Tag Archives: Slavery

Slavery Days in Steuben

By the time white people started moving into our area in large numbers, slavery was still legal in 12 of the 13 states. So tiny numbers of enslaved people trickled in, usually in ones and twos. Frederick Barthles, who founded what we call Bradford, reportedly had “his slave Jim” buried at his feet, though if that’s true, the stone has disappeared.

Eleazar Lindsley brought in seven enslaved people, but Captain William Helm brought up many more… maybe over a hundred… from Virginia. While his arrival was hailed as the coming of gentility and sophistication, it also debuted a spectacle of cruelty and profligacy. To be a slave, and be sold or traded, was bad enough. To be yanked from your family and sent to a new master because Captain Helm lost you in a game of cards was even worse. And he lost a lot.

With very few people owning slaves, and attitudes slowly changing, slaves occasionally got away with facing down their masters. But as Austin Steward walked across Bath’s Pulteney Square on his way to church, he once heard his sister screaming as her master beat her, and couldn’t do a thing. “Imagine my feelings when I saw the smooth-faced hypocrite, the inhuman slave-whipper, enter the church, pass quietly on to his accustomed seat, and then meekly bow his hypocritical face.”

Helm repeatedly hired Steward out, and one night Steward encountered lawyer Daniel Cruger on the Cameron Street bridge. “I asked him to tell me if I was not free, by the laws of New York. He started, and looked around him as if afraid to answer my question, but after a while told me I was NOT free.”

But at a private meeting in Cruger’s office, the lawyer assured Stewart that he WAS legally free, and gave him contact information for abolitionists in Canandaigua. He escaped in company with a young woman known only as Milly, a slave to George Hornell (for whom the city was named). He had legally acknowledged paternity of her child Milo, but now she left Hornell “to take care of himself… resolved on death, or freedom from the power of the slaveholder.”

Pretty much broke, Helm gathered a few confederates for a gigantic kidnaping scheme. A front man arranged a large reunion in Palmyra, particularly for former Helm slaves. The Captain and his gang burst in to capture the whole crowd, race them southward, and sell them off. But the slaves and former slaves fought back with “fists, clubs, chairs, and any thing they could get.” Returning with only a few captives to Bath they grabbed a few more, most of whom later gave them the slip, so they arrived in Virginia with only two young boys.

Daniel Cruger, by then in Congress, got wind of the upcoming sale and investigated. Not only were both youngsters from his district (Elmira and Painted Post), but he actually knew one of them! He also knew darned well that they were both free people, and after extricating them he paid for their journey home.

Thanks to Robert Troup and others, New York slavery ended on the Fourth of July in 1827. Since southern whites only agreed to join the United States if they got bonus Congressional and Electoral votes as a reward for having slaves, each census up to 1820 counted New York slaves. Steuben County’s highest number was 87 (in 1810)… Ontario had 212 the same year, and Allegany 21. The highest total statewide was 21,193 in 1790. Every one of those lives was lived with terror and tragedy looming.

Slavery Days in the Southern Tier

When our region was opened to white settlement in the 1780s, it was opened to black settlement as well, because the early white settlers brought along their slaves.
Slavery was forbidden in the Northwest Territory, bounded by the Ohio and Mississippi, and Massachusetts abolished slavery by court order in 17??. But apart from that, slavery was legal everywhere in U.S. Territory, including New York.
Since our area had direct connections with Chesapeake Bay and the Maryland-Virginia Tidewater (via the Conhocton-Chemung-Susquehanna River route), this became a “natural” area for slavery to extend. Indeed, land agent Charles Williamson, who had 1.2 million acres to dispose of, marketed this region to southerners as a place to buy huge estates, bring your slaves, and live like a king. This never came to pass, but Steuben County and its neighbors did become home to a noticeable slave population.
A hundred years ago you could still see buildings in Canisteo and in Bath that were reported to have been slave dwellings, and you could also find slave cemeteries that have since disappeared.
By and large, white men didn’t record much about the lives of slaves, just as they didn’t record much about the lives of women and poor people (of any race). We do have record of Colonel L. A. Jones in Addison, who won a woman and two sons in a game of cards (!) around 1820. According to a town history he passed the woman on to his brother, but recognizing the impending end of slavery enrolled the sons in school. “They were refused admission on account of color. He called a meeting of the citizens at the school house…. He said, ‘Gentlemen, the law will soon free these boys, they will have no master to look after them. They must earn their living as white men do, they must have a chance, they must have some education. They are going to attend this school and by the great Jehovah I will mop the ground with the man who refuses them admission and throw this building in the river stick by stick.’”
While this is stirring, the story also suggests the horror of casual, offhand transfers and the breakup of families as slaves (even children!) were routinely sold for payment of debts or taxes, or in liquidation of assets to settle estates.
Austin Steward left a remarkable slave narrative in which he described being brought to Bath from Virginia and hired out along with other slaves, including his sister. “One pleasant Sabbath morning, as I was passing the house where she lived, on my way to the Presbyterian church, where I was sent to ring the bell as usual, I heard the most piteous cries and earnest pleadings issuing from the dwelling. To my horror and the astonishment of those with me, my poor sister made her appearance, weeping bitterly, and followed by her inhuman master… flourishing a large raw-hide. Very soon his bottled wrath burst forth, and the blows, aimed with all his strength, descended upon the unprotected head, shoulders and back of the helpless woman, until she was literally cut to pieces. She writhed in his powerful grasp, while shriek after shriek died away in heart-rending moanings; and yet the inhuman demon continued to beat her, though her pleading cries had ceased, until obliged to desist from the exhaustion of his own strength…. The kind reader may imagine my feelings when I saw the smooth-faced hypocrite, the inhuman slave-whipper, enter the church, pass quietly on to his accustomed seat, and then meekly bow his hypocritical face….”
Steward describes being hired out to a man who clubbed and beat him frequently, not on any grounds, but simply because he could. Encountering attorney Daniel Cruger as both men crossed a bridge, Steward asked whether he shouldn’t in fact be free under New York law. Cruger loudly stated that of course Steward was NOT free, but the two men later held a private consultation (“you didn’t hear this from me”) in Cruger’s office.
A New York law for gradual emancipation had gone into effect in 1799, and court rulings since then had held that importing a slave, then hiring that slave out, was an evasion of the law’s provision against slave sales, and that the act ipso facto emancipated the slave. Cruger helped Steward get in touch with anti-slavery activists; at the age of 22 he walked away from Bath to settle in Manchester, where the activists helped him maintain his legal freedom when his owner later found him and tried to reclaim him. Facing the legal reality, the owner tried to lure Steward back “with honeyed words.” Unsurprisingly, this didn’t work.