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The 1850 census slave schedule for Utah Territory reported only 26 slaves, with a note that all of them were heading to California, and did not include any enslaved people remaining in the territory. [13] John David Smith estimates that there were 100 blacks in Utah by 1850, with two-thirds of them enslaved. [14]
In 1850, he and/or his father owned 82 slaves in Jones County, Georgia [3] and 10 slaves in adjoining Pike County. [4] By 1860 this James C. Freeman lived near Flat Shoals in Meriwether County, Georgia (adjacent to Pike County) and owned 16 slaves (8 of them noted as fugitives) as well as rented rooms to a local grocer and two clerks.
At the time of the 1850 U.S. census of the Charleston parish of St. Michael and St. Phillip, White was the legal owner of nine enslaved people, five female, four male, aged two to 36. [11] He lived in town with his wife and six children, aged one to 12, and had real estate valued at US$18,000 (equivalent to $659,232 in 2023). [12]
The Alabama state census of 1850 listed Harwell as the head of a household of nine free whites and five enslaved people. ... He was listed on the 1860 slave schedules ...
Michelle Johnson, professor emerita of journalism at Boston University, holds a photo of her great-great-grandfather Simon Peak in Glenn Springs, S.C., where according to 1870 census records Peak ...
In the 1850 census, although his family's entry is lost or miscategorized, his farm equipment was mentioned. [2] The slave schedule for that census show owned a Black female slave about 14 years old. [3] A decade later, Dr. Rust owned three slaves, a Black woman aged 25 and 14 year old mulatto boy and 12 year old mulatto girl. [4]
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources. The following is a list of notable people who owned other people as slaves, where there is a consensus of historical evidence of slave ownership, in alphabetical order by last name. Part of a series on Forced labour and slavery Contemporary ...
At the time of the 1850 U.S. census, his occupation was exchange broker and he owned $40,000 in real estate. [2] On the 1850 slave schedules he was listed as the legal owner of three people, a 26-year-old female, an eight-year-old boy, and five-month-old baby girl. [39]