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From the Archives:
Biographies:
Hamilton Waters
1800-1877
As he drove along
the Old Lake Road with a wagonload of fugitive slaves, Hamilton Waters
recalled his own journey on the freedom trail.
It was not long
after the first Negro Rights Convention in Philadelphia that Waters, a
partially blind slave in Somerset County, Maryland, hired himself out
so he could buy his mother’s freedom along with his own. He was
issued a “deed of manumission” for himself and a “bill of sale” in the
amount of $58 dollars for this mother.
A Maryland law required that any free black
traveling through the state had to find a job or leave the state
within 15 days. Those who stayed could be fined $30 a day or be sold
back into slavery.
Hamilton and his mother chose to leave. He
was issued his “freedom papers” in 1835.
Together they set
out for the free black settlements in Canada near the Michigan
Border. Before reaching Canada, his fortunes changed when Hamilton
met Lucinda Duncanson, an educated African-American woman who had
worked in the household of New York Governor Enos Thompson Throop.
Hamilton and Lucinda married, gave birth to a daughter, and moved
their young family from Michigan to Erie, where Hamilton found work as
a clothes presser in Robert Vosburgh’s barber shop. The family lived
at East Third and Holland Streets for many years.
Hamilton Waters became a respected citizen and a founder of the
Wesleyan Methodist (Colored) Church in a section of Erie known as
Jerusalem. Members of the Wesleyan Methodist Church were among the
"staunchest advocates of the abolition of slavery.”
Jerusalem
was located on Erie's West Side, from Sixth Street north to the
Bayfront and from Sassafras Street west to about Cherry Street. The
area was purchased by William Himrod, a white abolitionist, who wanted
to offer "newly freed blacks and destitute whites" an opportunity to
purchase a small homestead.
Jerusalem
was known to have been a remote area and not easily reached from
downtown Erie, making the area ideal for clandestine anti-slavery
activities.
One night in the summer of 1858, Jehiel Towner of Erie contacted Frank
Henry of Harborcreek about helping three passengers escape to Canada.
The next night about dusk, Hamilton Waters brought the family to Frank
Henry in a wagon. A skiff was waiting at the mouth of four-mile creek
to take them across the lake to Canada.
“The driver, one Hamilton Waters, was a free mulatto, known to
everybody around Erie. He had brought a little boy with him as a
guide, for he was almost as blind as a bat,” Henry recalled.
Hamilton worked
hard to secure an education for his daughters, Elizabeth and Louisa.
Louisa, his youngest daughter, filled an important clerkship under the
state government of Louisiana and came back to Erie to work in the
insurance agency of the Hon. J.F. Downing.
Hamilton’s
connections with Pittsburgh’s abolitionists made it possible for his
daughter Elizabeth to go to college at the Allegheny Institute and
Mission in Pittsburgh, later called Avery College. The college,
founded by philanthropist Charles Avery, had a subterranean hideout
for fugitive slaves.
Elizabeth, trained
in the classical languages, was one of three commencement speakers at
her graduation. Unable to find a job in Erie’s public schools, she
taught the children of newly freed slaves at the Himrod mission.
Elizabeth married
black abolitionist Henry Burley who later fought in the Civil War.
Their sons Reginald and Harry often accompanied Hamilton on his lamp
lighting rounds through the streets of Erie while he rang out the old
plantation songs in his clear, distinctive voice.
Waters
determination to secure his release from slavery, to provide for his
family and to assist freedom seekers despite his blindness helped to
shape the character of one of America’s most influential composers and
arrangers. Harry Thacker Burleigh would go on to study at the National
Conservatory of Music in New York. His grandfather’s plantation songs
would someday reach an international audience and inspire the famous
Czech composer Antonin Dvorak’s New World Symphony.
Hamilton Waters
died on February 6, 1877 at the age of 77.
His obituary in
The Erie Morning Dispatch said "he has gone to the land where there is
no oppression and the bondsman is free." A few hours before he passed
away Waters said to a friend 'I have my trunk packed-- been packed a
good while -- and am waiting for the boat to round the curve.' "
SIDEBAR
Immediately after
the Civil War, many former slaves placed advertisements in newspapers,
searching for lost family members. These notices provide precious
details for genealogists. The ad below, discovered as recently as
2002, was placed in the October 28, 1865 edition of THE CHRISTIAN
RECORDER in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
NOTICE.
Information wanted
of Matilda Waters, who formerly belonged to a man by the name of Levin
Waters, of Princess Ann, Somerset Co., Maryland. She was married to
Jeremy Horsey. She had four children when I saw her last, about thirty
years ago. Also, of my brother, Simon Cater, or Simon Waters. I should
like to hear from him. Also, of Rinaldo Turner, Sandy Anderson and Wm.
Handy. Any information of the whereabouts of the said persons can be
sent to the Book Store, No. 619 Pine St., Philadelphia - or to
HAMILTON E.
WATERS,
Erie, Pennsylvania. |