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Back in the 1800s, were there any black slave owners?

Published 10.28.08
Illustration by Slug Signorino

Some time ago, I heard an African-American author talk on NPR about a fact that had inspired him to write his book: During the 1800s, some slave owners in the U.S. were black. Simply put, blacks owned blacks. Afterward a historian said she'd never heard of any such phenomenon and dismissed the idea as ridiculous. Who's right?

---- Raina S.

Slave ownership by blacks certainly wasn't common, so it's no surprise you hadn't come across it before. An article published only four decades after Emancipation suggests most American blacks knew nothing about it even then. However, at one time or another, free black slaveholders could be found in every slave state. Bizarre though this sounds, most had an excuse. Let me explain the concept of benevolent slavery.

Free blacks were fairly common in the antebellum South, constituting 8 percent of Southern blacks in 1840. Most had gained their freedom through manumission (especially common just after the Revolutionary War) or been born free to a free mother. Slaves who'd been permitted to earn money in their spare time sometimes made enough to buy their freedom. Another route was being bought and freed by free relatives or friends. But some who bought slaves in this way didn't formally free them for years, partly because freedmen paid higher taxes than slaves or whites. Courts since colonial times had recognized the right of free blacks to own slaves. This gave rise to an odd arrangement in which people lived as free but were legally someone else's property. This was benevolent slavery.

Between 1800 and 1830 slave states began restricting manumission, seeing free blacks as potential fomenters of slave rebellion. Now you could buy your friends, but you couldn't free them unless they left the state -- which for the freed slave could mean leaving behind family still in bondage. So more free blacks took to owning slaves benevolently. Being a nominal slave was risky -- among other things, you could be seized as payment for your nominal owner's debts. But at least one state, South Carolina, granted nominal slaves certain rights, including the right to buy slaves of their own.

Nobody's sure how many such arrangements existed. A widely cited but imperfect source is the 1830 federal census, chosen because it supposedly represents the high point of black slave ownership. One count, taking the data at face value, found 3,777 free black heads of household who had slaves living with them. If that's accurate, about 2 percent of Southern free blacks owned slaves.

But this number could be off in either direction. It didn't distinguish between slaves the householder owned, live-in slaves he hired, and slaves who merely lodged with him. In a few cases the census listed known white slaveholders as black. Black overseers were sometimes counted as slave owners instead of absentee white planters. On the other hand, nominal slaves were often recorded as free.

In most cases, historians think, blacks owned slaves benevolently, but exploitative slaveholding by blacks did happen. Some well-off urban blacks owned house slaves, and occasionally craftsmen owned skilled slaves to work under or alongside them. Determining how often this happened isn't easy, since the census didn't consistently distinguish between nominal and actual slaves. Proof of commercial ownership can be found in advertising for runaway slaves, sales of slaves at market rates, etc. A confounding factor is that some free blacks owned slaves both benevolently and commercially. One scholar claims the majority of slave transactions by blacks in Charleston, S.C., were commercial -- but again, South Carolina was unusual, for reasons I'll return to. An analysis of Petersburg, Va., suggests only about 10 percent of black slaveholders owned slaves commercially, which was probably typical. Sure, slavery is slavery, but what we're talking about is a far cry from the plantation field slavery you might have imagined.

We do, however, need to acknowledge a less common form of black slaveholding. Whites in Louisiana and South Carolina fostered a class of rich people of mixed race -- typically they were known as "mulattoes," although gradations such as "quadroon" and "octoroon" were sometimes used -- as a buffer between themselves and slaves. Often the descendants and heirs of well-off whites, these citizens were encouraged to own slaves, tended to side with whites in racial disputes, and generally identified more with their white forbears than black. Nationwide maybe 10 percent of the mixed-race population (about 1 percent of all those identified as African-American) fell into this category.

Some of these people owned lots of slaves. How common was this? Let's define "lots" as 10 or more in a household, bearing in mind that sometimes those with many slaves were still benevolent owners. (One man benevolently owned 18 relatives on the eve of Emancipation.) In 1830, 80 percent of blacks who owned 10 or more slaves lived in Louisiana or South Carolina. I won't say it wasn't weird, but there were only 214 such owners nationwide out of 320,000 free blacks.

© 2008 Creative Loafing Media, Inc. All rights reserved.

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COMMENTS

RE: Back in the 1800s, were there any black slave owners?

Posted by Vasmosn on 10.31.09 @ 06:53 PM

Frank, I don't know where you're getting your information but Que is much more correct than you are. Slavery throughout history has rarely been based upon race. In most ancient cultures, slaves had definite rights. Most slaves were taken as prisoners of war or forced to work off debts. Durante Vita did not exist in most cultures. The children of slaves were not necessarily slaves. Slaves were considered human and in many cultures could sue their masters. In a few cultures the only differences between slave and free were where they could eat or sleep. The United States and Great Britain certainly were not among the first to abolish slavery, although they were far from the last. The reason that it is such an issue is because America supposedly founded itself on the basis of individual freedom and equality for ALL men! That shouldn't be hard to understand. Those things said, there still should be no guilt, no hate or division. Any more than if I see man spend 10 years in prison for a crime he didn't commit and I think he deserves help. I don't feel guilty and I don't hate those that put him there but I feel that to ignore him and treat him as if he's had just as much opportunity as anyone for success is crazy. No America is not evil but she has yet to live up to her potential and it's her potential that makes her truly great.

RE: Back in the 1800s, were there any black slave owners?

Posted by frankgriffin on 08.03.09 @ 06:03 PM

Quelyn08 you do not know what the heck you are talking about. Slaves in other countries were used up until they died. There was no such thing as a family even. In the middle east slaves were cheap so they had little value so they would just be replaced with new slaves when the old ones died. Slaves were expensive to ship to America so they had more value. They were worth so much they were allowed to reproduce and have families. Based on this knowledge I would say America treated its slaves better and has less to feel guilty for but then hey Quelyn08 why let the facts get in the way of a good America is evil rant.

RE: Back in the 1800s, were there any black slave owners?

Posted by Quelyn08 on 06.29.09 @ 05:28 PM

In response to Frankgriffin- You're correct, slavery and the act of enslaving people is not a practice exclusive to the US and the UK, but the article never suggested that it was. The reason that Western Nations such as the UK and US "feel such guilt" about the issue is because of the way the institution of slavery was practiced full of cruelty and injustice. Though there was slavery in other nations (pre 1800), the slaves had certain rights and in some cases had the ability to earn their freedom. The U.S. guilt comes from the way they ran slavery- the breaking up of families, inhumane treatment of a race of people, the destruction and lose of culture, the creation of hate based on skin tone which is still present today (prior to slavery the US had indentured servitude where both whites and blacks labored together to pay their debts back for freedom, and the further degradation and injustice of a whole race of people even after slavery ended. That is where the guilt comes from.

To "forget" and not address these issues are the reasons why it is still an issue today. The fact that open and honest discussion about slavery is such a taboo subject is one of the reasons why we SHOULD keep bringing this up.

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