Category Archives: Black Hannah Pugsley

Freedom, Fortune, and Family: Remembering the Abolitionists Quaker Hannah Pugsley and Black Hannah Pugsley of New Rochelle, New York, Part 2

Reframing these two “visionary Quaker women” allows us see how abolitionism  was a communal, sustained, and embedded in relationships that cut across race, gender, class, and geography. 

For too long, both Quaker Hannah Pugsley and Black Hannah Pugsley have remained at the margins of abolitionist history. The former has often been remembered as a benevolent figure, yet seldom recognized as an active white abolitionist; the latter, preserved primarily through oral memory, remains largely absent from formal archives. However, recent scholarship—including new studies on Quaker women ministers—invites a reassessment of their roles in the early struggle for Black freedom. Scholars such as Rebecca Larson, Michele Lise Tarter, and Sandra Holton have shown that Quaker women routinely preached, organized, and offered spiritual leadership that challenged both religious and societal norms. In this light, Quaker Hannah’s support for New Rochelle’s early Free Black community and the founding of AME Zion Church suggests a deeper theological and political commitment, consistent with the Quaker tradition of lived equality and moral witness.

This reevaluation aligns with the broader framing of Black and interracial abolitionist efforts found in the works of Richard S. Newman, Cristina Proenza-Coles, and David Hackett Fischer. Newman, in his essay “A Chosen Generation,” describes the Black Founders as the generation of African Americans who “came of age just as the American nation took shape.” These were the first to organize against slavery, to found independent Black institutions, and to pioneer protest strategies ranging from print culture to aid for fugitives to the formation of national conventions for racial justice. Similarly, Proenza-Coles’ American Founders and Fischer’s African Founders document the foundational and enduring contributions of African-descended people in shaping early American civic and political life.³ Together, these works affirm that both Hannahs—Black and Quaker—must be recognized as participants in a multigenerational, interracial abolitionist movement that predated and outlasted the Revolution itself.

The full article can be read here by clicking on the link: AAHGS-NE-Newsletter-Fall 2025-Freedom Fortune and Family-Part 2

 

 

Freedom, Fortune, and Family: Remembering the Abolitionists Quaker Hannah Pugsley and Black Hannah Pugsley of New Rochelle, New York, Part 1

 

I dedicate this blog post to the memory of those Quakers who strove to uphold their principles of neutrality during the Revolutionary War, a time when taking sides meant everything. I also dedicate this blog post to all my ancestors who literarily built this country out of muck and mire.

This article reclaims a long-overlooked chapter in New York’s abolitionist history by reexamining the intertwined lives of two extraordinary women: Quaker Hannah Pugsley (1760-1831) and Black Hannah Pugsley (1866- ?) of New Rochelle. Drawing on oral history and uncovered documentary sources, I argue that Quaker Hannah Pugsley—whose moral convictions and courageous actions have yet to be formally recognized—must be considered an abolitionist. Her commitment to Black freedom extended beyond rhetoric: she provided financial support for the founding of the Colored African Methodist Zion Church in 1840, a sanctuary built by New Rochelle’s free Black community that would later become St. Catherine’s AME Zion Church. This support placed her among a small but powerful circle of white allies who worked in tandem with free Black abolitionists. Black Hannah Pugsley and her family, for their part, played a critical role in rescuing Quaker Hannah from a violent mob during the Revolutionary War, a moment of interracial solidarity preserved in oral tradition.[2] Their shared legacy reveals early Underground Railroad activity in New Rochelle and underscores the collaborative resistance of families such as the Pugsleys, Francis, Browns, Serringtons Bonnets, among others, and Rev. John Dungy—founders of institutions that sustained the Black freedom struggle well into the 19th century. In recovering this narrative, we reshape our understanding of abolitionism in Westchester County, grounding it in community, mutual aid, and radical faith.

[1]In Westchester County, including New Rochelle, the term “Free Blacks” always included people of African, Indigenous, and Afro-Indigenous descent. Descendants today self-identify as “African American, Native American, mixed race or “White.”

The full article can be read here by clicking on the link: AAHGS-NE-Newsletter Spring 2025- Freedom Fortune and Family

Part 2 will be published in the next issue of AAHGS-NE Newsletter.