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At the time of the Declaration of Independence, many Africans presumed that the freedoms said to be God-given and the rights of all men, would be extended to those who were enslaved. Many free black men and some slaves fought on the side of the Americans in the American Revolution. Other slaves were promised their freedom if they joined the British Army, but when Britain lost, these slaves were returned to slavery. By the time the constitution was written ten years later, slavery was recognized as a predominant institution in the nation and was secured by the 3/5 Compromise which gave a distinct advantage to southern states in the US Congress.

During the early years of the Republic, slavery began to lose favor in the northern states, and was eliminated in some. Abolitionists arose who spoke out against the inhumanity of Slavery. The Underground Railroad was developed to enable slaves to reach freedom in Northern states that refused to recognize slavery, and in Canada where slavery was forbidden. Even some southerners began to rethink the logic of owning human beings. But as the years wore on, the stronger power in the government held by the slave-owning states pushed through more and more laws that imposed slavery on those states that chose to abolish it. This was done by harsh run-away laws that made criminals out of those who helped run-away slaves attain their freedom. Even today, the location of many of the "safe houses" and the names of those who helped slaves on the Underground Railroad are still kept secret.

Led by Nat Turner, Gabrial Prosser, and others, slaves undertook a number of rebellions to obtain their own freedom, but the outcome of these unsuccessful attempts at freedom generally led to widespread murder of slaves and free blacks, and more laws to hold slaves more harshly in bondgage.

Emancipations which were legal and encouraged prior to the establishment of the US government, were increasingly disfavored as the new republic developed. Eventually emancipation was outlawed to prevent owners from releasing their slaves as a reward for good service or upon the death of the owner. Slaves were often owned by estates which did not permit manumission because of a reduction in the value of the estate to future heirs.

Prior to the Civil War, some Americans felt that allowing slaves to return to Africa was a solution. Funds were solicited to enable free blacks and manumitted slaves to emigrate to Liberia where they formed a colony that eventually became a nation in its own right.

But, for most slaves, the release from the "peculiar institution" did not come until the end of the Civil War. In 1861, the southern states seceeded from the United States under pressure to limit the expansion of slavery into new territories and protests by abolitionist against enforcement of laws against run-aways. Southern troops fired on the Fort Sumpter as the opening volley of the Civil War.

During the civil war, the north considered slaves who escaped and enlisted in the Union Army to be free. The south announced that any such Union Soldiers would be executed rather than treated as Prisoners of War.

Fort Monroe, located at Old Point Comfort at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay found itself with a unique dilemma. One day, three slaves showed up at the fort requesting their freedom. In an interesting decision, General Butler, in charge of the fort, determined that these slaves, who were "property" of the rebellious Southerners, were therefore "Contraband", and were given Federal protection in and near the fort. Slaves from the Carolinas and Virginia could make their way overland or by water to Fort Monroe, rather than wait on the outcome of the civil war to obtain their freedom from slavery.

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