150th anniversary of black exodus from California
SAN FRANCISCO -- On April 14, 1858, hundreds of
African-Americans gathered in Zion Methodist Episcopal
Church here to respond to a backlash against their
activism against slavery. Although the almost 5,000
blacks had accumulated $2 million in property during
the Gold Rush, they did not have the right to vote or
to testify in court; their children could not attend
the best public schools and they lived in fear of
being returned to slavery under the fugitive slave
act. They decided their only alternative to
persecution in the United States was to move to
another country.
Read entire article at Press Release--John William Templeton
Within a week, the first of what would eventually be 800 persons, 20 percent of California's total black population, left for Victoria, British Columbia, where they prospered financially and took prominent roles in the local and provincial government.
A 150th anniversary commemoration of that exodus, led by Mifflin W. Gibbs and other Underground Railroad operatives, takes place in San Francico April 20-25 with a memorial service, a ceremonial launching from Fisherman's Wharf and a scholar's forum.
It occurs against the backdrop of another large outmigration of African-Americans from the Golden State --this time 216,000 leaving California in the past six years.