such [[mixed-race]] children were born to free women, they were free. Through use of court documents, deeds, wills, and other records, Heinegg traced such families from Virginia as the ancestors of nearly 80 percent of the free black people recorded in the [[1790 United States census]] of [[North Carolina]].{{sfn|Heinegg|2021|pp=1, 3-5, 10}} In addition, slave owners [[Manumission|manumitted]] slaves for various reasons: to reward long years of service, because heirs did not want to take on slaves, or to free slave [[concubines]] and/or their children. Slaves were sometimes allowed to buy their freedom; they might be permitted to save money from fees paid when they were "hired out" to work for other parties.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.issues-views.com/index.php/sect/1006/article/1093 |title= Freed In the 17th Century (reprint)|publisher= Issues & Views |date= Spring 1998}}</ref>

In the mid-to-late 18th century, [[Methodist]] and [[Baptist]] evangelists during the period of the [[First Great Awakening]] ({{circa}} 1730–1755) encouraged slave owners to free their slaves, in their belief that all men were equal before God. They converted many slaves to Christianity and approved black leaders as preachers; blacks developed [[Black church|their own strain of Christianity]].{{explain|date= July 2018}} Before the [[American Revolutionary War]] of 1775–1783, few slaves were manumitted; on the eve of the American Revolution, there was an estimated 30,000 free African Americans in Colonial America which accounts for about 5% of the total African American population with most of free African Americans being mixed race. Since the portion of free African Americans were so small and could possibly [[Passing (racial identity)|pass as white]], they were not deemed a threat to the White population to warrant anti-black legislation. However, historian Ira Berlin states that this figure could be as high as 25 percent due to errors in census collection, ambiguous status of runaway slaves, white-passing persons, and slaves who lived as if they were free but did not have the papers to prove it.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Wright|first=Donald R.|title=African Americans in the Early Republic|year=1993|isbn=0-88295-897-6|location=Wheeling, Illinois |publisher=Harland Davidson |pages=126}}</ref> ===After the revolution=== The war greatly disrupted slave societies. Beginning with the 1775 [[Lord Dunmore's Proclamation|proclamation of Lord Dunmore]], governor of Virginia, the British recruited slaves of American revolutionaries to their [[British Armed Forces|armed forces]] and promised them freedom in return. The [[Continental Army]] gradually also began to allow blacks to fight, giving them promises of freedom in return for their service.<ref>{{cite book|last= Horton|first= James Oliver|title= Hard Road to Freedom: The Story of African-America|url= https://archive.org/details/hardroadtofreedo0000hort|url-access= registration|year= 2001|pages= [https://archive.org/details/hardroadtofreedo0000hort/page/68 68–69]}}</ref> Tens of thousands of slaves escaped from plantations or from other venues during the war, especially in the South.<ref>Peter Kolchin, ''American Slavery, 1619–1865,'' 1993.</ref> Some joined British lines or disappeared in the disruption of war. After the war, when the [[Evacuation Day (New York)|British evacuated New York]] in November 1783, they transported more than 3,000 [[Black Loyalist]]s and thousands of other [[Loyalist (American Revolution)|American Loyalist]]s to resettle in [[Nova Scotia]] and in what became [[Upper Canada]] (part of present-day [[Ontario]]). A total of more than 29,000 Loyalist refugees eventually departed from New York City alone. The British evacuated thousands of other slaves when they left Southern ports, resettling many in the Caribbean and others in England.

In the first two decades after the war, the number and proportion of free Negroes in the United States rose dramatically: northern states abolished slavery, almost all gradually.<ref>{{cite book|last= Zilversmit|first= Arthur|title= The First Emancipation: The Abolition of Slavery in the North|url= https://archive.org/details/firstemancipatio00zilv|url-access= registration|year= 1967}}</ref> But also many slave owners, in the [[Upper South]] especially, inspired by the war's ideals, manumitted their slaves. From 1790 to 1810, the proportion of free blacks in the Upper South rose from less than 1% to overall,{{clarify|date=July 2020}} and nationally, the proportion of free blacks among blacks rose to 13%. The spread of [[Cotton production in the United States|cotton cultivation]] in the [[Deep South]] drove up the demand for slaves after 1810, and the number of manumissions dropped after this period. In the [[antebellum period]] many slaves escaped to freedom in the North and in [[Canada]] by running away, assisted by the [[Underground Railroad]], staffed by former slaves and by [[Abolitionism in the United States|abolitionist sympathizers]].<ref>{{cite book|last= Horton|first= James Oliver|title= Hard Road to Freedom: The Story of African America|url= https://archive.org/details/hardroadtofreedo0000hort|url-access= registration|year= 2001|pages= [https://archive.org/details/hardroadtofreedo0000hort/page/143 143–146] }}</ref> Census enumeration found a total of 488,070 "free colored" persons in the United States in 1860.<ref>[https://www2.census.gov/library/publications/decennial/1860/population/1860a-46.pdf 1860 Census totals of the free colored population], p. 595.</ref>

==Abolitionism== Most organized political and social movements to end slavery{{where|date=January 2021}} did not begin until the mid-18th century.<ref name=Painter>{{cite book|last=Painter|first=Nell Irvin|author-link=Nell Irvin Painter|title=Creating Black Americans: African-American History and Its Meanings, 1619 to the Present|year=2007}}</ref>{{rp|70}} The sentiments of the [[American Revolution]] and the equality evoked by the [[United States Declaration of Independence|Declaration of Independence]] rallied many black Americans toward the revolutionary cause and their own hopes of emancipation; both enslaved and free black men fought in the Revolution on both sides.<ref name=Painter/>{{rp|70–71}} In the North, slaves ran away from their owners in the confusion of war, while in the South, some slaves declared themselves free and abandoned their slave work to join the British.<ref name=Painter/>{{rp|71}} ===After the revolution=== In the 1770s, Black people throughout [[New England]] began sending petitions to northern legislatures demanding freedom; by 1800, all of the northern states had abolished slavery or set measures in place to gradually reduce it.<ref name=Painter/>{{rp|72}}<ref name=Wilson15>Wilson, ''Black Codes'' (1965), p. 15. "By 1775, inspired by those 'self-evident' truths which were to be expressed by the [[United States Declaration of Independence|Declaration of Independence]], a considerable number of colonists felt that the time had come to end slavery and give the free Negroes some fruits of liberty. This sentiment, added to economic considerations, led to the immediate or gradual abolition of slavery in six northern states, while there was a swelling flood of private manumissions in the South. Little actual gain was made by the free Negro even in this period, and by the turn of the century, the downward trend had begun again. Thereafter the only important change in that trend before the Civil War was that after 1831 the decline in the status of the free Negro became more precipitate."</ref> While free, black people often had to struggle with reduced civil rights, such as restrictions on voting, as well as racism, segregation, or physical violence.<ref name=Painter/>{{rp|73–74}} [[Vermont]] abolished slavery in 1777, while it was still independent, and when it joined the United States as the 14th state in 1791 it was the first state to have done so. All the other Northern states abolished slavery between 1780 and 1804, leaving the [[slave state]]s of the South as defenders of the "[[peculiar institution]]". Massachusetts abolished slavery in 1780, and several other Northern states adopted [[Gradual emancipation (United States)|gradual emancipation]]. In 1804, New Jersey became the last original Northern state to embark on gradual emancipation. Slavery was prohibited in the federal [[Northwest Territory]] under the [[Northwest Ordinance]] of 1787, passed just before the [[U.S. Constitution]] was ratified. The free black population increased from 8% to 13.5% from 1790 to 1810; most of whom lived in the Mid-Atlantic States, New England, and the Upper South, where most of the slave population lived at the time.<ref name=Painter/>{{rp|77}}

The rights of free blacks fluctuated and waned with the gradual rise in power among poor white men during the late 1820s and early 1830s.<ref name=Painter/>{{rp|80}} The [[National Negro Convention]] movement began in 1830, with black men holding regular meetings to discuss the future of the black "race" in America; some women such as [[Maria W. Stewart|Maria Stewart]] and [[Sojourner Truth]] made their voices heard through public lecturing.<ref name=Painter/>{{rp|80}} The National Negro Convention encouraged a boycott of slave-produced goods. These efforts were met with resistance, however, as the early 19th century brought renewed anti-black sentiment after the spirit of the Revolution began to die down.<ref name=Wilson15 />

[[File:Learning is Wealth - Wilson Charley Rebecca & Rosa Slaves from New Orleans 1864.jpg|thumb|"Learning is wealth". Wilson, Charley, Rebecca, and Rosa. Mixed-race slaves from New Orleans]]

During the 1787 [[Philadelphia Convention]] which produced the [[United States Constitution]], a [[Three-fifths Compromise|compromise]] was proposed between northern states which only wanted to count free blacks in congressional apportionment (ignoring slave populations), and slave states which wanted full counting of the slave population. The compromise counted slave populations on the ratio of three-fifths, while free blacks were not subject to the compromise and counted as one full citizen for representation.<ref>[https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1245&context=yjlh The Founders and Slavery:Little Ventured, Little Gained], p. 427, [[Paul Finkelman]], "Under the Constitution free blacks counted as whole persons for purposes of representation."</ref> Due to this compromise Southern states could count three-fifths of their slave populations toward the state populations for purposes of [[congressional apportionment]] and the [[United States electoral college|electoral college]].<ref name="FreeButNotEqual">{{Cite web |title=Free, But Not Equal: The Reality of the 'Free Negro' in Pre-Abolition America |url=https://www.translationscertified.com/free-but-not-equal-the-reality-of-the-free-negro-in-pre-abolition-america|access-date=19 August 2025}}</ref> This additional counting of the slave population resulted in those states having political power in excess of the white voting population. The South dominated the national government and the presidency for years. Congress adopted legislation that favored slaveholders, such as permitting slavery in territories as the nation began to expand to the West. The [[Fugitive Slave Act of 1793]] was strengthened by the [[Fugitive Slave Act of 1850]], part of the [[Compromise of 1850]], requiring even the governments and residents of free states to enforce the capture and return of fugitive slaves. Famous fugitives such as [[Frederick Douglass]] and Sojourner Truth gained the support of white abolitionists to purchase their freedom, to avoid being captured and returned to the South and slavery.<ref name=Painter/>{{rp|84–85}} In 1857, the ruling of ''[[Dred Scott v. Sandford]]'' effectively denied citizenship to black people of any status.<ref name=Painter/>{{rp|85}} ===Black codes=== Southern states also passed harsh laws regulating the conduct of free blacks, in several cases banning them from entering or settling in the state. In Mississippi, a free Negro could be sold into slavery after spending ten days in state. Arkansas passed a law in 1859 that would have enslaved every free black person still present by 1860; although it was not enforced, it succeeded in reducing Arkansas's population of free blacks to below that of any other slave state.<ref>Wilson, ''Black Codes'' (1965), p. 16. "Symptomatic of the changing public attitude was the passage of a law in 1793 forbidding the migration of free Negroes into Virginia, and another, in 1806, which provided that every Negro freed thereafter must leave the state within twelve months unless granted special permission to remain. All of the other slaveholding states enacted some such laws; they varied in severity but not in substance."</ref> A number of Northern states also restricted the migration of free blacks, with the result that emancipated blacks had difficulty finding places to legally settle.<ref>Wilson, ''Black Codes'' (1965), p. 16–17. Wilson quotes [[John Catron]] of the Tennessee Supreme Court: "All the slaveholding states, it is believed, as well as many non-slaveholding, like ourselves have adopted the policy of exclusion. The consequence is the free negro cannot find a home that promises even safety in the United States and assuredly none that promises comfort."</ref> ===Abolitionism=== The abolitionist cause attracted interracial support in the North during the antebellum years. Under President [[Abraham Lincoln]], Congress passed several laws to aid blacks to gain a semblance of freedom during the [[American Civil War]]; the [[Confiscation Act of 1861]] allowed fugitive slaves who escaped to behind Union lines to remain free, as the military declared them part of "contraband" from the war and refused to return them to slaveholders; the [[Confiscation Act of 1862]] guaranteed both fugitive slaves and their families everlasting freedom, and the [[Militia Act of 1862|Militia Act]] allowed black men to enroll in military service.<ref name=Painter/>{{rp|138}}

In January 1863, Lincoln's [[Emancipation Proclamation]] freed slaves in Confederate-held territory only. Black men were officially admitted to serve in the Union Army and the [[United States Colored Troops]] were organized. Black participation in fighting proved essential to Union victory.<ref name="Painter"/>{{rp|70}} ===After the Civil War=== In 1865, the Union won the Civil War, and states ratified the [[Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Thirteenth Amendment]], outlawing slavery (except as punishment for a crime) throughout the entire country. The Southern states initially enacted [[Black Codes (United States)|Black Codes]] in an attempt to maintain control over black labor. The Mississippi Black Code (the first to pass and the best known) distinguished between "free negroes" (referring to those who had been free before the war, in some places called "Old Issues"), (newly free) "freedmen", and "[[mulatto]]es" — though placing similar restrictions on freedom for all. US-born blacks gained legal citizenship with the [[Civil Rights Act of 1866]], followed by the [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fourteenth Amendment]] [[Citizenship Clause]].<ref>{{cite book|editor=Richard Zuczek.|title=Encyclopedia of the Reconstruction Era |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=H80eQweo0V4C&pg=PA154|year=2006|publisher=Greenwood|page=154|isbn=9780313013997 }}</ref>

==Regional differences== ===Migration to cities=== The lives of free blacks varied depending on their location within the United States. There was a significant free-black bias towards cities, as many rural free blacks migrated to cities over time, both in the North and the South. Cities were the chief destinations for migrating free blacks in the South, as cities gave free blacks a wider range of economic and social opportunities. Most southern cities had independently black-run churches as well as secret schools for educational advancement.<ref>{{cite book|last=Berlin|first=Ira|title=Slaves Without Masters: The Free Negro in the Antebellum South|year=1981|page=173}}</ref> Northern cities also gave blacks better opportunities. For example, free Negroes who lived in Boston generally had more access to formal education.<ref>{{cite book|last=Frazier|first=Edward Franklin|title=The Free Negro Family|year=1968|page=14}}</ref>

===In the South=== Before the American Revolution, there were very few free blacks in the Southern colonies.<ref>{{cite book|last=Berlin|first=Ira|title=Slaves Without Masters: The Free Negro in the Antebellum South|year=1981|page=3}}</ref> The Lower South, except for its cities, did not attract many free blacks. The number of urban free Negroes grew faster than the total free black population, and this growth largely came from a mass migration of rural free Negroes moving to cities, such as Richmond and Petersburg of Virginia, Raleigh and Wilmington of North Carolina, Charleston of South Carolina, and Savannah (and later Atlanta) of Georgia.<ref>{{cite book|last=Berlin|first=Ira|title=Slaves Without Masters: The Free Negro in the Antebellum South|year=1981|page=174}}</ref> The South overall developed two distinct groups of free Negroes. Those in the Upper South were more numerous: the 1860 census showed only 144 free Negroes in Arkansas, 773 in Mississippi, and 932 in Florida, while in Maryland there were 83,942; in Virginia, 58,042; in North Carolina, 30,463; and in Louisiana, 18,647.<ref name=Wilson13 /> Free blacks in the Lower South were more urban, educated, wealthier, and were generally of mixed race with white fathers, compared to free blacks in the Upper South.<ref>{{cite book|last=Berlin|first=Ira|title=Slaves Without Masters: The Free Negro in the Antebellum South|year=1981|page=181}}</ref> Despite these differences, the Southern states passed similar laws to regulate black life, borrowing from one another.<ref>Wilson, ''Black Codes'' (1965), pp. 13–14. "In fact, discriminatory laws were remarkably uniform, in spite of the very great difference in the numbers of free Negroes. But this difference in the numbers of free Negroes was certainly not reflected in the laws of these two groups of states."</ref><ref name=Wilson13 />

====Legislation against free Black people==== The above numbers reflect a deliberate attempt to expel free Negroes from the deep South. "Southerners came to believe that the only successful means of removing the threat of free Negroes was to expel them from the southern states or to change their status from free persons to ... slaves."<ref name=Smith>{{citation |place=Gainesville |publisher=University of Florida Press |title=Slavery and Plantation Growth in Antebellum Florida 1821–1860 |first=Julia Floyd |last=Smith |date=1973}}</ref>{{rp|112}} Free Negroes were perceived as "an evil of no ordinary magnitude,"<ref name=Smith/>{{rp|119}} undermining the system of slavery. Slaves had to be shown that there was no advantage in being free; thus, free Negroes became victims of the slaveholders' fears. The legislation became more forceful; the free Negro had to accept his new role or leave the state. In Florida, for example, the legislation of 1827 and 1828 prohibited them from joining public gatherings and "giving seditious speeches", and laws of 1825, 1828, and 1833 ended their right to carry firearms. They were barred from jury service and from testifying against whites. To [[manumit]] (free) a slave, a master had to pay a tax of $200 each and had to post a bond guaranteeing that the free Negro would leave the state within 30 days.<ref>{{cite book |last=Schafer |first=Daniel L. |date=2003 |title=Anna Madgigine Jai Kingsley: African Princess, Florida Slave, Plantation Slaveowner |publisher=University Press of Florida |isbn=0-8130-2616-4 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/annamadgiginejai00scha }}</ref> Eventually, some citizens of [[Plantations of Leon County|Leon County]], Florida's most populous<ref>{{cite web |url=http://fcit.usf.edu/florida/docs/c/census/Florida_counties.htm |publisher=Exploring Florida (University of South Florida) |title=Florida Population 1840–2000 by County |access-date=October 27, 2017}}</ref> and wealthiest<ref name=Smith/>{{rp|140}} county (this wealth was due to the higher number of slaves in Leon County than any other county in Florida, who in the 1860 census constituted 73% of its population),<ref>{{citation |jstor=2716918 |title=Slavery in Microcosm: Leon County, Florida, 1824 to 1860 |journal=Journal of Negro History |volume=66 |number=3 |date=1981 |first=Larry E. |last=Rivers |pages=235–245, at p. 237|doi=10.2307/2716918 |s2cid=149519589 }}</ref> petitioned the General Assembly to have all free Negroes removed from the state.<ref name=Smith />{{rp|118}}

In Florida, legislation passed in 1847 required all free Negroes to have a white person as a legal guardian;<ref name=Smith />{{rp|120}} in 1855, an act was passed which prevented free Negroes from entering the state.<ref name=Smith/>{{rp|119}} "In 1861, an act was passed requiring all free Negroes in Florida to register with the judge of probate in whose county they resided. The Negro, when registering, had to give his name, age, color, sex, and occupation and had to pay one dollar to register ... All Negroes over twelve years of age had to have a guardian approved by the probate judge ... The guardian could be sued for any crime committed by the Negro; the Negro could not be sued. Under the new law, any free Negro or mulatto who did not register with the nearest probate judge was classified as a slave and became the lawful property of any white person who claimed possession."<ref name=Smith />{{rp|121}}

Free blacks were ordered to leave Arkansas as of January 1, 1860, or they would be enslaved. Most left.<ref>{{cite news |newspaper=[[Anti-Slavery Reporter and Aborigines' Friend]] |date=March 1, 1860 |volume=8 |issue=3 |pages=50–51 |title=Monthly Summary. United States |url=https://archive.org/details/sim_anti-slavery-reporter-and-aborigines-friend_1860-03-01_8_3/page/50/mode/2up}}</ref>

====Migration from South to North==== Even with the presence of significant free black populations in the South, free blacks often migrated to Northern states. While this presented some problems, free blacks found more opportunities in the North overall. During the nineteenth century, the number and proportion of population of free blacks in the South shrank as a significant portion of the free black population migrated northward.<ref name="Berlin">{{cite book|last=Berlin|first=Ira|title=Slaves Without Masters: The Free Negro in the Antebellum South|year=1981|page=171}}</ref> Some of the more prominent and talented free black figures moved to the North for its opportunities, draining the South of potential free black leaders. Some returned after the Civil War to participate in the [[Reconstruction era (United States)|Reconstruction Era]], establishing businesses and being elected to political office.<ref name="Berlin"/> This difference in the distribution of free blacks persisted until the Civil War, at which time about 250,000 free blacks lived in the South.<ref name=Wilson13>Wilson, ''Black Codes'' (1965), p. 13. "When the Civil War began, there were in the slaveholding states roughly a quarter of a million free Negroes living precariously in the shadow of slavery. Though they constituted a relatively small segment of the total population, they were of sufficient social importance to have occasioned the enactment of a great many laws which severely discriminated against them."</ref>

===Migration via the frontier=== [[File:Free Black Population per County with Legend, 1790.svg|thumb|Number of free black people per County in Virginia and North Carolina, 1790<ref name=hein4v1>{{cite book |last=Heinegg |first=Paul |date=2001 |title=Free African Americans of North Carolina, Virginia, and South Carolina From the Colonial Period to About 1820 4th Edition |volume=I |url=https://archive.org/details/freeafricanameri0001hein |location=Baltimore, MD |publisher=Genealogical Publishing Co |page=7|isbn=0-8063-5110-1 |access-date=28 December 2025}}</ref>]] Free black people in the eastern United States became prominent before the solidification of chattel slavery in Virginia. According to genealogical records, some of the first ancestors of later communities categorized as free people of color in the eastern United States were free black people in [[Tidewater Virginia]], such as [[Emanuel Driggus]], [[John Graweere]], [[Anthony Johnson (colonist)|Anthony Johnson]], [[Gabriel Jacobs]], and Emmanuel [[Cumbo (name)|Cumbo]] (Cambow).{{sfn|Heinegg|2021|pp=v-vi, 1}}{{sfn|Hashaw|2006|pp=28, 41}}

Free African-American communities formed around those who were able to obtain land grants on the edge of the expanding frontier, moving from [[Southampton County]] to [[Granville County|Granville]], to the interior of South Carolina, and later to Tennessee and Louisiana.{{sfn|Heinegg|2021|pp=7}} Reports indicate attitudes towards these communities were kinder on the frontier, due to the need to rely on neighbors, low slave populations, and high land ownership by the free black community equalizing their status with white frontiersmen.{{sfn|Heinegg|2021|pp=11}} In frontier counties such as [[Halifax County, North Carolina|Halifax]], [[Edgecombe County|Edgecombe]], and Granville, citizens would petition the government to repeal the specific taxes on free black people.{{sfn|Heinegg|2021|pp=11}} Many of them would serve in the Revolutionary War, funding more land purchases.{{sfn|Heinegg|2021|pp=16-17}} They would continuously emigrate and clear new lands due to persecution by newly settled whites, following the expanding frontier to maintain their place in society.{{sfn|Hashaw|2006|pp=69}}

====Free Black settlements==== Free black people founded settlements on the frontier, such as [[Carthagena, Ohio|Carthagena]]. Some of these settlements became used by the [[Underground Railroad]], such as "[[Phytolacca|Poke]] Patch" in Ohio.{{sfn|Rowe|2017|pp=44-45}}<ref name=sand2022>{{cite news |last=Sands |first=James |date=17 February 2002 |title=Greenfield Township offered equality in pre-Civil War days |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FelDAAAAIBAJ&pg=PA21&article_id=3200,2508681 |work=The Daily Sentinel |location=Pomeroy, OH |publisher=Ohio Valley Publishing Co. |access-date=28 April 2026}}</ref> According to historical archives, these settlements operated as hubs for abolitionists and runaway slaves.<ref name=rowe2017>{{cite book |last=Rowe |first=Jill E. |title=Invisible in Plain Sight: Self-Determination Strategies of Free Blacks in the Old Northwest |publisher=[[Peter Lang (publisher)|Peter Lang]] |location=New York, NY |year=2017 |isbn=978-1-4331-3490-6 |series=Interdisciplinary Studies in Diasporas |volume=3 |pages=44-45, 64, 78 |url=https://www.peterlang.com/document/1051850 |access-date=18 May 2026}}</ref> A group of freed slaves known as the [[Randolph Freedpeople]] founded two settlements in Ohio, [[Rumley, Ohio| Rumley]] and [[Piqua,_Ohio#Rossville|Rossville]], as well as [[Israel Hill]] in Virginia.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://richmond.com/news/marker-recognizes-free-black-community-of-israel-hill/article_10535efc-5c71-56bb-9e55-c9e242a10d31.html|title=Marker recognizes free black community of Israel Hill|website=Richmond Times-Dispatch}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Israel Hill on the Appomattox|url=http://www.co.prince-edward.va.us/travel_israelhill.shtml|website=Prince Edward County|access-date=11 June 2015|ref=3|archive-date=14 June 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150614083401/http://www.co.prince-edward.va.us/travel_israelhill.shtml|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2017-03-14 |title=Settling Rossville |url=https://www.ohiohistory.org/settling-rossville/ |access-date=2022-05-19 |website=Ohio History Connection |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name=rowe2017/>

Some other notable free Black settlements on the frontier were [[Free Hill, Tennessee|Free Hill]], [[Pocahontas_Island#Free_Black_settlement|Pocahontas Island]], [[Pee Pee Township, Ohio|Pee Pee]], and [[Chubbtown]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2017-05-01 |title=Curious Cbus: Seriously, What's The Deal With Pee Pee Township? |url=https://www.wosu.org/news/2017-05-01/curious-cbus-seriously-whats-the-deal-with-pee-pee-township |access-date=2024-07-11 |website=WOSU Public Media |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/virginia-politics/one-mans-quest-to-preserve-the-haunting-black-history-of-pocahontas-island/2016/09/26/b79f9b2c-7abf-11e6-beac-57a4a412e93a_story.html|title=One man's quest to preserve the haunting black history of Pocahontas Island|newspaper=Washington Post|language=en|access-date=2018-07-17}}</ref><ref name="tenneseangarrison">{{cite news|last1=Garrison|first1=Joey|title=Tennessee community founded by freed slaves fights extinction|url=http://www.tennessean.com/story/news/local/2016/07/09/tennessee-community-founded-freed-slaves-fights-extinction/86801136/|accessdate=July 10, 2016|work=The Tennessean|date=July 9, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=McElwee|first=Bobby G.|title=Floyd County|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZEBlEX_cU30C&pg=PA19|date=October 1998|publisher=Arcadia Publishing|isbn=978-0-7385-6712-9|page=19}}</ref><ref>{{cite news | url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=kUlOAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ShQEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6802%2C2879757 | title=Blacks flourished in Georgia town during Civil War | work=Star-News | date=Jan 10, 1989 | accessdate=18 October 2015 | author=Sverdlik, Alan | pages=6D}}</ref>

====Population isolates==== {{Seealso|Racial isolates in the United States}}

Some lighter-skinned descendants of free Black people formed distinct communities later on, such as the [[Melungeons]], [[Brass Ankles]], [[Lumbee]], [[Redbone_(ethnicity)#Louisiana_Redbone_cultural_group|Redbones]], and [[Carmel Melungeons|Carmelites]].{{sfn|Hashaw|2006|pp=59}}{{sfn|Heinegg|2021|pp=20}}<ref name=bart2020/> Some of them sought separate schools from freedmen during the [[Jim Crow Era]].{{sfn|Heinegg|2021|pp=22, 24-25, 27}} The "old issue negroes" of [[Person County]] were able to obtain separate schools, while others, such as the Melungeons and Louisiana Redbones, were sometimes able to attend white schools.{{sfn|Heinegg|2021|pp=27}} Over time, some of them began to pass as white.<ref name=knigh2025>{{cite journal |last=Knight |first=Thomas Daniel |date=12 September 2025 |title=Migration in the Early Chesapeake: Dorchester Co., MD, as a Case Study, 1650–1750 |journal=Genealogy |volume=9 |issue=3 |page=96 |doi=10.3390/genealogy9030096 |doi-access=free|publisher=[[University of Texas Rio Grande Valley]] |url=https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/9/3/96 |access-date=12 March 2026}}</ref>{{sfn|Price|1950|pp=320-322}} Scholar Renate Bartl concludes a subset of free Black people adopted an "{{em|[[Native_American_name_controversy#"Indian"_and_"American_Indian"_(since_1492)|Indian]]}}" identity to avoid classification as Black or "{{em|[[colored]]}}". She stated that of the free Black origin isolates with no documented tribal ancestry, most possessed no past tribal descent or identity, instead adopting an identity later on.<ref name=bart2020>{{cite thesis |last=Bartl |first=Renate |date=2020 |title=American Tri-Racials African-Native Contact, Multi-Ethnic Native American Nations, and the Ethnogenesis of Tri-Racial Groups in North America |url=https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/26874/ |work=Electronic Theses of LMU Munich |degree=PhD |location=Munich, Germany |doi=10.5282/edoc.26874 |publisher=[[Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München]] |pages=75, 373-378 |access-date=3 May 2026}}</reF>

==Opportunities for advancement== Free black people drew up petitions and joined the army during the American Revolution, motivated by the common hope of freedom.<ref name="Berlin2">{{cite book|last=Berlin|first=Ronald Hoffman and Ira|title=Slavery and Freedom in the Age of the American Revolution|year=1986|pages=292–293}}</ref> This hope was bolstered by the 1775 proclamation by British official [[Lord Dunmore]], who promised freedom to any slave who fought on the side of the British during the war.<ref>{{cite book|last=Horton|first=James Oliver|title=Free People of Color: Inside the African-American Community|url=https://archive.org/details/freepeopleofcolo00hort|url-access=registration|year=1993|page=[https://archive.org/details/freepeopleofcolo00hort/page/147 147]}}</ref> Black people also fought on the American side, hoping to gain benefits of citizenship later on.<ref>{{cite book|last=Horton|first=James Oliver|title=Free People of Color: Inside the African-American Community|url=https://archive.org/details/freepeopleofcolo00hort|url-access=registration|year=1993|page=[https://archive.org/details/freepeopleofcolo00hort/page/149 149]}}</ref>

The economic, military, and scientific superiority of the elite class justified slavery through interpretation of their status as a matter of [[divine providence]]; black people were thus perceived as members of an inferior race, as God had seemingly allowed the elite class to exploit the slave trade without any hint that he might be planning any sort of divine retribution. In fact, the very opposite had happened and slaveholders were seemingly rewarded with great material wealth.<ref>Wilson, ''Black Codes'' (1965), p. 19. "Quite plainly the free Negro could not escape contamination from the concept of racial inferiority, and the Negro servant's descent into slavery was paralleled by the free Negro's loss of social and political status. When the black race came to be identified with slavery, the fortunes of the free Negro became indissolubly linked with the fortunes of the slaves. When the Negro slave came to be regarded as some sort of sub-human, the concept applied with equal force to Negroes who were free."</ref> The judiciary confirmed this subordinate status even when explicitly racialized laws were not in place. A South Carolina judge editorialized in an 1832 case:<ref>Wilson, ''Black Codes'' (1965), p. 27. Quoting John B. O'Neall, Court of Appeals of South Carolina, in ''State vs. Harden'' (1832).</ref>

<blockquote>Free negroes belong to a degraded caste of society; they are in no respect on an equality with a white man. According to their condition they ought by law to be compelled to demean themselves as inferiors, from whom submission and respect to the whites, in all their intercourse in society, is demanded; I have always thought and while on the circuit ruled that words of impertinence and insolence addressed by a free negro to a white man, would justify an assault and battery.</blockquote> ===Employment=== Free black people could not enter many professional occupations, such as medicine and law, because they were barred from the necessary education. This was also true of occupations that required firearm possession, elective office, or a liquor license. Many of these careers also required large capital investments that most free black people could not afford. Exceptions to these limitations existed, as with physicians [[Sarah Parker Remond]] and [[Martin Delany]] in [[Louisville, Kentucky]].<ref>{{cite journal|last=Burckin|first=Alexander|title=A Spirit Of Perseverance: Free African-Americans in Late Antebellum Louisville|journal=The Filson Club History Quarterly|year=1996|volume=70|issue=1|page=71}}</ref>

Free black males enjoyed wider employment opportunities than free black females, who were largely confined to domestic occupations.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Burckin|first=Alexander|title=A Spirit Of Perseverance: Free African-Americans in Late Antebellum Louisville|journal=The Filson Club History Quarterly|year=1996|volume=70|issue=1|page=69}}</ref> While free black boys could become apprentices to carpenters, coopers, barbers, and blacksmiths, girls' options were much more limited, confined to domestic work such as being cooks, cleaning women, seamstresses, and child-nurturers.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Lebsock|first=Suzanne|title=Free Black Women and the Question of Matriarchy: Petersburg, Virginia, 1784–1820|journal=Feminist Studies|year=1982|volume=8|issue=2|pages=276–277|doi=10.2307/3177563|jstor=3177563|hdl=2027/spo.0499697.0008.204|hdl-access=free}}</ref> Despite this, in certain areas, free black women could become prominent members of the free black community, running households and constituting a significant portion of the free black paid labor force.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Lebsock|first=Suzanne|title=Free Black Women and the Question of Matriarchy: Petersburg, Virginia, 1784–1820|journal=Feminist Studies|year=1982|volume=8|issue=2|page=274|doi=10.2307/3177563|jstor=3177563|hdl=2027/spo.0499697.0008.204|hdl-access=free}}</ref> One of the most highly skilled professions for a woman was teaching.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Burckin|first=Alexander|title=A Spirit Of Perseverance: Free African-Americans in Late Antebellum Louisville|journal=The Filson Club History Quarterly|year=1996|volume=70|issue=1|page=72}}</ref>

===Education=== The 1830s saw a significant effort by white communities to oppose black people's education, coinciding with the emergence of public schooling in northern American society.<ref>{{cite book|last=Moss|first=Hilary J.|title=Schooling Citizens: The Struggle for African-American Education in Antebellum America|year=2009|pages=2–3}}</ref> Public schooling and citizenship were linked together, and because of the ambiguity that surrounded black citizenship status, blacks were effectively excluded from public access to universal education.<ref>{{cite book|last=Moss|first=Hilary J.|title=Schooling Citizens: The Struggle for African-American Education in Antebellum America|year=2009|page=4}}</ref> Paradoxically, the free black community of [[Baltimore]] in the antebellum years made more significant strides in increasing black access to education than did [[Boston]] and [[New Haven, Connecticut|New Haven]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Moss|first=Hilary J.|title=Schooling Citizens: The Struggle for African-American Education in Antebellum America|year=2009|page=5}}</ref> Most southern states had no public education systems until these were established during Reconstruction by the new biracial legislatures. Educated free black people created [[History of libraries#African American libraries and literary societies|literary societies]] in the North, making libraries available to blacks in a time when books were costly but dues or subscription fees were required for membership.

Many free African American families in colonial North Carolina and Virginia became landowners and some also became slave owners. In some cases, they purchased members of their own families to protect them until they could set them free. In other cases, they participated in the full slave economy. For example, a freedman named Cyprian Ricard purchased an estate in [[Louisiana]] that included 100 [[Slavery|slaves]].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8qMc-y3ya9UC&q=cyprian+ricard+louisiana&pg=RA1-PA234|title=Slavery: A World History|access-date=2007-10-16|last=Meltzer|first=Milton|publisher=DaCapo|year=1993|isbn=0-306-80536-7}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Franklin|first=John Hope|author2=Moss, Alfred A.|title=From Slavery to Freedom: A History of African Americans|url=https://archive.org/details/fromslaverytofre00fran_0|url-access=registration|publisher=McGraw-Hill|year=1994|isbn=978-0-679-43087-2|page=[https://archive.org/details/fromslaverytofre00fran_0/page/156 156]}}</ref>

===Civil War=== During the Civil War, free blacks fought on both the Confederate and Union sides. Southern free black people who fought on the Confederate side were hoping to gain a greater degree of tolerance and acceptance among their white neighbors.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Horton|first1=James Oliver|last2=Horton |first2= Lois E.|author2-link=Lois Horton|title=Slavery and Public History: The Tough Stuff of American Memory|url=https://archive.org/details/slaverypublichis00jame|url-access=registration|year=2006|page=[https://archive.org/details/slaverypublichis00jame/page/197 197]|publisher=New Press, The |isbn=9781565849600}}</ref> The hope of equality through the military was realized over time, such as with the equalization of pay for black and white soldiers a month before the end of the Civil War.<ref name="Painter"/>

==Women== Within free black marriages, many women were able to participate more equally in their relationships than elite white women.<ref name=Saxton>{{cite book |last=Saxton |first=Martha |title=Being Good: Women's Moral Values in Early America |url=https://archive.org/details/beinggoodwomensm00saxt |year=2003|publisher=Hill and Wang |isbn=9780374110116 }}</ref>{{rp|224}}{{how|date=January 2021}}{{why|date=January 2021}} This potential for equality in marriage can be seen through the example of the "colored aristocracy" of the small black elite in St. Louis, where women were often economic partners in their marriages.<ref name=Saxton/>{{rp|225}} These small groups of blacks were generally descended from French and Spanish mixed marriages. Under the French, the women in these marriages had the same rights as white women and could hold property.<ref>{{cite book|last=Corbett|first=Katherine|title=In Her Place: A Guide to St. Louis Women's History|year=1999|page=16}}</ref> These black women hoped to remain financially independent both for themselves and for the sake of protecting their children from Missouri's restrictive laws.<ref name=Saxton/>{{rp|225}} This level of black female agency also made female-centered households attractive to widows.<ref name=Saxton/>{{rp|224}} The traditional idea of husband dominating wife could not be the central idea in these elite marriages because of women's importance in bringing income into the family.<ref name=Saxton/>{{rp|227}} Women had to exercise caution in married relationships, however, as marrying a black man who was still a slave would make the free black woman legally responsible for his behavior, good or bad.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Lebsock|first=Suzanne|title=Free Black Women and the Question of Matriarchy: Petersburg, Virginia, 1784–1820|journal=Feminist Studies|year=1982|volume=8|issue=2|page=283|doi=10.2307/3177563|jstor=3177563|hdl=2027/spo.0499697.0008.204|hdl-access=free}}</ref> ===Legal cases=== [[File:Mumbett70.jpg|125px|thumb|Elizabeth Freeman, one of the first slaves to file and win a freedom suit in Massachusetts.]] There are multiple examples of free black women exerting agency within society, and many of these examples include exerting legal power. Slavery and freedom coexisted with an uncertainty that was dangerous for free blacks. From 1832 to 1837, the story of [[Margaret Morgan (slave)|Margaret Morgan]] and her family presents a prime example of the danger to free blacks from the ambiguous legal definitions of their status. The Morgan family's legal entanglement led to the case of ''[[Prigg v. Pennsylvania]]'', in which it was decided that their captors could supersede Pennsylvania's personal liberty law and claim ownership of the Morgans.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Patricia|first=Reid|title=Margaret Morgan's Story: A Threshold between Slavery and Freedom, 1820–1842|journal=Slavery and Abolition|year=2012|volume=33|issue=3|pages=360–362|doi=10.1080/0144039x.2011.606628|s2cid=143137075}}</ref> This case highlighted the constitutional ambiguity of black rights while also illustrating the active effort by some in the white community to limit those rights.

In New England, slave women went to court to gain their freedom while free black women went to court to hold on to theirs; the New England legal system was unique in its accessibility to free blacks and the availability of attorneys.<ref name="Adams">{{cite book |last1=Pleck |first1=Elizabeth |last2=Adams |first2=Catherine|title=Love of Freedom |year=2010 |page=127}}</ref> Women's [[freedom suit]]s were often based on technicalities, such as the lack of legal slave documents or mixed-race ancestry that exempted some from slave service. In New England in 1716, Joan Jackson became the first slave woman to win her freedom in a New England court.<ref name="Adams"/>

[[Elizabeth Freeman]] brought the first legal test of the constitutionality of slavery in Massachusetts after the American Revolution, asserting that the state's new constitution and its assertions of men's equality under the law meant that slavery could not exist. As a landowner and taxpayer, she is considered to be one of the most famous black women of the revolutionary era.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Pleck |first1=Elizabeth |last2=Adams |first2=Catherine|title=Love of Freedom|year=2010|page=142}}</ref> [[Coverture]] limited the ability of some free black women to file lawsuits on their own, but a few women still filed jointly with their husbands.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Pleck |first1=Elizabeth |last2=Adams |first2=Catherine |title=Love of Freedom |year=2010 |page=129}}</ref>

==Notable free persons== <!--PLEASE RESPECT ALPHABETICAL ORDER--> {{unreferenced|section|date=February 2022}}

===Born prior to 1800=== [[File:Jean Baptiste Point du Sable Andreas 1884.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[Jean Baptiste Point du Sable]], the first permanent settler in 1780s Chicago and the "Father of Chicago" who traveled up the [[Mississippi River]] from [[New Orleans]]. There are no known portraits of Jean Baptiste Point du Sable made during his lifetime.<ref>{{cite news|last=Davey|first=Monica|title=Tribute to Chicago Icon and Enigma|url=http://www.wehaitians.com/tribute%20to%20chicago%20icon%20and%20enigma.html|access-date=August 25, 2010|newspaper=New York Times|date=June 24, 2003}}</ref> This depiction is taken from A.T. Andreas' book ''History of Chicago'' (1884).<ref>{{cite book|last=Andreas|first=Alfred Theodore|author-link=Alfred T. Andreas|title=History of Chicago. From the earliest period to the present time, volume 1|year=1884|publisher=A. T. Andreas|at=Front matter|url=https://archive.org/details/historyofchicago01inandr|access-date=January 25, 2011}}</ref>]]

{{Div col|colwidth=24em}} * [[Richard Allen (bishop)|Richard Allen]]: founder of [[African Methodist Episcopal Church]], first independent black denomination in the US, co-founder of the [[Free African Society]]<ref>{{Cite web |title=Richard Allen |url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part2/2p29.html |publisher=PBS: Africans in America |access-date=19 August 2025}}</ref> * [[Reytory Angola]]: first black person to petition a legislature as an individual * [[Benjamin Banneker]]: almanac author, astronomer, surveyor, naturalist and farmer. * [[John Chavis]]: first African American known to attend college in the U.S. * [[James Derham]]: first African American to formally practice medicine in the United States * [[Emanuel Driggus]]: one of the first free [[First Africans in Virginia]] * [[Elizabeth Freeman]]: healer, midwife and nurse who sued for her freedom in 1781 * [[Prince Hall]]: noted abolitionist for his leadership in the free black community in Boston, and as the founder of Prince Hall Freemasonry * [[Jeanette Forchet]]: one of the first to be freed in [[St. Louis|St. Louis, Missouri]] in the 1700s * [[John Graweere]]: one of the first free [[First Africans in Virginia]] * [[Thomas L. Jennings]]: first black man granted a U.S. patent * [[Anthony Johnson (colonist)]]: former slave who became a slave owner * [[Absalom Jones]]: first ordained black Episcopal priest; saint * [[John Berry Meachum]]: Baptist minister, businessman, educator * [[Jane Minor]], healer and emancipator * [[Jean Baptiste Point du Sable]]: founder of [[Chicago]] and trader * [[Lucy Terry]]: author * [[Sojourner Truth]]: abolitionist and women's rights activist * [[Denmark Vesey]]: led a slave revolt in 1822 * [[David Walker (abolitionist)|David Walker]]: abolitionist * [[Phillis Wheatley]]: first published African-American female poet<ref>{{Cite web |title=Phillis Wheatley |url=https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/phillis-wheatley |publisher=Poetry Foundation |access-date=19 August 2025}}</ref> * [[Theodore S. Wright]]: minister, co-founder of [[American Anti-Slavery Society]] {{Div col end}}

===1800–1865=== [[File:Solomon_Northup_001.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[Solomon Northup]] was born and raised a free black man in the [[slave states and free states|free state]] of [[New York (state)|New York]] and was [[Reverse Underground Railroad|kidnapped]] and sold into Southern slavery in 1841, and was later rescued and regained his freedom in 1853.]]

{{Div col|colwidth=24em}} * [[William Wells Brown]]: fugitive slave, author, playwright, activist * [[George Washington Chavis]]: member of the [[Mississippi Legislature]] * [[Charlotte L. Brown]]: civil rights activist in 1860s San Francisco * [[Thomas Day (North Carolina)|Thomas Day]]: pre-eminent antebellum cabinetmaker and abolitionist from North Carolina * [[Martin Delany]]: abolitionist, writer, physician, and proponent of black nationalism * [[Moses Dickson]] abolitionist, soldier, minister, organizer * [[Frederick Douglass]]: fugitive slave, reformer, writer, and statesman * [[William Ellison]]: property owner and businessman * [[John Carruthers Stanly]]: One of the largest slave owners in North Carolina and the wealthiest free black resident * [[Henry Highland Garnet]]: Abolitionist and educator * [[Cynthia Hesdra]]: former slave and New York businesswoman * [[Harriet Jacobs]]: writer and abolitionist * [[Biddy Mason]]: nurse, midwife, entrepreneur, philanthropist * [[Mary Meachum]]: Underground railroad conductor and President of Colored Ladies Soldiers Aid Society * [[William Cooper Nell]]: journalist * [[William Nesbit (activist)|William Nesbit]]: civil rights activist in Pennsylvania * [[Solomon Northup]]: writer of slave narrative ''[[Twelve Years a Slave]]'' * [[Sarah Parker Remond]]: lecturer and abolitionist, physician * [[Charles Lenox Remond]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.docsouth.unc.edu/neh/douglass/douglass.html|title=Frederick Douglass, 1818–1895. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave. Written by Himself|website=www.docsouth.unc.edu}}</ref> * [[Hiram R. Revels]]: republican politician, and college administrator * [[Daniel Payne]]: educator, college administrator, and author * [[Robert Purvis]]: abolitionist * [[David Ruggles]]: anti-slavery activist *[[Heyward Shepherd monument|Heyward Shepherd]]: killed in [[John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry]] * [[Michael Shiner]]: diarist * [[Maria Stewart]]: journalist, abolitionist, and activist * [[William Still]]: abolitionist, writer, and activist * [[Pierre Toussaint|Pierre]] and [[Juliette Toussaint]]: philanthropists * [[Harriet Tubman]]: fugitive slave, abolitionist, [[Underground Railway]] organizer ("conductor")<ref>{{Cite web |title=Harriet Tubman |url=https://www.nps.gov/subjects/harriettubman/index.htm |publisher=National Park Service |access-date=19 August 2025}}</ref> * [[Harriet Wilson]]: novelist * [[Horace_King_(architect)|Horace King]]: architect {{Div col end}}

== See also == * [[African-American history#The Black community|Antebellum black community]] * [[Abyssinian Meeting House]] * [[Free people of color]] * [[Slavery in the United States]] * [[Slavery in Canada]]

==References== {{Reflist|30em}}

==Further reading== * Berlin, Ira. ''Slaves Without Masters: The Free Negro in the Antebellum South'' (1974). * Burton, Orville Vernon. "Anatomy of an Antebellum Rural Free Black Community: Social Structure and Social Interaction in Edgefield District, South Carolina, 1850–1860," ''Southern Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal of the South'' (1982) 21#3 pp.&nbsp;294–325. * Curry, Leonard P. ''The Free Black in Urban America, 1800–1850: The Shadow of the Dream'' (University of Chicago Press, 1981). * Diemer, Andrew K. ''The Politics of Black Citizenship: Free African Americans in the Mid-Atlantic Borderland, 1817–1863'' (University of Georgia Press, 2016). xvi, 253 pp. * Franklin, John Hope. ''Free Negroes in North Carolina''. * Hancock, Scott. [http://cupola.gettysburg.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1005&context=afsfac "From "No Country" to "Our Country!" Living Out Manumission and the Boundaries of Rights and Citizenship, 1773–1855."] Paths to Freedom: Manumission in the Atlantic World (University of South Carolina Press, 2009), 265–289. * Horton, James O. ''Free People of Color: Inside the African American Community'' (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1993). * Horton, James O., and Lois E. Horton. ''Black Bostonian's: Family Life and Community Struggle in the Antebellum North'' (New York: Holmes and Meier, 1979). * King, Wilma. ''The Essence of Liberty: Free Black Women during the Slave Era'' (2006). * Lebsock, Susan. "Free black women and the question of matriarchy: Petersburg, Virginia, 1784–1820," ''Feminist n Mk'' (1982) 8#2 pp.&nbsp;271–92. * Polgar, Paul J. "'Whenever They Judge it Expedient': The Politics of Partisanship and Free Black Voting Rights in Early National New York," ''American Nineteenth Century History'' (2011), 12#1 pp.&nbsp;1–23. * [http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?id=GALE|A300443415&v=2.1&u=unc_main&it=r&inPS=true&prodId=AONE&userGroupName=unc_main&p=AONE&digest=cc2c3c36c34c7676d1ef56bcb99e19a2&rssr=rss Rohrs, Richard C., "The Free Black Experience in Antebellum Wilmington, North Carolina]: Refining Generalizations about Race Relations," ''Journal of Southern History'' 78 (August 2012), 615–38. * Wilson, Theodore Brantner. ''The Black Codes of the South''. University of Alabama Press, 1965. * {{cite book |last=Heinegg |first=Paul |date=2021 |title=Free African Americans of North Carolina, Virginia, and South Carolina from the Colonial Period to About 1820. Sixth Edition |volume=I - Families Abel to Drew |url=https://genealogical.com/store/free-african-americans-of-north-carolina-virginia-and-south-carolina-from-the-colonial-period-to-about-1820-sixth-edition-volume/ |location=Baltimore, MD |publisher=Genealogical Publishing Company |isbn=9780806359298 |access-date=9 January 2026}} * {{cite book |last=Hashaw |first=Tim |date=2006 |title=Children of Perdition. Melungeons and the Struggle of Mixed America. |url=https://www.mupress.org/Children-of-Perdition-Melungeons-and-the-Struggle-of-Mixed-America-P70.aspx |location=Macon, GA |publisher=Mercer University Press |isbn=9780881460742 |access-date=9 January 2026}} * {{cite book |last=Price|first=Edward Thomas |date=January 1950 |title=Mixed Blood Populations of Eastern United States as to origins, localizations, and persistence |url=https://archive.org/details/mixed-blood-populations-eastern-united-states |location=Oakland, CA |publisher=[[University of California]] |isbn= |access-date=28 January 2026}}

==External links== * The University of North Carolina at Greensboro [http://library.uncg.edu/slavery/index.aspx?s=3 Digital Library on American Slavery: Browse Subjects – Free People of Color]

{{African American topics}}

[[Category:African-American people with free status before 1865| ]] [[Category:Pre-emancipation African-American history]] [[Category:Social history of the United States]]