University of Virginia Library

Search this document 
The writings of James Madison,

comprising his public papers and his private correspondence, including numerous letters and documents now for the first time printed.
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
expand section
 
 
 
 
 
ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS CONCERNING SLAVERY. [1823].
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
expand section
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
expand section
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
expand section
 
 
 
 
 
expand section
 
 
 
expand section
 
 
 
 
 
 
expand section
 
 
 
 

 
 

ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS CONCERNING SLAVERY.[45] [1823].

MAD. MSS.

    1.

  • Yes.

  • 2.

  • Employs an overseer for that number of slaves with
    few exceptions

  • 3.

  • 4.

  • Not uncommonly the land, sometimes the slaves, very
    rarely both together

  • 5.

  • The common law as in England governs the relation between
    land & debts; Slaves are often sold under execution for
    debt; the proportion to the whole, cannot be great within a
    year, and varies of course, with the amount of debts, and the
    urgency of creditors.

  • 6.

  • Yes.


  • 131

    Page 131

    7–10.

  • Instances are rare where the Tobacco planters do
    not raise their own provisions.

  • 11.

  • The proper comparison not between the culture of
    Tobo. & that of Sugar and Cotton, but between each of these
    cultures & that of provisions. The Tobo. planter finds it
    cheaper to make them a part of his crop than to buy them.
    The Cotton & Sugar planters to buy them, where this is the
    case, than to raise them. The term cheaper embraces the
    comparative facility & certainty, of procuring the supplies.

  • 12.

  • Generally best cloathed, when from the household
    manufactures, which are increasing.

  • 14, 15.

  • Slaves seldom employed in regular task work.
    They prefer it only when rewarded with the surplus time
    gained by their industry.

  • 16.

  • Not the practice to substitute an allowance of time
    for the allowance of provisions.


  • 132

    Page 132

    17.

  • Very many & increasing with the progressive subdivisions
    of property; the proportion cannot be stated.

  • 18, 19.

  • The fewer the slaves & the fewer the holders
    of slaves, the greater the indulgence & familiarity. In districts
    comprising large masses of slaves; there is no difference
    in their condition whether held in small or large
    numbers, beyond the difference in the dispositions of the
    owners, and the greater strictness of attention where the
    number is greater.

  • 20.

  • There is no general system of religious instruction.
    There are few spots where religious worship is not within
    reach, and to which they do not resort. Many are regular
    members of Congregations chiefly Baptist; and some Preachers
    also, tho' rarely able to read.

  • 21.

  • Not common; but the instances are increasing.

  • 22.

  • The accommodation not unfrequent where the plantations
    are very distant. The slaves prefer wives on a different
    plantation; as affording occasions & pretexts for going
    abroad, and exempting them on holidays from a share of the
    little calls to which those at home are liable.


  • 133

    Page 133

    23.

  • The remarkable increase of slaves, as shewn by the
    Census, results from the comparative defect of moral and
    prudential restraint on the Sexual connexion; and from the
    absence at the same time, of that counteracting licentiousness
    of intercourse, of which the worst examples are to be
    traced where the African trade as in the W. Indies keeps the
    number of females, less than of the males

  • 24.

  • The annual expense of food & raiment in rearing a
    child, may be stated at about 8, 9, or 10 dollars; and the age at
    which it begins to be gainful to its owner, about 9 or 10 years.

  • 25.

  • The practice here does not furnish data for a comparison
    of cheapness, between these two modes of cultivation.

  • 26.

  • They are sometimes hired for field labour in time of
    harvest, and on other particular occasions.

  • 27.

  • The examples are too few to have established any
    such relative prices.

  • 28.

  • See the Census.

  • 29.

  • Rather increases.

  • 30.


  • 134

    Page 134

    31.

  • More closely with the slaves, and more likely to side
    with them in a case of insurrection

  • 32.

  • Generally idle and depraved; appearing to retain the
    bad qualities of the slaves with whom they continue to associate,
    without acquiring any of the good ones of the whites,
    from whom [they] continue separated by prejudices agst. their
    colour & other peculiarities.

  • 33.

  • There are occasional instances in the present legal
    condition of leaving the State

  • 34.

  • None

  • 35.

J. M. presents his respects to Dr. Morse, with the annexed
answers to the Queries accompanying his letter of the 14th
inst: so far as they were applicable to this State. The answers
c. not conveniently be extended as much as might perhaps
be desired. Their brevity and inadequacy will be an apology
for requesting, that if any use be made of them, it may be
done without a reference to the source furnishing them.

Montpr., Mar. 28,1823.

 
[45]

Jedediah Morse wrote to Madison from New Haven March 14,
1823, sending a printed list of questions "from a respectable Correspondent
in Liverpool, deeply engaged in the Abolition of the Slave
Trade, and the Amelioration of the condition of Slaves," and asking
Madison to furnish brief answers. The questions follow:

    1.

  • Do the planters generally live on their own estates?

  • 2.

  • Does a planter with ten or fifteen slaves employ an overlooker,
    or does he overlook his slaves himself?

  • 3.

  • Obtain estimates of the culture of Sugar and Cotton, to show
    what difference it makes where the planter resides on his estate, or
    where he employs attorneys, overlookers, &c.

  • 4.

  • Is it a common or general practice to mortgage slave estates?

  • 5.

  • Are sales of slave estates very frequent under execution for
    debt, and what proportion of the whole may be thus sold annually?

  • 6.

  • Does the Planter possess the power of selling the different
    branches of a family separate?

  • 7.

  • When the prices of produce, Cotton, Sugar, &c., are high, do
    the Planters purchase, instead of raising, their corn and other provisions?

  • 8.

  • When the prices of produce are low, do they then raise their
    own corn and other provisions?

  • 9.

  • Do the negroes fare better when the Corn, &c., is raised upon
    their master's estate, or when he buys it?

  • 10.

  • Do the tobacco planters in America ever buy their own Corn
    or other food, or do they always raise it ?

  • 11.

  • If they always, or mostly, raise it, can any other reason be
    given for the difference of the system pursued by them and that
    pursued by the Sugar and Cotton planters than that the cultivation
    of tobacco is less profitable than that of Cotton or Sugar?

  • 12.

  • Do any of the Planters manufacture the packages for their
    produce, or the clothing for their negroes? and if they do, are their
    negroes better clothed than when clothing is purchased ?

  • 13.

  • Where, and by whom, is the Cotton bagging of the Brazils
    made? is it principally made by free men or slaves?

  • 14.

  • Is it the general system to employ the negroes in task work,
    or by the day?

  • 15.

  • How many hours are they generally at work in the former
    case? how many in the latter? Which system is generally preferred
    by the master? which by the slaves?

  • 16.

  • Is it common to allow them a certain portion of time instead
    of their allowance of provisions? In this case, how much is allowed?
    Where the slaves have the option, which do they generally choose?
    On which system do the slaves look the best, and acquire the most
    comforts?

  • 17.

  • Are there many small plantations where the owners possess
    only a few slaves? What proportion of the whole may be supposed
    to be held in this way?

  • 18.

  • In such cases, are the slaves treated or almost considered a
    part of the family?

  • 19.

  • Do the slaves fare the best when their situations and that of
    the master are brought nearest together?

  • 20.

  • In what state are the slaves as to religion or religious instruction?

  • 21.

  • Is it common for the slaves to be regularly married?

  • 22.

  • If a man forms an attachment to a woman on a different or
    distant plantation, is it the general practice for some accommodation
    to take place between the owners of the man and woman, so that they
    may live together?

  • 23.

  • In the United States of America, the slaves are found to increase
    at about the rate of 3 ℘ cent. ℘ annum. Does the same take
    place in other places? Give a census, if such is taken. Show what
    cause contributes to this increase or what prevents it where it does
    not take place.

  • 24.

  • Obtain a variety of estimates from the Planters of the cost
    of bringing up a child, and at what age it becomes a clear gain to its
    owner.

  • 25.

  • Obtain information respecting the comparative cheapness
    of cultivation by slaves or by free men.

  • 26.

  • Is it common for the free blacks to labour in the field?

  • 27.

  • Where the labourers consist of free blacks and of white men,
    what are the relative prices of their labour when employed about the
    same work?

  • 28.

  • What is the proportion of free blacks and slaves?

  • 29.

  • Is it considered that the increase in the proportion of free
    blacks to slaves increases or diminishes the danger of insurrection?

  • 30.

  • Are the free blacks employed in the defence of the Country,
    and do they and the Creoles preclude the necessity of European
    troops?

  • 31.

  • Do the free blacks appear to consider themselves as more
    closely connected with the slaves or with the white population? and
    in cases of insurrection, with which have they generally taken part?

  • 32.

  • What is their general character with respect to industry and
    order, as compared with that of the slaves?

  • 33.

  • Are there any instances of emancipation in particular estates,
    and what is the result?

  • 34.

  • Is there any general plan of emancipation in progress, and
    what?

  • 35.

  • What was the mode and progress of emancipation in those
    States in America where slavery has ceased to exist?—Mad. MSS.