Senate Resolution No. 1174
BY: Senator CLEARE
COMMEMORATING the 196th Anniversary of the
Abolition of Slavery in the State of New York on
July 5, 2023
WHEREAS, It is the sense of this Legislative Body to commemorate
significant events which represent turning points in our unique history
and which are indelibly etched in the saga of our great Nation; and
WHEREAS, Attendant to such concern, and in full accord with its
long-standing traditions, this Legislative Body is justly proud to
commemorate the 196th Anniversary of the Abolition of Slavery in the
State of New York to be observed on Wednesday, July 5, 2023; and
WHEREAS, In 1799, an Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery was
enacted in the State of New York, specifying that children born to a
slave mother after July 4, 1799, were declared legally free, but not
until male children had turned 28, and females 25; slaves born before
that date remained in servitude, although they were redefined as
indentured servants; and
WHEREAS, On March 31, 1817, the New York State Legislature ended two
centuries of slavery within its borders, setting July 4, 1827, as the
date of final emancipation and making New York the first state to pass a
law for the total abolition of legal slavery; and
WHEREAS, In 1821, the New York Constitutional Convention was called
to extend universal suffrage across the State, and it did abolish
property qualifications for white men, but at the same time the
convention delegates disenfranchised the states' African American
citizens, including those to be freed in 1827, by limiting the right to
vote by free black men to those who owned substantial property; and
WHEREAS, On July 4, 1827, Governor Daniel Tompkins finally signed
legislation abolishing slavery in the State of New York; and
WHEREAS, This historic law freed approximately 4,600 or 11% of the
black population living in New York; the black community and its
supporters celebrated Emancipation Day and the following day,
approximately 3,000 people gathered at St. John's Park in New York City
to herald the new law; and
WHEREAS, Due to the threat of racist violence, African American New
Yorkers later chose to celebrate the emancipation day on July 5th for
many years; after 1834, the tradition largely merged into local
commemorations of the August 1 Emancipation Day in the British Empire,
first observed in New York in 1838 as part of a growing national embrace
among African Americans; and
WHEREAS, In 2020, through the support of the New York branch of the
Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH),
the holiday was revived and recognized by the State as an Abolition
Commemoration Day observed on the second Monday in July; and
WHEREAS, It is the custom of this Legislative Body to commemorate
events of significance in the history and progress of society; now,
therefore, be it
RESOLVED, That this Legislative Body pause in its deliberations to
commemorate the 196th Anniversary of the Abolition of Slavery in the
State of New York on July 5, 2023; and be it further
RESOLVED, That a copy of this Resolution, suitably engrossed, be
transmitted to the New York branch of the Association for the Study of
African American Life and History (ASALH).