![]() ![]() Information on the lives of African Nova Scotians during the period 1793 to 1812 is scarce. ![]() In 1800 virtually all of the Maroons took advantage of the opportunity provided by the Sierra Leone Company to emigrate to Sierra Leone. However, the Maroons were not interested in giving up their own religion and would not work for less than the wages a white person would receive. Lieutenant Governor Sir John Wentworth attempted to change the Maroons’ culture by introducing them to Christianity. A small number interested in farming were resettled from Preston to Boydville (Maroon Hill, Halifax County). The Maroons found farming in Nova Scotia difficult, especially as the climate prevented the growing of familiar food crops such as pineapples, bananas, yams, and cocoa. However, like the previous occupants of the poor, rocky land at Preston, they had little success. They worked on the third fortification at the Citadel in Halifax and on Government House, and performed other manual labour. In 1796 almost 600 Maroons were deported from Jamaica to Nova Scotia, following their rebellion against the colonial government. Halifax’s black population was 422 in 1791 and 451 in 1802. Few black people in Halifax participated in the exodus to Sierra Leone, perhaps because of better economic opportunities in the military city. There were 23 black families at Tracadie in 1808 by 1827 this number had increased to 30 or more. These included the Birchtowns (Guysborough and Shelburne Counties), Negro Line (later Southville, Digby County) and Tracadie (Guysborough County). A number of African Nova Scotian communities survived, at least for a time. There were few slaves left in Nova Scotia by the time the Black Refugees began to arrive during and after the War of 1812.Īlthough 1000 Black Loyalists from Nova Scotia emigrated to Sierra Leone, the majority remained. A bill supporting the slaveholders was introduced but it did not pass. In 1808 a group of slaveholders in Annapolis protested that court decisions were making it impossible to maintain their right to own slaves and asked the Assembly for assistance. ![]() ![]() This encouraged more and more slaves to run away, challenging the slaveholder to test his title in court. Thereafter, courts began refusing to uphold the ‘right’ of slaveholders to hold human beings as private property. Until the late 1790s, courts in Nova Scotia continued to uphold the legal interests of slaveholders. In December 1800 she was beaten to death by Andrews and his sons, who were tried the following year for murder but acquitted. Jude, slave of Samuel Andrews at Tusket River, fared far worse. However, the magistrate sided with him and Postell and her daughter were left in a state of slavery. The slaveholder, Jesse Gray, was prosecuted. For example, in 1791, Mary Postell of Argyle protested to the authorities when she was re-enslaved and her daughter Flora kidnapped into slavery. Some free African Nova Scotians who were enslaved or re-enslaved courageously protested their treatment in court. The Decline and Disappearance of Slavery, 1793-1812Īfrican Nova Scotians in the Age of Slavery and Abolitionįrom the beginning, enslaved African Nova Scotians challenged slavery by escaping from it.African Nova Scotians in the Age of Slavery and Abolition.Nova Scotia Births, Marriages, and Deaths.Provincial Archival Development Program. ![]()
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