The full content of this document is only available to subscribing institutions. More information can be found via www.amdigital.co.uk
If you believe you should have access to this document, click here to Login.
Field name | Value |
---|---|
Collection Reference Number | GLC00226 |
From Archive Folder | Documents Relating to 1859 |
Title | An unidentified slave to his mother about his hopes that his master will buy him a wife |
Date | 8 October 1859 |
Document Type | Correspondence |
Content Description | An unidentified slave discusses visiting his friends at the Widow Bailys' in Faquier [Fauquier County], Virginia. He hopes that his master will buy him a wife, noting "There is a young lady here that I am very much taken with and I think that my Master will buy her and take her out with us." Instructs his mother to direct further correspondence to Portland, Alabama, and writes, "We have bought all our servants." |
Subjects | Slavery African American History Women's History Marriage Children and Family Slave Life |
Place written | Alexandria, Virginia |
Theme | Slavery & Abolition; African Americans; Women in American History; Children & Family |
Sub-collection | The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1493-1859 |
Additional Information | Under southern law, slaves were considered chattel property. Like domestic animals, they could be bought, sold, leased, inherited, and physically punished. Slaves were prohibited from owning property, testifying against whites in court, or traveling without a pass. Partially in response to abolitionist attacks on slavery, southern legislatures enacted laws setting minimum standards for housing, food, and clothing. These statutes, however, were difficult to enforce. Slave marriages lacked legal sanction and as a result, slave families were extremely vulnerable to separation. The most conservative estimates indicate that at least 10 to 20 percent of slave marriages were severed by sale. Even more common was the sale of slave children. Well over a third of slave children grew up in households from which one or both parents were absent. Even in instances in which marriages were not broken by sale, slave spouses often resided on separate plantations, owned by different individuals. On large plantations, one slave father in three had a different owner from his wife and could only visit his family at his master's discretion. On smaller holdings divided ownership occurred even more frequently. Just a third of the children on farms with 15 or fewer slaves lived in a two-parent family. |
Copyright | The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History |
Module | Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859 |