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To: Kriggerel

In 1830 there were 3,775 free black people who owned 12,740 black slaves.

According to historian R. Halliburton Jr.:

There were approximately 319,599 free blacks in the United States in 1830. Approximately 13.7 per cent of the total black population was free. A significant number of these free blacks were the owners of slaves. The census of 1830 lists 3,775 free Negroes who owned a total of 12,760 slaves.


6 posted on 06/15/2018 8:57:22 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Good point bet few if any schools teach that fact the left works so hard to keep that data mum.


30 posted on 06/15/2018 9:20:06 AM PDT by Vaduz (women and children to be impacIQ of chimpsted the most.)
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To: SeekAndFind
Reparations: Who should pay? ANSWER: "shall now take that matter up with the "Dahomian tribe "of West Africa."

The Last Slave Ship Survivor Gave an Interview in the 1930s. It Just Surfaced

https://www.history.com/news/zora-neale-hurston-barracoon-slave-clotilda-survivor BY BECKY LITTLE // MAY 3, 2018

Cudjo Lewis, the last surviving captive of the last slave ship to bring Africans to the U.S. (Credit: Erik Overbey Collection, The Doy Leale McCall Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University of South Alabama)

Roughly 60 years after the abolition of slavery, anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston made an incredible connection: She located the last surviving captive of the last slave ship to bring Africans to the United States.

Hurston, a known figure of the Harlem Renaissance who would later write the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, conducted interviews with the survivor but struggled to publish them as a book in the early 1930s. In fact, they are only now being released to the public in a book called Barracoon: The Story of the Last “Black Cargo” that comes out on May 8, 2018.

Hurston’s book tells the story of Cudjo Lewis, who was born in what is now the West African country of Benin. Originally named Kossula, he was only 19 years old when members of the neighboring Dahomian tribe captured him and took him to the coast. There, he and about 120 others were sold into slavery and crammed onto the Clotilda, the last slave ship to reach the continental United States. Those wanting Reparations for slavery, shall now take that matter up with the "Dahomian tribe" of West Africa.

//////// “When Hurston tried to get Barracoon published in 1931, she couldn’t find a taker. There was concern among “black intellectuals and political leaders” that the book laid uncomfortably bare Africans’ involvement in the slave trade, according to novelist Alice Walker’s foreword to the book, which is finally being published in May. Walker is responsible for reintroducing the world to a forgotten Zora Neale Hurston, who’d died penniless and alone in 1960, in a 1975 Ms. magazine essay. As Walker writes, “Who would want to know, via a blow-by-blow account, how African chiefs deliberately set out to capture Africans from neighboring tribes, to provoke wars of conquest in order to capture for the slave trade. This is, make no mistake, a harrowing read.””

http://www.vulture.com/2018/04/zora-neale-hurston-barracoon-excerpt.html

50 posted on 06/15/2018 11:49:57 AM PDT by Stanwood_Dave ("Testilying." Cop's lie, only while testifying, as taught in their respected Police Academy(s).)
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