Home / Full timeline / New York State passes the Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery, which freed no living enslaved Black person.
New York State passes the Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery, which freed no living enslaved Black person.
1799
Although there was movement towards the abolition of slavery, the legislature took steps to characterize indentured servitude for Blacks in a way that redefined slavery in the state. Slavery was important economically, both in New York City and in agricultural areas, such as Brooklyn. Based on a model in Pennsylvania, in 1799, the legislature passed the Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery. It freed no living enslaved Black person, in part to allow owners at the time to recoup the most profit from their enslaved Blacks before losing them. It declared children of enslaved Blacks born after July 4, 1799, to be legally free, but the children had to serve an extended period of indentured servitude: to the age of 28 for males and to 25 for females. Enslaved Blacks born before that date were redefined as indentured servants and could not be sold, but they had to continue their unpaid labor.