Posted on 06/20/2021 12:51:55 PM PDT by DeweyCA
Justus Angel and Mistress L. Horry were wealthy landowners in South Carolina’s Colleton District in the 1830s, in what is now Charleston County. The couple owned 84 slaves each for a total of 168, at a time when most of their peers owned a handful. Their slaves worked their plantation and made them rich. Angel and Horry also traded slaves for profit, showing no regard for dissolving slave families. They were no kinder or crueler to their slaves than anyone else. They were considered “slave magnates” because of the number of slaves they owned. They were referred to as the “economic elite.” They were also black.
Black people owned black people in all 13 original colonies and in every state that allowed slavery. Frequently, freed black people would go on to own more slaves than their white neighbors. In 1830, nearly a fourth of the free black slave masters in South Carolina owned 10 or more slaves, and several owned more than 30, far surpassing their white slave-owning neighbors.
Yes, black people, frequently former slaves themselves, owned slaves. While it can be said that many black people owned family members to protect them and keep them close, black slave owners also bought and sold slaves for profit. Renowned African-American historian and Duke University Professor, John Hope Franklin, wrote “The majority of Negro owners of slaves had some personal interest in their property. There were instances, however, in which free Negroes had a real economic interest in the institution of slavery and held slaves in order to improve their economic status.” Franklin also wrote that roughly 3,000 free black people in New Orleans alone owned slaves.
... it’s now about equity. YOU need to pay for what other white, and black, people stopped doing over 155 years ago.
(Excerpt) Read more at pjmedia.com ...
Crickets?
Figured.
You’re suggesting a plantation owner should enter into a sharecropping agreement with someone with zero skill set. Someone who had never seen a cotton plant or plow in their life. Nonsense.
Sharecropping would have been an alternative to slavery AFTER the workforce had acquired the skillsets.
It took 65 years to teach blacks how to grow cotton?
Yeah pretty sure I read that somewhere. Anyway the point is Indian had slaves, they regularly enslaved other Indians - their enemies !
After the Cherokee were moved to Oklahoma, they had many black slaves and many fought for the Confederacy.
They also battled pro Union Cherokee.
After the war they refused to free their slaves and federal troops were sent.
Stand Watie was the last Confederate general in the field to cease hostilities at war's end.
I forgot about that!
The war between the states was about slavery the same way that the American Revolution was about tea.
What happened to the black slaves sent to Arabia and Asia? Do their bloodlines still exist in those places, or did they die off, or what?
I am also curious about descendants of the European slaves captured by Barbary pirates. They seem to have vanished into history.
It’s irrelevant how long it took. The fact is your “why didn’t they start out sharecropping” argument is idiotic if they had no idea how to do it “in the beginning”.
Good luck!
Well her Grandfather was a slave trader.
Yes indeed he did....but Harris is such a bimbo...if she were nt so preoccupied with her own physical presence in any given situation she might take note of what’s going on around her...she’s just not.
Been said she’s way in over her head and it’s playing out exactly that.
It is relevant. Its took the complete destruction of the Southern cotton economy via war to shift from a plantation based system to share cropping. If share cropping was so obviously more profitable, (you have yet to prove that point) why didn’t the Southern planters ad\opt it earlier?
bookmark
lol...right?
Bookmark
Bk mk
Oh let me guess. It was about state's rights?
Both wars were over Government by Consent.
The first practical mechanical cotton harvester was introduced in the 1930s. The first mechanical tobacco harvester was introduced around 1955. Pesticides came out around the mid-20th century as well. So if industrialization was going to cause the end of slavery then it had eight or nine more decades to run.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.