The
Whipper children received good educations and were well
known for keen and philosophical minds. There were four
known children, Benjamin, Alfred, Mary and William (some
say there was a fifth child, but no records could be found
to substantiate this). After their father died the children
received equal shares of his estate.
Mary
Ann left Pennsylvania and came to Dresden where she met
and married James Hollinsworth, also of Pennsylvania.(1)
Both
Mary and James Hollinsworth were involved with her brother
in the secreting of slaves across the border on the Reading
and Columbia Railroad.(2)
Alfred
operated a clothing store in Philadelphia prior to his departure
for Canada West. He conveyed his Philadelphia assets to
his brother William in 1853 and moved to the Chatham area.
In 1861 he married Maryann Brown, the daughter of Solomon
and Rachel Brown of Camden.(3)
Rachel
Brown was the great-aunt of Ethel Brown, the author's mother-in-law.
Alfred became the teacher at the Princess Street school
in Chatham in 1856 where he remained until the Board of
Education decided that he did not have the proper certification
and voted to replace him with Peter Nichol (see schools).
(4)
Alfred
served as a traveling agent for the Provincial Freeman after
it moved it's offices to Chatham. He was involved in the
emigrationist schemes of Martin Delany's back to Africa
movement and attended John Brown's Chatham convention in
May of 1858.(5)
Benjamin
Whipper and his wife, Sophia Patterson, disposed of their
property and left Columbia Pennsylvania for Canada West.
By the year 1869, Benjamin was settled in Chatham and was
a traveling Deacon for the B.M.E. church. At the conference
held in Windsor in 1869, Benjamin was ordained and became
a minister having been examined and found proficient in
church doctrine. the examining committee consisted of Reverends
Walter Hawkins, Benjamin Stewart, and Richard Disney. He
pastored in several places including Drummondville in the
same year as his ordination. Records indicate that he was
still a member of the conference in 1884.(6)
The
most famous of the Whipper children was William. William
was extremely active in the Underground Railroad operations
in Columbia and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. By his own account
he was responsible for passing hundreds of slaves to the
land of freedom and contributed $1,000.00 annually to the
cause from 1847 to 1860.
He married
Harriet Smith of Columbia, Pennsylvania and records indicate
that they bore one child, a daughter, on February 15, 1837,
that possibly died at birth. He soon became partners in
business with his wife's brother Stephen Smith, a well known
civil rights activist in the area. These two men were remarkably
successful lumber and coal merchants in Columbia. By 1860,
William had amassed property valued at $23,800.00.(7) He
had also managed to purchase holdings in the Reading and
Columbia Railroad and began secreting slaves to Canada via
this legitimate railroad system.
Many
of the slaves that he had helped to freedom and also his
relatives wanted William to join them in Canada after several
attempts had been made to burn his lumber yard by pro-slavery
terrorists. William visited the Dawn Settlement in 1853
and although he did not move to the area, he and his partner
decided to build a warehouse and other holdings in the village
of Dresden. His Canadian holdings were supervised by his
brother-in-law James Hollinsworth. William and his partner
Stephen Smith sometimes visited the Dresden area via the
same railroad cars that were transporting escaping slaves
in secret compartments and hideaways.
William
Whipper felt that he had family ties on both sides of the
American and Canadian borders simply because he felt that
all Blacks were brothers and sisters. He showed a tremendous
concern for change in the way humanity treated humanity.
In his own words at one of the many anti-slavery conventions
he attended he expressed these thoughts. "All men are
equal under God, but Black men in America have been reduced
to degradation by slavery and prejudice. Fidelity to natural
laws and human rights, and to the law of the universal love
will bring about the end of all complexional distinctions...My
country is the world, my countrymen are all mankind."(8)
A nephew,
James Whipper Purnell, who had been raised by William became
a lumber merchant in Chatham and was also secretary to Martin
Delany while he was planning his back-to-African expedition.
James W. Purnell was also a member of the John Brown convention
held in Chatham and married Julia A. Shadd, daughter of
Absalom and Eliza Shadd in 1864.(9) James and Julia's son,
Dr. William Whipper Purnell, was a practicing physician
in Washington, D.C. and was a good friend of Dr. Dan Williams
who performed the first open heart surgery in the United
States.
William
Whipper died in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1876. Many
of the descendents of the Whipper family still live in and
around the Dresden and Chatham areas.
Interestingly,
many historians have reported that William Whipper fathered
a son. However, in his will he stated that a portion of
his estate be left to the son of James Whipper Purnell,
William Whipper Purnell, with the hope that he would discard
his surname and "change his name to William Whipper
and thus adopting my name he shall ever keep me in kindly
remembrance."
Sources:
(1) Letter from William Whipper to his sister Maryanne's
children after her death - courtesy of Dorothy Binga Taylor
(2)
Copy of stock shares in the Reading and Columbia Railroad
owned by William Whipper - Dorothy Binga Taylor
(3) Kent County Registry of Marriages - Jan. 3, 1861
(4) Board of Education records - Chatham museum
(5) see John Brown Connection
(6) (A) Minutes of the thirteenth Session of the Annual
Conference of the British Methodist Episcopal Church 1869
held in Windsor,
(B) Conference Records of 1884 minutes.
(7) (A) William Whipper - Black Society by Gerri Majors
and Doris E. Saunders pages 74, 80, 104, 105 (B) William
Whipper Moral Reformer by Richard P. McCormick page 39
(8) William Whipper Moral Reformer by Richard P. McCormick
page 31
(9) (A) Chatham Land Registry office - Power of Attorney
to James Burns Hollensworth by William and Harriet Whipper
(B) Last will and Testament of Absolom Shadd mentions Julia
Ann Shadd, wife of James W. Purnell.
(C) A letter from William Whipper to niece and nephews Ida,
Albert and Ellwood Hollensworth from Columbia Pennsylvania,
March 25, 1866