Original title:  Henry Bibb, copper engraving by Patrick H. Reason - Wikipedia

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BIBB, HENRY WALTON, lecturer, abolitionist, author, and newspaperman; b. 10 May 1815 in Shelby County, Ky, son of James Bibb and Milldred Jackson, a slave; m. first 1833 Malinda ——, and they had two children, one of whom died in infancy; m. secondly June 1848 Mary Elizabeth Miles, a Quaker from Boston; d. 1 Aug. 1854 in Windsor, Upper Canada.

Henry Walton Bibb, born into slavery, worked for at least three masters in Kentucky and Louisiana. He made several bids for freedom. On one of these he spent a few months in Canada in 1838, but when he returned to Kentucky in an attempt to free his first wife and their daughter he was caught and sold to a group of gamblers. He finally made his way alone to Detroit in December 1840. There he joined the anti-slavery movement, travelling across Michigan, Ohio, and the northeastern states lecturing upon the evils of slavery. In 1850, two years after his marriage to Mary Elizabeth Miles, a member of the Anti-Slavery Society in Boston, the passage by the American Congress of the Fugitive Slave Act compelled Bibb and his wife to cross the Detroit River and settle in Sandwich, Upper Canada. Bibb related the full story of his years in slavery and his efforts to escape in an autobiography published that same year in New York.

Bibb began publication of the Voice of the Fugitive, the first black newspaper in Upper Canada, at Sandwich on 1 Jan. 1851. A bi-weekly, the Voice militantly attacked racial bigotry, advocating the immediate end to chattel slavery everywhere and the complete integration into Canadian society of the black refugee by a devotion to temperance, education, and agriculture. The newspaper opposed annexation to the United States because of the institution of slavery in that country, and was utterly opposed to the introduction of black separate schools, through the Common Schools Act (1850), because Bibb felt that the future of the blacks in Canada depended upon their being part of an integrated community. Unlike its counterpart the Provincial Freeman, edited by Samuel Ringgold Ward* and Mary Ann Shadd*, the Voice greatly admired Josiah Henson*, the elder statesman and somewhat controversial leader of former slaves in Upper Canada.

Bibb was also a founding director of the Refugee Home Society, a black colonization project established in Detroit in May 1851 to help meet the needs of an estimated 25,000 to 35,000 fugitive slaves living in Canada. The society, supported by donations from American and Canadian anti-slavery groups, purchased land located in scattered blocks at Maidstone, Puce, Belle River, and elsewhere around Windsor from the Canada Company for resale to refugee blacks who had no personal property and lacked the means to buy land privately. Each settler received 25 acres, five of which would be free if the land was cultivated within three years and the remainder of which was to be paid for in nine instalments. Any profits from the land sales were to be used by the society to purchase more land, build schools, and pay teachers. In January 1852 the Voice of the Fugitive was made the official organ of the society, to publish its constitution and bylaws and to report regularly on its affairs.

Support for the society, however, was not unanimous among the black community. Within months of its incorporation, Mary Ann Shadd and her supporters attacked the practice of “begging” for funds and clothing from Canadian and American philanthropic associations. The society’s opponents also accused the administrators of inept management, the fraudulent use of funds for personal gain, and land jobbing for the benefit of Detroit land speculators. None the less, with the assistance of the American Missionary Association, the society enjoyed a modest success, settling 150 refugees before it was disbanded at the end of the civil war.

Bibb was also closely associated with the anti-slavery movement in Canada. At Toronto on 11 Sept. 1851 he was elected chairman of the North American Convention of Colored Freemen, a general meeting of delegates from England, Jamaica, the free American states, and Upper Canada. The convention was called to renew the public and constitutional fight against American slavery, to encourage black slaves to resettle in Canada, and to unite all North American blacks into an agricultural union with the power to sway legislation. A year later, on 21 Oct. 1852, Bibb was elected president of the Windsor Anti-Slavery Society, a branch of the parent Toronto society.

From June 1852 Bibb had had an editorial assistant, James Theodore Holly, and this allowed him to resume an active schedule of speaking engagements promoting the work of the Refugee Home Society and soliciting subscriptions to his newspaper. The Voice of the Fugitive continued in print until a fire on 9 Oct. 1853 destroyed Bibb’s printing office. Thereafter, Bibb published a one-page newsletter until his premature death at Windsor on 1 Aug. 1854.

John K. A. O’Farrell

[Henry Walton Bibb compiled two brief accounts of slave uprisings under the titles Slave insurrection in 1831, in Southampton County, Va., headed by Nat Turner; also, a conspiracy of slaves, in Charleston, South Carolina, in 1822 (New York, 1849) and Slave insurrection in Southampton County, Va., headed by Nat Turner, with an interesting letter from a fugitive slave to his old master: also a collection of songs for the times (New York, 1850). Bibb’s autobiography, Narrative of the life and adventures of Henry Bibb, an American slave . . . , published in 1850 in New York with an introduction by Lucius D. Matlack, was included in a collection entitled Puttin’ on ole massa: the slave narratives of Henry Bibb, William Wells Brown, and Solomon Northup, ed. Gilbert Osofsky (New York, 1969), 51–171. Bibb also published a second anthology of anti-slavery songs in The anti-slavery harp (Windsor, [Ont.], 1852), but no surviving copy of this collection is known. A photograph of Bibb in the possession of the Ont. Dept. of Travel and Publicity is reproduced on p.201 of D. G. Hill’s study, cited below.  j.k.a.o’f.]

Private arch., Alvin McCurdy (Amherstburg, Ont.), Research notes; D. G. Simpson (London, Ont.), Research notes. Liberator (Boston), 4 March 1853, 11 Aug. 1854. Provincial Freeman (Toronto), 12 Aug. 1854. Voice of the Fugitive (Sandwich [Windsor]; Windsor), 1 Jan. 1851–October 1853. D. G. Hill, The freedom-seekers: blacks in early Canada (Agincourt [Toronto], 1981). A. L. Murray, “Canada and the Anglo-American anti-slavery movement: a study in international philanthropy” (phd thesis, Univ. of Pa., Philadelphia, 1960). J. K. A. Farrell [O’Farrell], “The history of the negro community in Chatham, Ontario, 1787–1865” (phd thesis, Univ. of Ottawa, 1955). W. H. Pease and J. H. Pease, Black Utopia: negro communal experiments in America (Madison, Wis., 1963). D. G. Simpson, “Negroes in Ontario from early times to 1870” (phd thesis, Univ. of Western Ont., London, 1971). J. W. St G. Walker, “‘On the other side of Jordan’: the record of Canada’s black pioneers, 1783–1865” (paper read before the CHA, London, 1978). R. W. Winks, The blacks in Canada: a history (Montreal, 1971). Fred Landon, “The negro migration to Canada after the passing of the Fugitive Slave Act” and “Henry Bibb, a colonizer” in Journal of Negro Hist. (Washington), 5 (1920): 22–36 and 437–47; “The work of the American Missionary Association among the negro refugees in Canada West, 1848–64,” OH, 21 (1924): 198–205. Alvin McCurdy, “Henry Walton Bibb,” Negro Hist. Bull. (Washington), 22 (1958): 19–22.

Cite This Article

John K. A. O’Farrell, “BIBB, HENRY WALTON,” in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 8, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003–, accessed December 21, 2024, https://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/bibb_henry_walton_8E.html.

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Permalink:   https://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/bibb_henry_walton_8E.html
Author of Article:   John K. A. O’Farrell
Title of Article:   BIBB, HENRY WALTON
Publication Name:   Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 8
Publisher:   University of Toronto/Université Laval
Year of publication:   1985
Year of revision:   1985
Access Date:   December 21, 2024