Syracuse African Americans
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Barbara Sheklin Davis
Barbara Sheklin Davis, whose photographic exhibits have chronicled the Syracuse African American and Jewish communities, is a professor emerita at Onondaga Community College and the principal of Syracuse Hebrew Day School and Epstein High School of Jewish Studies.
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Syracuse African Americans - Barbara Sheklin Davis
Jennings
One
THE EARLIEST YEARS
The history of Syracuse’s African American community begins, like that of the city itself, with salt. More than a decade before Ephraim Webster and Asa Danforth began to manufacture it, black men were making salt. Silas Bowker, later to be a senator from Cayuga County, visited the Onondaga salines in 1774, and in 1823, an account of what he saw was recorded in the journal of the New York State Senate: The manufacture of salt was wholly in the hands of two negro men, deserters from their master in Esopus, who used brass kettles for this purpose, and whose only customers were the neighboring Indians.
There were black slaves in Syracuse in the early days. Some came with their owners from elsewhere in New York State or from the South; others were purchased by settlers to help with the heavy labor. When Asa Danforth built his mills, he purchased a slave from a tavern keeper in Herkimer Flats to do the grinding. All early census records show both slave and free black populations; the county African American population in 1810 was 153, of whom 41 were slaves.
In 1824, Isaac Wales became the first African American to settle in the young village of Syracuse. He had come in 1810 as the property of John Fleming. According to contemporary accounts, Wales in youth had but few accomplishments, yet learned to read and write.
He was able to get work on the Erie Canal, then being dug, and, as his habits were industrious and frugal,
he saved enough money to buy his freedom for $80. Wales married, purchased property and a home at 56 Ash Street, and advertised his services in the Daily Standard.
The 1830s saw increasing attention paid to abolitionist activities. In 1831, opponents of slavery met in Syracuse to form an abolitionist society. Notices of antislavery meetings in Syracuse and surrounding areas began to appear in local papers. In 1837, Syracuse’s first African American church, the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, was founded.
The only early African American Syracusan of whom a portrait exists today is George Johnson. Johnson was an indoor servant in the home of the Wheaton family, and his likeness appeared in the diary of Ellen Birdseye Wheaton with the caption Black George.
Johnson worked for the Wheaton family for 14 years, from 1846 until 1860, and then was employed by the Longstreet family until his death.
In 1839, an event occurred that served to focus Syracuse’s attention on the issue of slavery. Harriet Powell was a beautiful girl of modest manner and lavish attire who was owned by the J. Davenports of Mississippi. The African American employees of Syracuse House plotted to free her with the assistance of local abolitionists. A hue and cry was raised, but searching proved fruitless. Although Davenport issued a handbill offering a hefty $200 reward for the return of his possession, Harriet Powell was successfully transported to freedom in