The Convention's Address

Throughout the Colored Conventions Movement, Black leaders from Frederick Douglass, to Henry Highland Garnet, to Bishop Henry Mcneal Turner used the tradition of the convention’s “address” to advocate for political positions and to demonstrate oratory mastery, a tradition that was launched in the 1830 convention. Bishop Richard Allen delivered the 1830 convention’s address. In it, he describes Upper Canada as a place of great opportunity for the Black population where land is cheap, economic advance feasible, and the government makes "no invidious distinction on the basis of race."

Read the address here. It begins on page 8.

By all accounts, Richard Allen was a legendary orator. Newman writes that "when preaching," Richard Allen's "eyes flashed, commanding the respect of everyone around him." He quotes Henry Garnet, "They seemed to blaze with a fire that attracted the attention of all who beheld them" [1]

Sources:

[1] Newman, Richard S. Freedom's Prophet: Bishop Richard Allen, the AME Church, and the Black Founding Fathers. New York: New York University Press, 2008.