“Am I Not a Man and a Brother”

July 12, 2018

“Am I Not a Man and a Brother”

 “Museum Making: An Invitation” exhibit, celebrating 150 years of the Nova Scotia Museum

 

 

Josiah Wedgwoodwas born on this day in 1730. Wedgewood, along with the Clarkson brothers John and Thomas, was involved in the London-based Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade, established in May 1787. Wedgwood's factory produced several forms of ceramic medallions and other pieces to promote the work of the Society, and to highlight the plight of African slaves working in the plantations of the British Empire. These pieces circulated widely in Britain and its colonies. The most significant of three such objects in the History Collection of the Nova Scotia Museum is the least visibly imposing - a very small, well-worn mixed media medallion by an unknown artist with the iconic imagery of a kneeling, shackled slave asking the question “Am I Not a Man and a Brother”, which became the most powerful symbol of the abolitionist campaign. (NSM History Collection 2015.13.5)

Unknown, Am I Not a Man and a Brother, c 1790s, 3.0 x 2.8 cm. Nova Scotia Museum History Collection, 2015.13.5
 

Such imagery and slogans resonated throughout different levels of society in the British Empire, including in the colony of Nova Scotia. The reverse of this yellow metal pendant is inscribed “Avoid Self Reproach” and is inset with woven human hair – perhaps a personal remembrance of a freed or escaped slave. Wedgwood’s abolitionist pieces were also among the first commercially mass-produced ceramics in the world. The medallion is currently on display as part of the “Museum Making: An Invitation” exhibit, celebrating 150 years of the Nova Scotia Museum, at the Museum of Natural History in Halifax.

Reverse, Unknown, Am I Not a Man and a Brother, c 1790s, 3.0 x 2.8 cm. Nova Scotia Museum History Collection, 2015.13.5
 

Many freed and escaped Black slaves had fled to the colony following the American Revolution, forming new Black Loyalist communities such as Birchtown, outside of Shelburne, where their history is told at the Nova Scotia Museum’s Black Loyalist Heritage Centre. Some later left Nova Scotia in the winter of 1791-2 for a new colony in Sierra Leone, with the assistance of Royal Navy Lieutenant John Clarkson and the Sierra Leone Company. Today, many African Nova Scotian communities and individuals proudly trace their origins and culture to the Black Loyalists. 

- Martin Hubley, Curator of History