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Wilberforce Colony

Wilberforce Colony
Colony
The Wilberforce Settlement
Wilberforce Colony is located in Ontario
Wilberforce Colony
Wilberforce Colony
Location within the province of Ontario
Coordinates: 43°12′N 81°23′W / 43.200°N 81.383°W / 43.200; -81.383Coordinates: 43°12′N 81°23′W / 43.200°N 81.383°W / 43.200; -81.383
Country  Canada
Province Ontario
County Middlesex County, Ontario
Established 1829
Founded by Israel Lewis and Thomas Crissup
Government
 • Type Colony
 • President, Board of Managers Austin Steward
Area
 • Total .1.6 km2 (0.04 sq mi)
Population (1835)
 • Total 166
 • Density 1,700/km2 (4,300/sq mi)
Time zone EST (UTC-5)
 • Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)

Wilberforce Colony was a colony established about 1829 by free African American citizens, north of present-day London, Ontario, Canada. It was an effort by American blacks to create a place where they could live in political freedom.

When American black communities favored emigration at all (and many did not), they preferred going to a country where free blacks could hold full political control of their destiny. The establishment of what became the Wilberforce Colony in Canada was one such movement. It was planned by blacks from Cincinnati, Ohio, who emigrated following passage of discriminatory laws in 1828 and a destructive riot against them in 1829.

The frontier colony grew quickly upon its founding. Internal disputes, lack of funding and the draw of urban jobs led to its decline by 1850. In the 1840s, many Irish immigrants settled in this area after fleeing famine in their homeland. Altogether, the Wilberforce Colony survived as an independent community fewer than 20 years.

The increase in Cincinnati's black population in the decade starting in 1820 was rapid and pronounced. Although Ohio was a free state, the southern portion was influenced settlers from the South and racial tensions grew. In 1820, some 433 African Americans comprised less than 4% of the city's population, but over the next decade the city's black population swelled by more than 400%. This change alarmed some white residents. In response to a citizens' petition in 1828, the Cincinnati City Council appointed a committee "to take measures to prevent the increase of negro population within the city." In March of that year the Ohio Supreme Court decided that the 1807 state Black Laws, which placed restrictions on blacks in many areas of life and employment, were constitutional. The Cincinnati City Council enforced this restrictive legislation.

Near the end of June 1828, Cincinnati blacks elected Israel Lewis and Thomas Crissup to survey a site in Canada to which the Cincinnati blacks could emigrate. Lewis and Crissup met with John Colbourne, the Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada, to discuss prospects of settling in the area. They entered into a contract with the Canada Company for the purchase of land in Biddulph in the Huron Tract in Ontario, lots 2, 3, and 5 north of the Proof Line Road and lot 11 south of the road, for the amount of $1.50 per acre. The land was on the Ausable River, some twenty miles (32 km) from Lake Huron, and about thirty-five miles from the northern shore of Lake Erie. The initial arrangement between Israel Lewis and Thomas Crissup envisaged the purchase of 4,000 acres (16 km2) for $6,000, to be paid by November 1830.


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