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Jamestown Freedom Pioneers (c. 1830–1850s) were free people of color in Jamestown, North Carolina whose families and extended networks participated in abolitionist and freedom support activities during the antebellum era. Within a region shaped by an active Quaker presence, free Black families and Quaker allies shared moral opposition to slavery and engaged in efforts to aid freedom‑seeking enslaved people as part of the broader system of clandestine assistance that historians associate with the Underground Railroad in North Carolina. Jamestown’s Quaker communities — including members of the North Carolina Manumission Society and other anti‑slavery advocates — created legal and informal pathways to freedom, negotiating manumissions and facilitating movement northward. During the mid‑19th century, some descendants and kin of these free families migrated westward into the Midwest, contributing to the establishment and growth of free Black settlements, most notably the Weaver Settlement near Marion, Indiana, beginning in the 1840s. Founded by free people of color, including families originally from North Carolina, Weaver became a self‑sustaining community of farms, churches, and businesses and was part of a network of free Black communities that provided refuge and assistance to freedom seekers and formerly enslaved people moving through free states. Together, the Jamestown Freedom Pioneers and their connected communities reflect the complex social, religious, and migratory landscapes of free people of color in the antebellum United States, demonstrating how coordinated local resistance and regional alliances contributed to the broader struggle against slavery.