The New England Freedom Association (c.1842 – c.1848) was an organization founded by African Americans in Boston for the purpose of assisting fugitive slaves.
History
The New England Freedom Association was founded in 1842[1] or 1843,[2] and existed for about five years. Its founding members included William Cooper Nell, Henry Weeden, Judith Smith, Mary L. Armstead, Thomas Cummings, and Robert Wood. They raised "funds to aid those of our friends who flee to the land of the Pilgrims for their liberty."[2] Meetings were held in the African Meeting House on Beacon Hill.[3]
In December 1845, the association announced in the Liberator that it had reorganized.[4] Its officers were:
President: Henry Weeden
Vice-President: Joshua V. Smith (possibly a misprint for Joshua B. Smith)
Directors: James Johnson, Peter Avery, John St. Pierre, James L. Giles, James Scott, Mary L. Armstead, Judith Smith
Two of its twelve officers were women.[1] The Boston Vigilance Committee, by contrast, had no female members. In the Liberator article, the association described its purpose:
The object of our Association is to extend a helping hand to all who may bid adieu to whips and chains, and by the welcome light of the North Star, reach a haven where they can be protected from the grasp of the man-stealer. An article of the constitution enjoins upon us not to pay one farthing to any slaveholder for the property they may claim in a human being. ... Our mission is to succor those who claim property in themselves, and thereby acknowledge an independence of slavery.[4]
^ abNell, William Cooper; Weeden, Henry; Cummings, Thomas; Giles, James L. (December 12, 1845). "New-England Freedom Association"(PDF). The Liberator. p. 199.
Beshara, Christopher J. (October 9, 2009). "The Hidden History of Black Militant Abolitionism in Antebellum Boston". University of Sydney. doi:10.2139/ssrn.2101496. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)