University of Virginia Library


515

Page 515

INDEX

  • Acklen, Joseph A. S., plantation
    home of, 239, 240.
  • rules of, for overseers, 262–273.
  • Africa, West, see Guinea.
  • Agriculture, see cotton, indigo,
    rice, sugar and tobacco
    culture.
  • Aiken, William, rice plantation
    of, 251–253.
  • Aime, Valcour, sugar plantation
    of, 242–244.
  • Amissa, enslaved and restored to
    Africa, 32.
  • Angolas, tribal traits of, 44.
    revolt of, 473.
  • Antipathy, racial, Jefferson's
    views on, 123.
  • in Massachusetts, 119.
  • in North and South compared,
    439–441.
  • Northern spokesmen of, 131.
  • Arabs, in the Guinea trade, 9.
  • Asiento, 17–19, 22, 23, 30.
  • Azurara, Gomez E., 1, 2.
  • Baltimore, negro churches in,
    423.
  • Barbados, emigration from, to
    Carolina, 85, 86.
  • to Jamaica, 49.
  • founding of, 46, 47.
  • planters' committee of, 48.
  • slave laws of, 490–492.
  • sugar culture in, 46–49.
  • Belmead plantation, 230–232.
  • Benin, 6, 32.
  • Black codes, 75–77, 103–112, 489–
    514.
  • administration of, 501–509.
  • attitude of citizens toward, 503,
    512–514.
  • local ordinances, 497–499.
  • origin of, in Barbados, 490–492.
  • in the Northern colonies,
    103–112.
  • in Louisiana, 493, 494.
  • in South Carolina, 492, 493.
  • in Virginia, 75–77.
  • tenor of, in the North, 103–112.
  • in the South, 499–501.
  • Bobolinks, in rice fields, 90.
  • Bonny, 32, 34.
  • Boré, Etienne de, sugar planter,
    164.
  • Bosman, William, in the Guinea
    trade, 25, 34, 44.
  • Branding of slaves, 26, 63, 304,
    328, 454, 555.
  • Bristol, citizens of, in the slave
    trade, 32.
  • Burial societies, negro, 450–452.
  • Burnside, John, merchant and
    sugar planter, 246.
  • Butler, Pierce, 129.
  • the younger, 251.
  • slaves of, sold, 374.
  • Cain, Elisha, overseer, 234–238.
  • Cairnes, J. E., views of, on slavery,
    354–357.
  • Calabar, 2, 44.
  • New, 32.

  • 516

    Page 516
  • Calabar, Old, 32–34.
  • Cape Coast Castle, 25.
  • Capers, William, overseer, 203.
  • Capital, investment of, in slaves,
    51, 65, 301, 302, 359, 360,
    363.
  • Charleston, commerce of, 96, 97,
    212.
  • free negroes in, 402, 430.
  • industrial census of, 402.
  • racial adjustments in, problem
    of, 97.
  • slave misdemeanors in, 417,
    418.
  • Denmark Vesey's plot, 477–479.
  • Churches, racial adjustments in,
    rural, 314–322.
    urban, 418–423.
  • Clarkson, Thomas, views of, on
    the effects of closing the
    slave trade, 148, 149.
  • Columbus, Christopher, policy of,
    13.
  • Concubinage, 193, 194.
  • Congoes, tribal traits of, 44.
  • Connecticut, slavery in, 104, 105.
  • disestablishment of, 120.
  • Cooper, Thomas, views of, on the
    economics of slavery, 348.
  • Corbin, Richard, plantation rules
    of, 261, 265, 273.
  • Coromantees, conspiracy of, 469.
    tribal traits of, 25, 36, 42–44.
  • Corporations, ownership of slaves
    by, 375–379.
  • Cotton culture, sea-island, introduction
    of, 150–154.
    methods and scale of, 223–
    225.
  • upland, engrossment of thought
    and energy by, 212–215,
    397.
  • improvements in, 219–223.
  • Cotton culture, upland, methods
    and scale of, 160–163, 207–
    211, 225, 226, 288–290.
  • stimulates westward migration,
    170–180.
  • Cotton gin, invention of, 156–
    159.
  • Cotton mills, 378, 389, 396, 397,
    406.
  • slave operatives in, 378, 379.
  • Cotton plantations, see plantations,
    cotton.
  • Cotton prices, sea-island, 152,
    153, 225.
  • upland, 159, 160, 162, 183, 212,
    215, 227, 336, 370–375,
    chart facing, 370.
  • Cottonseed, oil extracted from,
    221.
  • used as fertilizer, 220, 221.
  • Covington, Leonard, planter, migration
    of, 177, 178.
  • Creoles, Louisiana, 163, 166.
  • Criminality among free negroes,
    449, 504.
  • among slaves, 454–488.
  • Cuba, 15, 66, 165.
  • Dabney, Thomas S., planter, migration
    of, 179.
  • Dahomeys, 29.
  • Dale, Sir Thomas, 68, 228.
  • Davis, Joseph and Jefferson, plantation
    policy of, 296.
  • Delaware, slaves and free negroes
    in, 121.
  • forbids export of slaves, 202.
  • Depression, financial, in Mississippi,
    372, 373.
  • in Virginia, 183, 391.
  • Dirt-eating, among Jamaica
    slaves, 58.

  • 517

    Page 517
  • Discipline, of slaves, 63, 262, 269,
    270, 275–281, 284, 293–296,
    306–308, 414, 415.
  • Diseases, characteristic, in Africa,
    4.
  • among Jamaica slaves, 53.
  • venereal, 235.
  • Doctors, black, in Jamaica, 58.
  • in South Carolina, 323.
  • in Virginia, 322, 323.
  • "Doctoress," slave, in Georgia,
    263.
  • Drivers (plantation foremen),
    60–62, 237, 240, 281, 304.
  • Driving of slaves to death, question
    of, 62, 382–386.
  • Dutch, in the slave trade, 22–26,
    30, 37, 107–109.
  • Dutch West India Company, 107–
    109.
  • Early, Peter, debates the closing
    of the foreign slave trade,
    140–143.
  • East India Company, in the slave
    trade, 24.
  • Eboes, tribal traits of, 43, 44.
  • El Mina, 25.
  • Elliott, William, planter, 152.
  • economic views of, 214.
  • Ellsworth, Oliver, 129.
  • Emancipation, see manumission.
  • Encomiendia system, in the
    Spanish West Indies, 15.
  • England, policy of, toward the
    slave trade, 23, 25.
  • Epitaph of Peyton, a slave, 292.
  • Evans, Henry, negro preacher,
    430, 431.
  • Factorage, in planters' dealings,
    236–239.
  • Factorage, in the slave trade, in
    American ports, 41.
  • in Guinea, 25, 29, 39.
  • Farmers, free negro, 437.
  • white, in the Piedmont, 154–
    156, 160–162, 207.
  • in the plantation colonies,
    46–49, 66, 72–78, 80, 81, 86,
    93–96.
  • segregation of, 331–336.
  • in the westward movement,
    169–176, 186.
  • Federal Convention, 129.
  • Festivities, of slaves, 312–316.
  • Fithian, Philip V., observations
    by, 324, 325.
  • Foremen, plantation, 60–62, 237,
    240, 281, 304.
  • Foulahs, 26, 31.
  • Fowler, J. W., cotton picking
    records of, 210, 299.
  • plantation rules of, 262–274.
  • Franklin and Armfield, slave-dealers,
    194–196.
  • Free negroes, 50, 75, 104, 107,
    112, 425–453, 504.
  • antipathy toward, 439–441.
  • criminality among, 449, 504.
  • discriminations against, 448,
    449.
  • emigration projects of, 447–
    448.
  • endorsements of, 429–431, 437.
  • kidnapping of, 441–445.
  • legal seizure of, attempts at,
    442, 443.
  • mob violence against, 449,
    450.
  • occupations of, in Augusta,
    436, 437.
  • in Charleston, 402–404.
  • in New Orleans and New
    York, 438, 439.

  • 518

    Page 518
  • Free negroes, prominent characters
    among, 428–433.
  • processes of procuring freedom
    by, 75, 425–430.
  • qualities and status of, 428–
    439.
  • reënslavement of, 446, 447.
  • secret societies among, 450–452.
  • slaveholding by, 75, 433–435.
  • French, in the slave trade, 25.
  • Fugitive slaves, see slaves, runaway.
  • rendition, in the Federal Constitution,
    129.
  • act of 1793, 130.
  • Funerals, negro, 417, 451, 452.
  • Gaboons, tribal traits of, 31, 43.
  • Gabriel, insurrection led by, 474,
    475.
  • Gadsden, Christopher, 125.
  • Gambia, slave trade on the, 23,
    32.
  • Gang system, in plantation work,
    55, 60, 61, 237, 240, 247,
    268.
  • Genoese, in the slave trade 18–23.
  • Georgia, founding of, 93–95.
  • free negress visits, 20.
  • slave imports forbidden in, 93.
  • permitted in, 94, 95.
  • restricted by, 133.
  • uplands, development of, 154–
    163.
  • Gerry, Elbridge, 129.
  • Gibson, Arthur H., views of, on
    the economics of slavery,
    358–360, 394.
  • Godkin, Edwin L., on the migration
    of planters, 181, 182.
  • Gold Coast, 6, 25, 27, 32.
  • Goodloe, Daniel R., views of, on
    slavery, 349, 351.
  • Gowrie, rice plantation, 254–256,
    297.
  • Grandy King George, African
    chief, wants of, 34.
  • Guiana, British, invites free negro
    immigration, 447.
  • cotton culture in, 150.
  • Dutch, 23, 108.
  • Guinea, coastal explorations of,
    1, 2, 11, 12.
  • life and institutions in, 2–8.
  • slave exports from, beginnings
    of, 9–13.
  • volume of, 32, 33, 39.
  • tribal traits in, 26, 31, 42–44,
    See also negroes and slave
    trade.
  • Hairston, Samuel, planter, 233.
  • Hammond, James H., planter
    and writer, 215–218.
  • Hampton, Wade, planter, 160,
    234.
  • Harrison, Jesse Burton, views of,
    on slavery, 348, 349,
    361.
  • Hawkins, Sir John, adventures
    of, in the slave trade, 20,
    21.
  • Hayti (Hispaniola), 14, 15, 23,
    65, 447.
  • Hearn, Lafcadio, on sugar-cane
    harvesting, 56, 57.
  • Helper, Hinton R., views of, on
    slavery, 350.
  • Hemp, 155, 169, 390.
  • Henry, Patrick, 118.
  • Henry, Prince, the Navigator,
    11, 12.
  • Heyward, Nathaniel, planter,
    249, 250.
  • Hodgson, W. B., planter, 234,
    238, 239, 503.

  • 519

    Page 519
  • Holidays, of slaves, plantation,
    207, 232, 313, 314.
  • urban, 407, 408, 416.
  • Hundley D. R., on slave traders,
    200, 206.
  • Immigrants, in the South, 338,
    396. See also Irish.
  • Importations of slaves, 39–41, 52,
    57, 58.
  • prohibition of, 132–159.
  • Indians, enslaved, in New England,
    100, 103.
  • in South Carolina, 87.
  • in West Indies, subjugated by
    Spaniards, 14–17.
  • Indigo culture, introduction of,
    in Georgia, 95.
  • in South Carolina, 91.
  • methods of, 92, 93.
  • Insurrection of slaves, see slave
    plots.
  • Irish, labor of, on plantations,
    244, 246, 301–303, 337.
  • Jamaica, capture and development
    of, 49–54.
  • maroons of, 465, 466.
  • nabobs, absentee, 50, 51.
  • plantations in, 54–65.
  • runaway slaves in, statistics of,
    44.
  • Jefferson, Thomas, on the foreign
    slave trade, 117, 139,
    140.
  • on negroes and slavery, 118,
    122, 123.
  • Jennison, Nathaniel, prosecution
    of, 119.
  • Job Ben Solomon, enslaved and
    restored to Africa, 31.
  • Joloffs, 12, 26.
  • Kentucky, settlement of, 126, 169.
  • Kidnapping of free negroes, 441–
    445.
  • King, Rufus, 127.
  • Kingsley, Z., plantation experience
    of, 294, 295.
  • Lace, Ambrose, slave trader, 33,
    34.
  • Lalaurie, Madame, 511, 512.
  • Lamar, John B., planter, 288–
    290, 413, 414.
  • Las Casas, Bartholomeo de la, 17.
  • Laurens, Henry, factor and
    planter, 36, 44, 117, 125,
    274, 275, 324.
  • Liberia, 9, 427, 428, 447.
  • Lincecum, Gideon, peregrinations
    of, 174–176.
  • Lindo, Moses, indigo merchant,
    92.
  • Liverpool, in the slave trade, 32,
    33.
  • types of ships employed, 35.
  • Loango, 31.
  • Lodges, negro, 450–452.
  • London, in the slave trade, 32.
  • London Company, 67.
  • Loria, Achille, views of, on slavery
    economics, 392–395.
  • Louisiana, cotton culture in, 226.
    slave laws of, 493, 494.
    sugar culture in, 163–168, 241–
    246.
  • L'Ouverture, Toussaint, 468, 469.
  • Lucas, Eliza, 91.
  • Lynchings, 460–463, 511, 512.
  • M'Culloch, J, R., views of, on
    slavery, 357.
  • McDonogh, John, manumission
    by, method of, 427, 428.
  • Macon, Nathaniel, 126.

  • 520

    Page 520
  • Madagascar, slaves procured
    from, 24.
  • Malaria, in Africa, 4.
    in South Carolina, 90, 91.
  • Mandingoes, tribal traits of, 42,
    44.
  • Manigault, Charles, planter, 203,
    254–256, 297, 298.
  • rules of, 261, 263, 271.
  • Manors in Maryland, 78, 79.
  • Manumission, of slaves, 59, 329,
    400, 425–430 475, 494, 498,
    499.
  • Maroons, negro, in Jamaica, 465,
    466.
  • on the Savannah River,
    509, 510.
  • Martinique, 23.
  • Maryland, founding of, 78.
    free negroes in, 122.
    manors in, 78, 79.
    plantations in, 79, 80.
    slave imports prohibited by,
    132.
    slaveholdings in, scale of, 84.
    slavery in, projects for the disestablishment
    of, 121, 122.
  • Massachusetts, in the slave trade,
    33.
  • slavery in, 99–104.
  • abolition of, 118–120.
  • Matthews, Samuel, planter, 72.
  • Medical attention to slaves, 49,
    62, 238.
  • Mercer, James, planter, 229.
  • Merolla, Jerom, missionary, 30.
  • Middle passage, see slave trade,
    African.
  • Midwives, slave, 59, 63, 263, 264.
  • Migration, 65, 66, 169–189, 332–
    338.
  • Mill, John Stuart, views of, on
    slavery, 352.
  • Miller, Phineas, partner of Eli
    Whitney, 157, 158.
  • Misdemeanors of slaves, in
    Charleston, 417.
  • Missouri, decline of slavery in,
    390.
  • settlement of, 170, 184.
  • Mississippi, depression in, 372,
    373.
  • product of long-fibre cotton in,
    183.
  • sale of slaves from, 199, 372,
    373.
  • Mobs, violence of, toward free
    negroes, 499, 450.
  • Mocoes, tribal traits of, 43, 44.
  • Molasses, 38, 39, 65, 158.
  • Moore, Francis, Royal African
    Company factor, 26, 28,
    29.
  • Moors, 9–12, 15.
  • Mulattoes, 77, 401, 430, 439, 453,
    500, 501.
  • Mules, 219, 242.
  • Nagoes, tribal traits of, 43, 44.
  • Negro traits, American, 52, 291–
    293, 339, 342, 343.
  • Angola, 43, 44.
  • Congo, 43, 44.
  • Coromantee, 25, 36, 42–44, 469.
  • Ebo, 43, 44.
  • Gaboon, 31, 43.
  • Mandingo, 44.
  • Nago, 43.
  • Paw Paw, 26, 43, 44.
  • Whydah, 26, 43.
  • Negroes, see antipathy, black
    codes, church adjustments,
    free negroes, funerals,
    plantation labor, plantation
    life, slave plots, slave

    521

    Page 521
    trade, slaveholdings, slavery,
    slaves.
  • New England, in the slave trade,
    24, 29, 38, 39, 44, 45, 100,
    103, 106.
  • type of ships employed, 34.
    slavery in, 99–107.
  • disestablishment of, 118.
  • New Jersey, slavery in, 111, 112.
    disestablishment of, 120.
  • New Netherlands, slavery in, 107.
  • New Orleans, as a slave market,
    165, 193–196.
  • free negroes in, 433, 438, 439.
  • New York, negro plots in, 111,
    469–471.
  • slavery in, 107–111.
  • disestablishment of, 120.
  • Nicholson, J. S., views of, on
    slavery, 357.
  • Nobility, English, as Jamaica
    plantation owners, 50.
  • North Carolina, early conditions
    in, 81, 82.
  • sentiment on slavery, 126.
  • Northrup, a kidnapped free negro,
    career of, 444, 445.
  • Northwest Territory, prohibition
    of slavery in, 126–128.
  • Oglethorpe, James, administers
    the Royal African Company,
    95.
  • founds Georgia, 93, 94.
  • restores a slave to Africa, 31.
  • Olmsted, Frederick L., observations
    by, 240, 241, 248, 253,
    254, 279, 298, 302, 307, 387,
    436, 439.
  • Overseers, plantation, functions,
    salaries, and experiences of,
    62, 228, 229, 234, 239, 261–
    283, 288, 289, 300, 303, 458.
  • Panics, financial, effects on slave
    prices, 371, 372.
  • Park, Mungo, in Guinea, 8, 27.
  • "Particular plantations," in Virginia,
    70–72, 79.
  • Paths, in Guinea, character of,
    31.
  • Paw Paws, tribal traits of, 26,
    43, 44.
  • Pennsylvania, slavery in, 112.
    disestablishment of, 120.
  • Peyton, a slave, epitaph of,
    287.
  • Philips, Martin W., planter and
    writer, 172–176, 215–222,
    301.
  • slave epitaph by, 287.
  • Pickering, Timothy, 126, 127.
  • Plantation and Frontier, citation
    of title in full, 20.
  • Plantation labor, 291–308.
  • Plantation life, 309–330.
  • Plantation management, 261–290.
  • Plantation mistress, 91, 323, 325,
    329.
  • Plantation rules, 261–275.
  • Plantation system, cherishment
    of slaves in, 301–303, 307,
    308, 339, 342, 343, 387, 398.
  • as a civilizing agency, 291, 309,
    313, 325.
  • gang and task methods in, 228,
    247–249.
  • severity in, question of, 293,
    294, 305–308, 382–387.
  • soil exhaustion in, 332, 333.
  • towns and factories hampered
    in growth by, 339, 340.
  • westward spread of, 169–186,
    333–336.
  • Plantation tendencies, 331–343.
  • Plantations, cotton, sea island,
    151–154.

  • 522

    Page 522
  • Plantations, cotton, upland, 154–
    163, 205–227, 233–241, 288–
    290.
  • J. H. Hammond estate,
    215–218.
  • Retreat, 234–239.
  • indigo, 91–93.
  • "particular," 70–72.
  • rice, 87–97, 247–259.
  • Butler's Island, 251.
  • Gowrie and East Hermitage,
    254–257.
  • Jehossee Island, 251–253.
  • sugar, in Barbados, 46–49.
  • Drax Hall, 48, 49.
  • in Jamaica, 49–66.
  • Worthy Park, 57–66.
  • in Louisiana, 163–168, 241–246.
  • Valcour Aime's estate, 242–
    244.
  • tobacco, 70–85, 228–232.
  • Belmead, 230–232.
  • James Mercer's estate, 229,
    230.
  • Planters, absenteeism among, 50,
    62, 91, 251, 340, 341.
  • concern of, for slaves, 387, 398,
    410.
  • dietary of, 311, 312.
  • exemplified in J. A. S. Acklen,
    239, 240, 262–274.
  • in William Aiken, 251–253.
  • in John Burnside, 246.
  • in Robert Carter, 323–325.
  • in Christopher Codrington,
    43.
  • in Thomas S. Dabney, 178,
    179.
  • in Jefferson and Joseph
    Davis, 296.
  • in Samuel Hairston, 233.
  • in James H. Hammond, 215–
    218, 262–274, 315.
  • Planters, exemplified in Wade
    Hampton, 160, 166, 234.
  • in Nathaniel Heywood, 249,
    250.
  • in W. B. Hodgson, 234, 238,
    239, 503.
  • in Z. Kingsley, 294–296.
  • in John B. Lamar, 288–290.
  • in Henry Laurens, 274, 275,
    324.
  • in Charles Manigault, 254–
    257, 266, 297, 298.
  • in Samuel Matthews, 72, 73.
  • in James Mercer, 229, 230.
  • in A. H. Pemberton, 282.
  • in Martin W. Philips, 215,
    218, 219, 222, 287, 301.
  • in George Washington, 283,
    286.
  • in David R. Williams, 283.
  • gentility of, 97, 324–327, 343,
    397, 398.
  • homesteads of, 309, 311, 324,
    325.
  • innovations by, 87, 91, 152, 153,
    164, 338, 339.
  • management by, 216–308.
  • migration of, 177–182.
  • purchases of slaves by, 40, 52,
    57, 58, 187, 189, 198, 203,
    204, 363, 365.
    rules of, 261–275.
  • sales of slaves by, 191, 192, 387.
  • sports of, 324.
  • temper of, 306, 323–330, 398.
  • Poor whites, in the South, 355,
    356, 398.
  • Cairnes' assertions concerning,
    356.
  • Portugal, activities of, in Guinea,
    1, 11, 12, 20, 26, 30.
  • an appanage of Spain, 19, 22.
  • negroes in, 1, 2, 12, 13, 28.

  • 523

    Page 523
  • Preachers, negro, 269, 270, 278,
    295, 418–423, 430, 431.
  • Procter, Billy, a slave, letter of,
    413, 414.
  • Providence, "Old," a Puritan colony
    in the tropics, career
    of, 98, 99.
  • Puritans, attitude of, toward slavery,
    98–102, 113, 114.
  • Quakers, relationship of, to slavery,
    48, 98, 107, 111, 112,
    121–126, 130.
  • Quincy, Josiah, 141.
  • Railroad companies, slave ownership
    by, 375–378.
  • Randolph, Edmund, disrelishes
    slavery, 118.
  • Randolph, John, of Roanoke, on
    the coasting trade in
    slaves, 144–146.
  • on depression in Virginia, 183,
    391.
  • manumits his slaves, 426.
  • Randolph, Richard, provides for
    the manumission of his
    slaves, 425, 426, 436.
  • Rape, by negroes in the ante-bellum
    South, 454–462.
  • Rats, a pest in Jamaica, 60.
  • Rattoons, of sugar cane, 54,
    55.
  • Religion, among slaves, rural,
    314–322.
  • urban, 418–423.
  • Retreat, cotton plantation, 334–
    339.
  • Revolution, American, doctrines
    of, 115, 116.
  • effects of, on slavery, 117,
    118, 122–125.
  • Negroes in, 116, 117.
  • Revolution, American, radicalism
    of, waning of, 128,
    131.
  • Rhode Island, in the slave trade,
    28.
  • resolution advocating the stoppage
    of the slave trade,
    130.
  • slavery in, 105, 107.
    disestablishment of, 120.
  • Rice birds (bobolinks), damage
    from, 90.
  • Rice culture, introduced into
    Georgia, 95.
  • into South Carolina, 87.
  • methods of, 95, 96.
  • plantations in, 89, 258, 259.
    scale of, 247–259.
  • Rishworth, Samuel, early agitator
    against slavery, 99.
  • Rolfe, John, introduces tobacco
    culture into Virginia, 69.
  • Roustabouts, Irish, qualities of,
    302.
  • negro, 292, 293.
  • Royal African Company, 24, 25,
    31, 39.
  • Ruffin, Edmund, advocates agricultural
    reforms, 215, 220.
  • views of, on slavery, 352–354,
    387, 398.
  • Rum, product of, in Jamaica, 44,
    63.
  • rations issued to slaves, in
    Jamaica, 44, 63.
  • in South Carolina, 266.
  • use of, in the Guinea trade, 7,
    27, 33, 38.
  • Runaway slaves, general problem,
    303.
  • of George Washington, 285, 286.
  • in Georgia, 234, 238, 257, 258.
  • in Jamaica, 44, 63.

  • 524

    Page 524
  • Runaway slaves in Mississippi,
    240.
  • Russell, Irwin, "Christmas in the
    Quarters," 315, 316.
  • Sabine Fields, rice plantation,
    257, 258.
  • Sahara, slave trade across, 9.
  • Saluda factory, slave operatives
    in, 379.
  • San Domingo, emigration from,
    to Louisiana, 165.
  • revolution in, 131, 467–469.
  • Say, J. B., views of, on slavery,
    347.
  • Sea-island cotton introduced into
    the United States, 152.
  • methods and scale of culture,
    153, 154, 223–225.
  • Seasoning of slaves, in Jamaica, 58.
  • Secret societies, negro, 450–452.
  • Senegal, slave trade in, 25.
  • Senegalese, tribal traits of, 42.
  • Senegambia, 32.
  • Serfdom, 10, 344, 345, 346, 400.
  • Servants, white indentured, in
    Barbados, 46, 47.
  • in Connecticut, 104.
  • in Jamaica, 50.
  • in Maryland, 80.
  • in Massachusetts, 99.
  • in Pennsylvania, 112.
  • in South Carolina and Georgia,
    155.
  • in Virginia, 70, 73, 74, 78.
  • revolts by, 464.
  • Servitude, indentured, tendencies
    of, 346.
  • Shackles, used on slaves, 180,
    181, 511.
  • Shenendoah Valley, 169, 192.
  • Ships, types of, in the slave
    trade, 34, 35, 38.
  • Sierra Leone, 31.
  • Slave Coast, 32, 43.
  • Slave felons, 193.
  • Slave plots and insurrections,
    general survey of, 463–
    468.
  • disquiet caused by, 482–488.
  • Gabriel's uprising, 474, 475.
  • in "Old" Providence, 99.
  • in New York, 111, 467, 469.
  • proclivity of Coromantees toward,
    42, 469.
  • San Domingan revolution, 456–
    459.
  • Stono rebellion, 473.
  • Nat Turner's (Southampton),
    revolt, 480.
  • Denmark Vesey's conspiracy,
    477–499.
  • Slave trade, African, 9–45.
    the asiento, 17–19, 22, 23.
    barter in, 27, 28, 33.
    chieftains active in, 34.
    closing of, by various states,
    132–138.
  • by Congress, 132, 138–
    148.
  • effects of, 148, 149, 370–
    372.
  • drain of funds by, 396, 397,
    401.
  • Liverpool's prominence in,
    32, 33.
  • the middle passage, 35–38.
  • reopening, project of, 399.
  • Royal African Company, 24–
    28.
  • ships employed in, types of,
    34, 35.
  • care and custody of slaves
    on, 35, 36.
  • tricks of, 52.
  • Yankee traders in, 24, 29.

  • 525

    Page 525
  • Slave trade, domestic, 187–203.
  • beginnings of, 187–189.
  • effects of, 203.
  • methods in, 194–201.
  • to Louisiana, 165, 166, 168,
    193–196.
  • scale of, 195, 196.
  • Slave traders, domestic, 190–196.
  • Franklin and Armfield, 194,
    195.
  • methods and qualities of,
    190, 192, 195–201.
  • reputations of, blackened,
    304.
  • maritime, 27–30, 33–36, 41.
  • Slaveholding, vicissitudes of, 379–
    382.
  • Slaveholdings, by corporations,
    375–379.
  • by free negroes, 75, 433–436.
  • scale of, in the cotton belt, 226,
    333–336.
  • in Jamaica, 51.
  • in Maryland, 84.
  • in New York, 109, 110.
  • in towns, 402.
  • in Virginia, 80, 83, 84, 230.
  • on the South Carolina coast,
    95, 96, 156, 161.
  • Slavery, in Africa, 6–9, 23, 27, 31.
  • in the American Revolution,
    115–126.
  • in ancient Rome, 341, 342.
  • in the British West Indies, 23,
    24, 46–66, 490–492.
  • in Europe, 1, 2, 10–13, 344, 345.
  • in Georgia, 93–95, 493.
  • in Louisiana, 163, 168.
  • in the North, 98–114.
  • disestablishment of, 118–121.
  • in South Carolina, 86–93, 95–
    97, 124, 125, 492, 495.
  • in Spanish America, 14–19.
  • Slavery in Virginia, 74–77, 80,
    82–85, 122–124.
  • See also black codes, negroes,
    and plantation labor, life
    and management.
  • Slaves, negro, artizans among,
    360, 370, 403–406.
  • as factory operatives, 378,
    379.
  • birth rates of, 54, 58, 64, 273,
    298, 299.
  • branding of, 26, 63, 304, 328,
    454, 455.
  • "breaking in" of, 53, 291,
    307.
  • breeding, forced, question of,
    361, 362.
  • capital invested in, 51,
    65, 243, 255, 301, 302,
    359, 360, 363, 387, 391, 397,
    399.
  • children, care and control of,
    59, 60, 253, 261, 264, 307,
    313, 357.
  • church adjustments of, 314–
    322, 418–423.
  • conspiracies of, see slave
    plots and insurrections.
  • crimes of, 102, 454–488.
  • crops of, private, 238, 268,
    277, 279, 305.
    dealers in, see slave traders.
  • discipline of, 262, 269, 270,
    275–281, 284, 293–296, 306–
    308, 501.
  • diseases and death rates of,
    53, 58, 256, 300, 303.
  • driving of, to death, question
    of, 62, 382–387.
  • earnings of private, 305, 410–
    414.
  • felons among, disposal of,
    193, 454–459.

  • 526

    Page 526
  • Slaves, negro, festivities of, 312–
    316, 416, 417.
  • food and clothing of, 49, 64,
    265, 266, 276–279, 286, 293,
    296–298, 312, 359, 397, 491,
    503.
  • foemen among, 57, 60–62,
    237, 272, 284, 304, 322.
  • hiring of, 57, 59, 204, 229,
    286, 339, 380, 405–414, 499,
    503.
  • to themselves, 339, 411–414,
    499, 503.
  • holidays of, 207, 209, 232,
    305, 407, 408, 416, 417.
  • hospitals for, 58, 243, 252,
    253, 404.
  • labor of, schedule of, 267,
    268, 306–308.
  • laws concerning, 75–77, 98–
    112, 489–514.
  • life insurance of, 197, 363
    and note, 364, 376, 406.
  • manumission of, 59, 329, 400,
    425–430, 459, 475, 498.
  • marriages of, 254, 256, 269,
    294, 298, 299, 314, 404, 493,
    494 500, 512, 513.
  • annulment of, 269.
  • medical and surgical care of,
    49, 62, 256, 263, 275, 289,
    301, 322, 323, 387.
  • plots and insurrections of,
    19, 42, 99, 457, 459–488.
  • police of, 272, 414–417, 487–
    499.
  • preachers among, 269, 270,
    278, 295, 418–423, 430, 431.
  • prices of, 27, 28, 38–40, 104,
    133, 148, 359–395, 400,
    chart facing 370.
  • property of, 392–394, 494,
    512, 513.
  • Slaves, negro, protection of, from
    strain and exposure, 255,
    256, 301–303, 398.
  • punishments of, 49, 102, 270–
    273, 417, 418, 454–459, 497.
  • purchases of, 40, 49, 52, 57,
    58, 187, 189, 245, 246, 360,
    364, 366, 369, 376, 377, 379,
    389.
  • by themselves, 413.
  • drain of funds, caused
    by, 395–397, 401.
  • quarters of, 252, 253, 267,
    279, 289, 298, 310.
  • sanitation of, 267, 277.
  • rape by, 454–462.
  • religion among, 269, 270,
    314–322, 418–423.
  • revolts of, see slave plots and
    insurrections.
  • rewards of, 62, 272, 279, 425,
    428 and note, 459.
  • rum allowances to, 62, 63,
    266.
  • running away by, 44, 63, 238,
    285, 286, 301–303, 304, 429,
    500.
  • sales of, 36–41, 150, 165, 166,
    191, 193, 199, 361, 371, 382,
    411.
  • shackling of, 180, 181, 511.
  • social stratification among,
    414, 415.
  • speculation in, 367, 371–375,
    395.
  • stealing of, 381, 382.
  • strikes by, 303, 304.
  • suicide of, 38, 43, 271, 272,
    381.
  • suits by, for freedom, 443,
    445, 500.
  • concerning, 501–503, 505
    509.

  • 527

    Page 527
  • Slaves, negro, temper of, 1, 25
    26, 36, 41–44, 52, 235, 276,
    278, 280, 281, 285, 291–293,
    306, 307, 324–327.
  • torture of, 102, 462, 463, 465,
    479, 511.
  • town adjustments of, 402–
    424.
  • undesirable types of, 187,
    192, 193, 280, 281.
  • wages of, 57, 406–414.
  • in the westward movement,
    177–182, 189–198, 203.
  • women among, care and control
    of, 261, 263, 264, 276,
    280, 281, 285.
  • work, rates of, 267, 268 306–
    308.
  • working of, to death, question
    of, 62, 382–386.
  • Smart, William, views of, on
    slavery, 357, 358.
  • Smith, Adam, views of, on slavery,
    347.
  • Smith, Captain John, 68.
  • Smith, Landgrave Thomas, 87.
  • Snelgrave, William, in the maritime
    slave trade, 36.
  • Soil exhaustion, 332, 336.
  • Southampton insurrection, 480–
    482.
  • South Carolina, closing and reopening
    of the foreign
    slave trade in, 132–138.
  • cotton culture in, 151–153, 159–
    161.
  • emigration from, 184, 389, 390.
  • founding of, 85–88.
  • indigo culture in, 91–93.
  • rice culture in, 87–91.
  • slave imports, prohibited by,
    134, 135.
  • reopened by, 136–138.
  • South Carolina, slave laws of,
    492, 493.
  • slaveholdings in, scale of, 95,
    96, 156, 161.
  • uplands, development of, 154,
    155, 159–161.
  • Spain, annexation of Portugal
    by, 19, 22.
  • asiento instituted by, 17–19.
  • negroes in, 2.
  • police of American dominions
    by, 20–22.
  • policy of, toward Indians and
    negroes, 13–23.
  • Spaulding, Thomas, planter, 152.
  • Spinners, on plantations, 161, 230,
    236.
  • Spratt, L. W., views of, on conditions
    in South Carolina,
    389, 390.
  • Staples, see cotton, hemp, indigo,
    rice, sugar and tobacco
    culture, and plantations.
  • Steamboat laborers, Irish, 302.
  • negro, 292, 293, 303.
  • Sugar culture, in Barbados, 46–
    49.
  • in Jamaica, 49–65.
  • in Louisiana, 163–168, 241–246.
  • methods and apparatus of, 54–
    57, 167, 384.
  • plantations in, scale of, 50, 51,
    166, 168, 245.
  • types of, 48, 49, 57–66, 242–
    244.
  • in the Spanish West Indies, 15.
  • Task system, in plantation industry,
    228, 247, 249, 267.
  • Taylor, John, of Caroline, agricultural
    writings of, 219,
    220.

  • 528

    Page 528
  • Telfair, Alexander, plantations
    of, 234–239, 257, 258.
  • rules of, 263, 267–271.
  • Tennessee, settlement of, 170,
    184.
  • Texas, 168, 171, 337.
  • Thomas, E. S., bookseller, experience
    of, 137, 138.
  • Thorpe, George, Virginia colonist,
    71.
  • Tobacco culture, in Maryland, 79.
  • method of, 82, 83.
  • in North Carolina, 81.
  • plantations in, scale of, 83, 84.
  • types of, 229–232.
  • in the uplands of South Carolina
    and Georgia, 155.
  • in Virginia, 69, 73.
  • Towns, Southern, growth of,
    hampered, 339, 340.
  • slaves in, 402–424.
  • Tucker, St. George, project of,
    for extinguishing slavery
    in Virginia, 124.
  • Turner, Nat, insurrection led by,
    480–482.
  • Utrecht, treaty of, grants the
    asiento to England, 23, 25.
  • Van Buren, A. de Puy, observations
    by, 302, 324–326.
  • Venetians, in the Levantine slave
    trade, 10.
  • Vermont, prohibition of slavery
    by, 118.
  • Vesey, Denmark, conspiracy of,
    477, 479.
  • Vigilance committees, 510.
  • Virginia, founding and early experience
    of, 67–73.
  • free negroes in, 75, 124.
  • Virginia, plantations in, "particular,"
    70–72.
  • private, 72–78, 228–232.
  • servants, indentured, in, 70–75.
  • slave crimes in, 457–459.
  • slave imports, prohibited by,
    132.
  • slave laws of, 75–77, 493.
  • slave revolts in, 472–474, 480,
    481.
  • slaveholdings in, scale of, 80,
    83, 84, 230.
  • slavery, introduced in, 74–77.
  • disestablishment in, projects
    of, 122–124.
  • tobacco culture in, 69, 73, 79–
    84, 229–232.
  • Walker, Quork, suits concerning
    the freedom of, 119.
  • Washington, George, apprehensions
    of, concerning slave
    property, 150.
  • desires the gradual abolition of
    slavery, 123.
  • imports cotton, 151.
  • as a planter, 84, 283–286.
  • West Indies, British, 46–66.
  • prosperity and decline in,
    progression of, 65, 66.
  • servile plots and insurrections
    in, 464–466.
  • slave prices in, on the eve of
    abolition, 400.
  • Spanish, colonization of, 15–19.
    negro slavery in, introduction
    of, 15–19.
  • Weston, P. C. plantation rules
    of, 261–273.
  • Westward movement, 169–187,
    189, 332–338.
  • Whitney, Eli, invents the cotton
    gin, 156–158.

  • 529

    Page 529
  • Whydahs, tribal traits of, 26, 29,
    43.
  • Williams, David R., planter,
    233.
  • Williams, Francis, a free negro,
    career of, 332.
  • Women, slave, care of, in pregnancy
    and childbirth, 261–
    264.
  • Women, slave, difficulties in controlling,
    276, 280, 281, 285.
  • Working of slaves to death, question
    of, 62, 382–386.
  • Worthy Park, Jamaica plantation,
    records of, 57–65.
  • Yeomanry, white, in the South,
    78, 160, 334, 337, 398.