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University in Louisville in Jefferson County, Kentucky — The American South (East South Central)
 

The Freedom Park: A Journey to Freedom

The Free Black Community of Louisville

 
 
The Freedom Park: A Journey to Freedom Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Darren Jefferson Clay, April 7, 2024
1. The Freedom Park: A Journey to Freedom Marker
Inscription.
Through the colonial period, a small minority of the African American population was nominally free. This minority grew dramatically when, consistent with the stated principles of the American Revolution, slavery was abolished in New England and the mid-Atlantic states between 1777 and the 1820s. At the same time, the more southerly states, while contemplating the end of slavery in the 1780s, became its hostage after the invention of the Cotton Gin revitalized the peculiar institution. By 1830, there were nearly 2,700,000 African Americans in the United States - 13.7 percent of whom were free.

Although not enslaved, free people of color were treated as outcasts throughout much of the north and west, banned in most of the lower south and tolerated grudgingly as an alien element in the border and upper south. Frequent mob violence often reduced the struggle for equal black citizenship to a desperate search for a safe place to live-ideally, with the possibility of land ownership, work for decent wages or the opportunity to practice a trade. Intense racial prejudice, both north and south, scattered free African Americans
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throughout the border-states, the north and the western frontier in towns, cities and rural enclaves where opportunities were greatest and resistance was least.

Free people of color were usually considered subjects, not citizens, of the United States with few rights and little legal protection. However, unlike enslaved African Americans, free people of color were persons, not property, under the law. Their births and deaths were recorded. They could marry legally, own property and enter into contracts. And, because enslaved African Americans were too small a minority to overthrow slavery from within, free people of color played a central role in establishing black communities, founding black institutions and as the backbone of the anti-slavery movement.

Between 1830 and 1860, the free African American population of Louisville Increased from 232 to 1,917, or by 726 percent and Louisville became home to the largest concentration of free people of color both in Kentucky and in the upper South-west of Baltimore. Locally, free people of color did not live in segregated neighborhoods, per se, but were clustered in alleys, or on certain blocks or parts of certain streets. They were disproportionately young and female. Most were desperately poor, with the hope of owning and operating businesses blocked by laws enacted to prevent competition with whites and their employment opportunities limited to labor and domestic service. Still, work was plentiful and a handful of more fortunate free blacks worked as clerks, musicians, teachers, teamsters, blacksmiths, barbers and on the steamboats that plied the river.

Louisville was a decidedly hostile environment and weaving a few hundred free people of color into a community depended on astute leadership. In the 1830s, three individuals emerged as the principal architects of black Louisville. One, Shelton Morris, founded the first black business in Louisville in 1832, a barbershop and bathhouse under the old Galt House. Another, Washington Spradling, speculated in real estate and, by the 1860, became the first African American in Kentucky worth more than $100,000. Together, as brothers-in-law, Spradling and Morris once owned much of the eastern Russell Area in the 1830s. Yet another, Eliza Curtis Hundley Tevis, became the only significant free black land-owner in the surrounding county when she purchased the land that developed into the Newburg/Petersburg community. By the 1850s, through their leadership and institution-building efforts, there were eight independent black churches in Louisville, most of which also sponsored small schools, in or near the old downtown area.

The establishment of a free black community in the midst of slavery was a defining moment in the struggle for freedom in Louisville. If the history of African Americans in Louisville begins with slavery, the history of the black community of Louisville begins with this free black community.
 
Topics.
The Freedom Park: A Journey to Freedom Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Darren Jefferson Clay, April 7, 2024
2. The Freedom Park: A Journey to Freedom Marker
This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: Abolition & Underground RRAfrican AmericansCivil RightsSettlements & Settlers.
 
Location. 38° 13.222′ N, 85° 45.656′ W. Marker is in Louisville, Kentucky, in Jefferson County. It is in University. It is at the intersection of West Cardinal Boulevard and South 3rd Street (Kentucky Route 1020), on the right when traveling east on West Cardinal Boulevard. Touch for map. Marker is at or near this postal address: 1905 S 3rd St, Louisville KY 40208, United States of America. Touch for directions.

Regionally, this marker is in the American South, specifically in the Upper South, and in the Ohio River Valley. Globally, it is in North America, the Western Hemisphere, the Western World, and the Anglosphere. Historically, it finds itself in what was once the territory of the Mississippian Culture and also the Antebellum South.

Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within walking distance of this marker: A different marker also named Freedom Park: A Journey to Freedom (a few steps from this marker);
The Freedom Park: A Journey to Freedom Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Darren Jefferson Clay, April 7, 2024
3. The Freedom Park: A Journey to Freedom Marker
Wilson W. Wyatt, Sr. (a few steps from this marker); Woodford R. Porter, Sr. (a few steps from this marker); Dr. Joseph H. McMillan, Sr (a few steps from this marker); Dr. Charles Henry Parrish, Jr. (a few steps from this marker); Dr. Eleanor Young Love (within shouting distance of this marker); Dr. Rufus E. Clement (within shouting distance of this marker); Anne M. Braden (within shouting distance of this marker). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Louisville.
 
The Freedom Park: A Journey to Freedom Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Darren Jefferson Clay, April 7, 2024
4. The Freedom Park: A Journey to Freedom Marker
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on May 20, 2024. It was originally submitted on April 28, 2024, by Darren Jefferson Clay of Duluth, Georgia. This page has been viewed 205 times since then and 28 times this year. Photos:   1, 2, 3, 4. submitted on May 19, 2024, by Darren Jefferson Clay of Duluth, Georgia. • Devry Becker Jones was the editor who published this page.
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Jul. 18, 2026