Recognizing and honoring May 21st of each year as “Ona Judge Day” in the City of Philadelphia. WHEREAS, Ona Judge was one of nine enslaved African descendants held in bondage by George Washington during his presidency from 1790-1797 at the President’s House located at 6th and Market Streets in Philadelphia, the site of America’s first “White House”; and WHEREAS, Despite Pennsylvania’s 1780 Gradual Abolition Act along with its 1788 amendment and the status of Philadelphia as the City with the largest free Black population in the nation at the time, Ona Judge and others were unlawfully kept enslaved through deliberate efforts to circumvent and actually break the law; and WHEREAS, On May 21, 1796, Ona Judge courageously escaped from bondage, resisting the institution of slavery and asserting her right to freedom, ultimately fleeing to New Hampshire where, as a free woman, she outlived George and Martha Washington by more than 50 years; and WHEREAS, Ona Judge’s life represents a powerful act of resistance, self-determination, and courage, as she evaded repeated efforts to be recaptured and refused to return to enslavement despite pressure and pursuit; and WHEREAS, Her story is a critical part of both Philadelphia’s and the nation’s history, illustrating the contradictions between the ideals of liberty and the realities of slavery in the founding of the United States; and WHEREAS, Ona Judge was one of nine enslaved African descendants held at the President’s House, and while this …
CITY COUNCIL
A motion was made by Bass that this Resolution be ADOPTED. The motion carried by a unanimous vote.
CITY COUNCIL
This Resolution was Introduced and Ordered Placed on This Week's Final Passage Calendar.