Black communities in Delaware post-Civil War: Difference between revisions

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The impulse for freedom that the Underground Railroad represented did not disappear after the Civil War. Prior to emancipation, among the most dramatic expressions of that impulse had unfolded not far from Delaware's borders. In 1848, the largest nonviolent escape attempt by enslaved people in American history took place in the nation's capital, when a group of 77 enslaved individuals attempted to flee by boat aboard the schooner ''Pearl''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Desperate for freedom, 77 enslaved people tried to escape by sailing up the Potomac |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2021/04/16/pearl-slave-escape/ |work=The Washington Post |access-date=2026-02-25}}
The impulse for freedom that the Underground Railroad represented did not disappear after the Civil War. Prior to emancipation, among the most dramatic expressions of that impulse had unfolded not far from Delaware's borders. In 1848, the largest nonviolent escape attempt by enslaved people in American history took place in the nation's capital, when a group of 77 enslaved individuals attempted to flee by boat aboard the schooner ''Pearl''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Desperate for freedom, 77 enslaved people tried to escape by sailing up the Potomac |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2021/04/16/pearl-slave-escape/ |work=The Washington Post |access-date=2026-02-25}}
== References ==
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Latest revision as of 13:09, 12 May 2026

After the Civil War ended in 1865, Black communities across Delaware faced a paradox that defined the next century of their existence: emancipation had arrived nationally, yet the state of Delaware responded to freedom not with expanded rights but with renewed legal restrictions. The experiences of Black Delawareans during the post-Civil War era were shaped by discriminatory legislation, the endurance of historic free Black settlements, and the community institutions that residents built and maintained in the face of sustained legal and social pressure. Delaware's story differs in certain ways from the broader Reconstruction narrative of the former Confederate South, yet its Black residents faced hardships of their own that were no less severe — rooted not in Confederate resistance but in the legal architecture of a border state that had long maintained racial hierarchy through statute and custom.

Background: Free Black Communities Before the War

Delaware's post-Civil War Black communities did not emerge from a vacuum. Long before the war, the state had a significant population of free Black men and women who had established their own neighborhoods, churches, and economic networks. Notably, Delaware had, proportionally, the largest free Black population of any state in the antebellum United States — a distinction that set it apart from both the slaveholding South and the nominally freer North.[1] Prior to the Civil War, free Black Delawareans nonetheless suffered under extensive legal discrimination. They were required to carry passes signed by white men in order to leave the state, a restriction that curtailed movement and opportunity even for those who were technically free.

Another distinctive feature of Delaware slavery was its scale. In the early nineteenth century, approximately 60 percent of Delaware's enslaved people lived in units of five or fewer individuals, a pattern that differed sharply from the large plantation system of the Deep South and reflected the state's small farms and mixed economy.[2] This structure shaped the social fabric of Black Delaware in lasting ways, producing communities that were geographically dispersed yet deeply interconnected through kinship, church, and trade.

Among the earliest and most significant of these pre-war settlements was Belltown in Sussex County, established as a community of free Black men and women in the middle of the nineteenth century on land owned by Jacob "Jigger" Bell, a free Black man for whom the community was named.[3] Belltown is regarded as among the oldest free Black communities in the state, and Bell's establishment of a landowning settlement in the antebellum period represented an act of particular consequence given the legal environment of the era. The existence of such communities before the Civil War provided a foundation — social, economic, and geographic — upon which post-war Black life in Delaware would be constructed.

Slavery itself persisted in Delaware far longer than many people recognize. Delaware only outlawed the institution through the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment at the conclusion of the Civil War, having declined to abolish it independently at any point during the antebellum period.[4] This context is essential to understanding the scale of the transition that freedom represented for Black Delawareans after 1865.

Post-Civil War Legislation and Jim Crow in Delaware

The end of the Civil War did not bring an end to legal discrimination in Delaware. Following emancipation, the Delaware Legislature moved to place even more limitations on African American citizenship rather than expanding the rights that freedom implied.[5] The state passed and enforced Jim Crow laws that denied the rights of African American citizens for much of the twentieth century, codifying racial separation in public life through a series of legislative acts that touched nearly every dimension of daily existence.[6]

These laws affected access to education, public accommodations, transportation, and civic participation. Schools were formally segregated under state law, and Black Delawareans were excluded from white public facilities including parks, theaters, and restaurants. The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, ratified nationally during Reconstruction, offered little practical relief in Delaware, where the legislature actively resisted federal civil rights measures and the state's courts enforced racially restrictive statutes. The legislative response to emancipation in Delaware reflected a broader pattern seen across the border and Mason–Dixon region, where states that had not joined the Confederacy nevertheless maintained racial hierarchies through statute and custom.

Education was among the arenas in which Delaware's racial restrictions were most consequential. Black children in Delaware attended underfunded, racially segregated schools for decades after the Civil War, and the fight for equal educational opportunity eventually became a defining legal and political struggle. Delaware's segregated schools were directly implicated in the litigation that became part of the landmark Brown v. Board of Education ruling in 1954, with two Delaware cases — Bulah v. Gebhart and Belton v. Gebhart — decided in favor of Black plaintiffs by the Delaware Court of Chancery before being consolidated into the Supreme Court's broader ruling.[7]

Delaware's Jim Crow era left a legacy that the state itself has formally acknowledged. In 2016, the legislature passed an apology for slavery and Jim Crow, a formal recognition that the laws enacted after emancipation caused lasting harm — though the apology was not accompanied by reparations.[8]

The Role of the Black Church

Among the most important institutions sustaining Black communities in Delaware after the Civil War was the church. African American churches served not only as houses of worship but as community centers, schools, mutual aid societies, and organizing hubs during the decades when Black Delawareans were excluded from white civic institutions. In the absence of equitable public services, Black congregations often filled the gaps — funding education for children, providing support for the sick and elderly, and offering a space for community deliberation and leadership development.

The church's centrality to Black community life in Delaware had roots that extended well before the Civil War. Free Black Delawareans had established independent congregations in the antebellum period as one of the few institutions they were permitted to organize and control. After emancipation, the church's role expanded as formerly enslaved people joined existing congregations and new ones were formed. Black denominations, including congregations affiliated with the African Methodist Episcopal Church, became pillars of community life across Sussex, Kent, and New Castle counties.[9] These institutions provided continuity across generations and helped communities like Belltown, Star Hill, and the Black neighborhoods of Wilmington maintain their cohesion under sustained legal and social pressure.

The Absence of Organized Klan Terror

One distinction between Delaware's post-Civil War experience and that of the Deep South concerns organized racial terror. The Ku Klux Klan never gained a real foothold in post-Civil War Delaware in the manner it did in the former Confederate states, where Klan "night riders" systematically terrorized Black people, their families, and their communities through violence and intimidation. This absence of large-scale organized vigilante violence did not mean that Black Delawareans lived free from racial hostility, but it did mean that the specific form of domestic terrorism that defined Reconstruction in states like Mississippi, South Carolina, and Louisiana was less pronounced in Delaware's counties and cities.

The relatively limited Klan presence, however, should not be interpreted as evidence that Delaware was a haven of racial equality. The legal mechanisms of Jim Crow, enforced by the state itself, accomplished many of the same ends that vigilante violence achieved elsewhere — the suppression of Black political participation, economic mobility, and community autonomy. In Delaware, the state was the primary instrument of racial control, and its laws were enforced by courts and officials rather than by extralegal organizations. The practical outcomes for Black Delawareans — exclusion from civic life, restricted economic opportunity, and constrained geographic mobility — were shaped as much by statute as by fear.

Historic Black Neighborhoods and Communities

Despite the legal and social pressures they faced, Black Delawareans established and maintained a number of distinct communities across all three counties of the state. These neighborhoods served as centers of cultural life, economic activity, and mutual support during decades when the broader society denied Black residents equal access to public institutions. The communities they built ranged from rural settlements with roots in the antebellum free Black experience to urban neighborhoods that grew with Delaware's industrializing economy in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.[10]

Several of these communities have been documented and recognized for their historical significance. They include Belltown in Sussex County; Polktown in Delaware City, New Castle County; Star Hill in Kent County, near Camden and Dover; Little Jersey near the Lums Pond area; and other settlements that developed in various parts of the state.[11]

Belltown

Belltown, located in Sussex County, is among the oldest known free Black settlements in Delaware. Founded in the mid-nineteenth century on land owned by Jacob "Jigger" Bell, a free Black man, the community predates the Civil War by several decades, making it a settlement that survived the transition from the antebellum period through emancipation and continued to function as a center of Black life well into the post-war era and beyond.[12] Bell's decision to purchase land and establish a community in the face of severe antebellum restrictions on free Black Delawareans reflects the determination that characterized the founding of such settlements. The community's longevity speaks to the resilience of its founders and their descendants in maintaining a distinct social and geographic identity across generations and through the upheavals of emancipation, the Jim Crow era, and beyond.

Polktown

Polktown, situated within Delaware City in New Castle County, represents another example of a Black neighborhood that developed within an existing incorporated municipality. Communities of this kind faced particular pressures, as their proximity to white neighborhoods and local government structures made them subject to municipal policies and enforcement in ways that more rural settlements sometimes avoided. Nevertheless, Polktown persisted as a defined community and is recognized among the historic Black neighborhoods that helped shape Delaware's social landscape.[13]

Star Hill

Star Hill, located in Kent County near the cities of Camden and Dover, is among the historic Black communities in the state's central region. Kent County, as the home of the state capital at Dover, was a site of particular significance for questions of civic participation and legal status that affected all Black Delawareans. The proximity of Star Hill to the seat of state government made it a community whose residents were in close geographic relationship to the legislative and judicial institutions that shaped — and constrained — Black life in Delaware for generations after the Civil War.[14]

Little Jersey

Little Jersey, located near the Lums Pond area of New Castle County, is another of the historic Black communities that developed in Delaware's post-Civil War landscape. Like Belltown and Star Hill, it represents the pattern by which Black Delawareans established distinct settlements — often in areas that white residents had passed over or considered marginal — and transformed those places into functioning communities with their own social networks, institutions, and identities.[15]

The Broader Regional Context: Resistance and Flight

Delaware's Black communities existed within a broader regional geography of resistance and movement. The Underground Railroad had long made Delaware a transit corridor for those escaping slavery, and the state's eastern shore connected it to a network of free Black communities stretching across the Delmarva Peninsula and into Maryland. Harriet Tubman, who was born into slavery on Maryland's Eastern Shore, made repeated use of Delaware's routes and safe houses in her missions to lead enslaved people to freedom — a fact that underscores how deeply embedded Delaware was in the networks of resistance that preceded and shaped emancipation.[16]

The impulse for freedom that the Underground Railroad represented did not disappear after the Civil War. Prior to emancipation, among the most dramatic expressions of that impulse had unfolded not far from Delaware's borders. In 1848, the largest nonviolent escape attempt by enslaved people in American history took place in the nation's capital, when a group of 77 enslaved individuals attempted to flee by boat aboard the schooner Pearl.<ref>Template:Cite web

References