North Buxton

North Buxton is a rural community located in Southwestern Ontario. It was established in 1849 as a community for and by former African-American slaves who escaped to Canada to gain freedom. Rev. William King, a Scots-Irish/American Presbyterian minister and abolitionist, had organized the Elgin Association to buy 9,000 acres of land for resettlement of the refugees, to give them a start in Canada. Within a few years, numerous families were living here, having cleared land, built houses, and developed crops. They established schools and churches, and were thriving before the American Civil War. Buxton now has a population of over 400 people.

There was great interest in the settlement among Americans. Buxton was visited by a reporter from the New York Herald Tribune in 1857, and by the head of the American Freedmen's Inquiry Commission in the summer of 1863, established after President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation had freed many slaves in the American South during the Civil War. These reports praised the achievements of the people of Buxton and other African Americans in Canada.

The community is within the Chatham-Kent municipality and today has a population of approximately 200, almost exclusively Black Canadians. North Buxton's historic population peaked at more than 2000, almost exclusively descendants of freed and fugitive slaves who had escaped the United States via the Underground Railroad. Great Britain abolished slavery in its colonies in 1838 and it had never been widespread in Canada. The related community is South Buxton.

History

The North Buxton community was established in 1849 by the Scots-Irish/American abolitionist, Rev. William King, a native of Scotland who had immigrated to the United States, worked as a teacher and tutor for years in Louisiana, and married into a planter family. After his wife died, he inherited her estate, including 15 slaves.[1] He initially allowed the slaves to keep fees earned after being hired out but, after becoming a Presbyterian minister and missionary in Canada, he decided to free the slaves and relocate them to that free country.

He worked with the Governor General, Lord Elgin, to create the Elgin Association, to manage development of a 9,000-acre parcel near Lake Ontario for a community where freedmen and fugitive slaves, known as Negro refugees in Canada, might settle. The Elgin Settlement eventually was organized as the communities of North and South Buxton. The Association provided land at low cost, and financing for those who would build a house and develop the land, to aid the African Americans.[2][3]

These former slaves usually reached Canada via the Underground Railroad from the United States in the years before the American Civil War. Thousands had been settling in southwest Ontario, as it was easily reached from a number of midwestern states and western New York. Among the notable residents was William Parker, a leader of the Christiana Resistance in 1851 in the free state of Pennsylvania, where he and his neighbors fought off a party trying to capture four fugitive slaves from Maryland. From Buxton, he became a correspondent of Frederick Douglass' newspaper, The North Star, and was elected to local office for many years.

The growing population was visited by Americans in addition to Canadians interested in its progress. A reporter from the New York Herald Tribune wrote admiringly about it in 1857.[2] During the late years of the American Civil War, after the Emancipation Proclamation in early 1863 freed many slaves in the South, a Freedmen's Inquiry Commission was established by the Secretary of War to gather information about the "condition and capacity" of the "population just set free."[4] On its behalf, Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe and J.M.W. Yerrinton, as secretary and reporter, visited numerous communities in Canada West (present-day Ontario) during the summer of 1863 to gather information about the many former American slaves who had gained freedom and settled there. Among those communities was Buxton.

He wrote,

"Buxton is certainly a very interesting place. Sixteen years ago it was a wilderness...Twenty years ago most of them [inhabitants] were slaves, who owned nothing, not even their children. Now they own themselves; they own their houses and farms; they have their wives and children about them. They are the enfranchised citizens of a government that protects their rights... The present condition of all these colonists as compared with their former one is remarkable...This settlement is a perfect success..." [5]

[2]

In the 1860s, there was a fire at their local pearl factory. As the bell rang to warn the citizens, many men fled out to stop the fire, but it could not be saved. Thus, a source of income was lost from the community. However, Buxton was doing well in other aspects and managed to stick through the situation. Sadly, though, at a similar time, Buxton joined the civil war and this impacted many residents.

In the nineteenth century, the community operated three schools; the former slaves placed emphasis on education and literacy for adults and children as the key to progress. Its education was considered so superior that nearby whites sent their children to attend these schools.[2][6] Over time, descendants have moved from these rural communities to cities for urban opportunities, and the population has declined.

Legacy

Representation in popular culture

References

  1. "History of Elgin", Buxton Museum
  2. 1 2 3 4 Landon, Fred (October 1918). "The Buxton Settlement in Canada". The Journal of Negro History. 3 (4): 360–367. JSTOR 2713816.
  3. Landon, Fred (July 1936). "Agriculture Among the Negro Refugees in Upper Canada". The Journal of Negro History. 21 (3): 304–312. JSTOR 2714620.
  4. Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe, Refugees from Slavery in Canada West: Report to the Freedmen's Inquiry Commission, (Boston: Wright and Potter, Printers, 1864/reprint Arno Press, 1969), pp. 1-2
  5. Howe (1864), Refugees from Slavery in Canada West, pp. 70-71
  6. "Underground Railroad and North Buxton", Singing Quilter Blog
  7. Curtis, Christopher Paul. Nobody But Curtis http://www.nobodybutcurtis.com/books.html. Retrieved 2015-01-15. Missing or empty |title= (help)

Further reading

External links

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