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CREATED:20240606T051800Z
DESCRIPTION:Most people do not think of Sacramento when discussing the history of 
 slavery, but during the Gold Rush, thousands of enslaved human beings 
 worked for their owners here in California. \n\nIn 1857, Sacramento became 
 the site of a court battle between an escaped slave, Archy Lee, and his 
 former owner. The resulting struggle became an early victory in American 
 human rights, and a rallying point for Sacramento’s early African 
 American community.\n\nArchy Lee was an African American slave from 
 Mississippi, brought to Sacramento by his owner, Charles Stovall. Stovall 
 came to Sacramento on October 2, 1857, bringing Lee with him. Once in 
 California, Stovall established a school and hired out Archy, keeping a 
 portion of his wages. At the time, slave owners were permitted to keep 
 their slaves only if they were visiting California for short periods. 
 Permanent residents could not own slaves.\n\nDuring his stay in Sacramento, 
 Lee came into contact with the established African American community in 
 Sacramento, centered around the Hackett House hotel on Third Street. This 
 community was small, but politically very well organized. In a state where 
 most whites were split between those who wanted to exclude African 
 Americans entirely and those who wanted California to become a slave state, 
 their need for organization was obvious. By 1857, they had established two 
 churches (Shiloh Baptist Church and St. Andrew’s African Methodist 
 Episcopal), a school, several local businesses, and hosted statewide 
 “Colored Convention” events to organize the call for civil 
 rights.\n\nIn January of 1858, Stovall decided to return Archy Lee to 
 Mississippi. Lee resisted by taking refuge in the Hackett House hotel. 
 Stovall sought assistance from the Sacramento County sheriff and had Lee 
 arrested. The first decision in the Archy Lee case, made by Judge Robert 
 Robinson on January 26, 1858, was that Archy was a free man, because 
 Stovall was a permanent resident of California and thus could not own 
 slaves.\n\nHowever, Stovall had arranged for a second arrest warrant by 
 appealing to the State Supreme Court, and Lee found himself before another 
 judge, Peter Burnett.\n\nJudge Peter Burnett, formerly California’s first 
 elected governor, was a virulent racist.  \n\nWhile a member of the Oregon 
 legislature, he authored a bill banning African Americans from the state, 
 punishing those who chose to remain with flogging every six months. While 
 governor of California, he attempted to pass a bill banning them from 
 California entirely, whether slave or free. \n\nOn February 11, 1858, Judge 
 Burnett handed down a very unusual decision. While California law 
 prohibited slave ownership for state residents, Burnett decided that 
 Stovall’s inexperience and poor health was sufficient reason to grant 
 what he viewed as leniency in the case. Thus, Lee was Stovall’s property 
 and had to leave California with him.\n\nMost Californians, especially in 
 the African American community, were outraged by the absurdity of this 
 decision, and even Stovall realized that he had to leave California 
 quickly. On March 5, Stovall tried to sneak Lee out of California on the 
 ship Orizaba, but was stopped by representatives of the Colored Convention. 
 This time, both Lee and Stovall were taken into custody; Lee for 
 “safe-keeping,” and Stovall for holding a slave illegally.\n\nBy March, 
 the case had come to the attention of both the African American community 
 and white abolitionists throughout California. Both solicited funds for 
 Lee’s defense, and organized a legal team led by Edwin T. Baker to argue 
 on Lee’s behalf.  Baker claimed that the previous decision, based on 
 Stovall’s ignorance of California law, was insufficient grounds to set 
 aside the Constitution. Judge Thomas W. Freelon of the San Francisco 
 district court agreed, and overturned Burnett’s decision.\n\nAs a final 
 strategy, Stovall’s team appealed to United States Commissioner William 
 Penn Johnston, a Southerner, arguing that Lee was in violation of the 1850 
 National Fugitive Slave Law. They hoped that Johnston’s status as a 
 federal official would trump California state law. Baker argued that since 
 Lee attempted to escape Stovall’s bondage while in California, no state 
 lines were crossed and thus no federal case could be established. Johnston 
 agreed, and on April 14, 1858, Archy Lee was declared a free man.\n\nAfter 
 his release, Lee joined an expedition of African Americans resettling in 
 Victoria, British Columbia. While living in Victoria, he worked as a 
 drayman, owned property, and even applied for Canadian citizenship, but 
 later returned to the United States. Little is known of Lee’s later life. 
 The Pacific Appeal newspaper reported in 1862 that he was working as a 
 barber in Washoe, Nevada. In 1873, several newspapers in San Francisco and 
 Sacramento reported that Lee was found ill near the bank of the American 
 River, and was taken to the county hospital, where he died.\n\nIn addition 
 to the basic desire to escape slavery, other factors may have motivated 
 Archy Lee’s attempts to avoid a return to the South. Prior to leaving 
 Mississippi, Lee had wounded a white man in a fight. While in California he 
 was safe from retribution, but a return to Mississippi would certainly have 
 meant imprisonment or lynching.\n\nArchy Lee’s struggle for freedom 
 energized California’s African American community and California 
 abolitionists. The resolution of this legal battle was a victory for foes 
 of slavery, African Americans in California, and certainly for Archy Lee. 
 It also made Sacramento the site of an extraordinary early battle in the 
 struggle for human rights.\n\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2024/06/05/18867046.php
SUMMARY:Peter Burnett, California’s first elected governor, Slavery in Old Sacramento
LOCATION:Old Sacramento Waterfront 
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2024/06/05/18867046.php
DTSTART:20240617T183000Z
DTEND:20240617T210000Z
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