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The Film:
Interview Transcripts:
Leroy Hopkins
LeRoy T. Hopkins,
Ph.D., Underground Railroad historian, Millersville University,
on
Pennsylvania’s gradual abolition act
Pennsylvania
became the first state of the original 13 colonies in 1780 to say that
any child born to a slave after March 30 would be an indentured
servant until they were 28 years of age. Now the parents would remain
slaves for life, and the idea was that after 28 years of age, then the
child would be free.
That was the
theory; the practice was much different. What happened was that the
children and the grandchildren of the original slaves remained
indentured servants. And the result was that in 1830 the state
Supreme Court had to step in and say, wait a minute, this was never
the intention of this law to create a perpetual class of servants, and
so they stopped this practice.
What you have to
remember about gradual abolition was that it was gradual, it did not
abolish slavery, and you also have to take into consideration the
longevity of the African. The average American only lived to around
age 40. Africans lived a shorter time period. So 28 years was a life
sentence. |
.separating fact
from fiction
role of the African Methodist Episcopal Church
doing what’s right
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