Search

Back to top

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Online Content Includes Digital Content Remove constraint Online Content: Includes Digital Content Collection African American and African Diaspora collection, 1729-1970 (majority within 1781-1865) Remove constraint Collection: African American and African Diaspora collection, 1729-1970 (majority within 1781-1865)
Number of results to display per page
View results as:

Search Results

Container

1787 March 19 . [Jean Jacques] Leguillon Ms. Doc.

3 pages

Folder : Oversize Manuscripts
Online
"Etat des Negres Vendus provenant de la Cargaison du Navire Negrier le Jeremie, Cap. Leguillon." Record of sale of 403 black men, women, and children, acquired on the Gold Coast and transported in the ship Jérémie. NB: Slave sale occurring in Haiti.
Container

1788 December 1 . Thomas Clarkson ALS to Harry Gandy; London, [England].

3 pages

Box 1
Online
Information regarding James Arnold, a dinner in the company of Granville Sharp (1735-1813), and "On Monday next I shall attend the privy Council by Appointment, and lay before them . . . the Evidence collected in my late tour." (See Clarkson's Abolition of the Slave Trade I, 338ff.)
Container

1789 November 24 - 1789 November 25 . New Jersey Council and General Assembly; William Livingston, John Beatty, Maskell Ewing, and B. Reed DS to Cato; New Jersey.

3 pages

Box 1
Online
An act setting free Cato, formerly owned by David Fitz Randolph. Randolph had "joined the Enemies of the United States," and when he had done so his property (including Cato) was forfeited to the state. Cato "has rendered . . . services both to this State and the United States in the time of the late War," and is thus being given his freedom.
Container

1794 January 20 . Burlington County (N.J.) Justices of the Peace and New Hanover (N.J.) Overseers of the Poor DS to Pompy Steward; New Hanover, New Jersey.

1 page

Box 1
Online
Manumission certificate for Pompy Steward, "Negro Slave named Pompy Steward, who on View and Examination, appears to us to be sound of mind and not under any Bodily incapacity to obtain a lively hood, and that he is not under Twenty-one years of age nor above Thirty-five." Richard Potts brought Steward before the subscribers.
Container

1794 December 22 . S. Potter ALS to James D. Woolfe; Swansey, [England].

1 page

Box 1
Online
Concerning the slave trade route between southern states and Havana; "the act of Congress [the Slave Trade Act of 1794] alows the trade to George & the Southern States for Slaves, thear you can go with a cargo of Slaves without Braken the Act--and you can . . . make a Sham Sale and Carry your slaves to the Havana--with much less expense then you posibly can . . . from the W. Indies." Fears that peace will make the "guinea trade" less lucrative.
Container

1795 June 20 . Sam[uel] Hopkins ALS to Nathaniel Massie; Mecklenburg, [Kentucky].

2 pages

Box 1
Online
Desires to move to Ohio if it will be a slave state; "I am making every preparation for A Removal of my Family, & Shall certainly fix on those Lands if the invidious restriction concerning Slaves can be done away. I wish you to exert yourself in procuring petitioners to endeavour to effect this at the Next congress."
Container

1795 September 14 . A[lexander] McKee ALS to James McKee; Detroit, [Michigan].

1 page

Box 1
Online
McKee left Bill, an enslaved man, in charge of his house while away in Quebec. Bill absconded with "many things belonging to me." Believes Bill has "run away to General Wayne's Camp" and may try to reunite with his mother in Pittsburgh. Asks James to "take him & send him to be sold" and warns him not to trust anything the fugitive may say. Includes a brief note sending Captain Elliott's compliments to James.