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Collection Reference Number GLC06687
From Archive Folder Documents Relating to 1789 
Title Edward Rutledge to unknown regarding the sale of slaves as payment of debts
Date 12 March 1789
Author Rutledge, Edward (1749-1800)  
Document Type Correspondence
Content Description Written by Rutledge, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, as a member of the South Carolina legislature to an unknown recipient. References previous and more detailed letters he wrote to the recipient within the last two days. Says in case the letters have not arrived that Mr. Parker, the husband of a sister of Mrs. Rutledge, has offered him "a Proposition to give £85 a Head, for one half of the Gang – that is 24 or 25 – payable in good Bonds." Says the first instalment is due in June. Says he thinks the price is a bargain if "the Negroes will come with him," hinting that they would resist being divided and that they had some sort of say in the matter. Says the gang will be divided fairly "as to Age, & quality" and wished that Parker would have taken 30 instead of 25. Also asks to be informed of the quantity of Georgia rice to be appropriated toward payment of debts, the propriety of accepting the offer for the Cumberland lands, and the list of Negroes remaining to be sold "with their Ages, qualities, &c &c." Says he is writing in the Assembly Hall where it is so noisy he cannot connect two ideas together. Postscript says no commission will be paid for the sale of the slaves to Parker and that he will make the division "as easy as possible."
Subjects African American History  Slavery  Slave Sale  Finance  Agriculture and Animal Husbandry  Debt  Land Transaction  
People Rutledge, Edward (1749-1800)  
Place written Columbia, South Carolina
Theme African Americans; Slavery & Abolition; Government & Politics; Agriculture
Sub-collection The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1493-1859
Additional Information Rutledge was a member of the Continental Congress 1774-1776 and a member of the South Carolina Assembly 1776-1780. He served in an artillery unit of state militia during the Revolution and was captured at the Battle of Charleston in 1780. He returned to South Carolina Assembly 1782-1795 and served as Governor of South Carolina 1798-1800.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859
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