American Negro Slavery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 680 pages of information about American Negro Slavery.

American Negro Slavery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 680 pages of information about American Negro Slavery.
carrying them to Charleston for sale.  In 1799 there was discovered in the Georgia treasury a shortage of some ten thousand dollars which a contemporary news item explained as follows:  Mr. Sims, a member of the legislature, having borrowed the money from the treasurer, entrusted it to a certain Speers for the purchase of slaves in Virginia.  “Speers accordingly went and purchased a considerable number of negroes; and on his way returning to this state the negroes rose and cut the throats of Speers and another man who accompanied him.  The slaves fled, and about ten of them, I think, were killed.  In consequence of this misfortune Mr. Sims was rendered unable to raise the money at the time the legislature met."[10] Another transaction achieved record because of a literary effusion which it prompted.  Charles Mott Lide of South Carolina, having inherited a fortune, went to Virginia early in 1802 to buy slaves, and began to establish a sea-island cotton plantation in Georgia.  But misfortune in other investments forced him next year to sell his land, slaves and crops to two immigrants from the Bahama Islands.  Thereupon, wrote he, “I composed the following valedictory, which breathes something of the tenderness of Ossian."[11] Callous history is not concerned in the farewell to his “sweet asylum,” but only in the fact that he bought slaves in Virginia and carried them to Georgia.  A grand jury at Alexandria presented as a grievance in 1802, “the practice of persons coming from distant parts of the United States into this district for the purpose of purchasing slaves."[12] Such fugitive items as these make up the whole record of the trade in its early years, and indeed constitute the main body of data upon its career from first to last.

[Footnote 8:  Unsigned MS. draft in the Wisconsin Historical Society, Draper collection, printed in Plantation and Frontier, II, 55, 56.]

[Footnote 9:  La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt, Travels in the United States, p. 592.]

[Footnote 10:  Charleston, S.C., City Gazette, Dec. 21, 1799.]

[Footnote 11:  Alexander Gregg, History of the Old Cheraws (New York, 1877), pp. 480-482.]

[Footnote 12:  Quoted in a speech in Congress in 1829, Register of Debates, V, 177.]

As soon as the African trade was closed, the interstate traffic began to assume the aspect of a regular business though for some years it not only continued to be of small scale but was oftentimes merely incidental in character.  That is to say, migrating planters and farmers would in some cases carry extra slaves bought with a view to reselling them at western prices and applying the proceeds toward the expense of their new homesteads.  The following advertisement by William Rochel at Natchez in 1810 gives an example of this:  “I have upwards of twenty likely Virginia born slaves now in a flat bottomed boat lying in the river at Natchez, for sale cheaper than has been sold here in years.[13] Part of said negroes I wish to barter for a small farm.  My boat may be known by a large cane standing on deck.”

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American Negro Slavery from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.