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Date: | Mon, 8 Sep 2014 21:39:26 -0400 |
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Is there evidence that a significant number of small slave owners considered
their slaves to be something other than property?
-----Original Message-----
From: Craig Kilby
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 2:46 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [VA-HIST] Out-migration from Virginia early 1810-1840
Dear Paul,
I am so sorry you are insulted and deeply offended. I have no idea why you
should be. I did not mention you by name, and in fact was not really
referring to you specifically, just the comment that 800,000 slaves were
sold into the Deep South and that the huge out-migration had many aspects
that should be considered. In that vein, I talked about out-migration of
small slave-holding families to the Ohio and Mississippi River Valleys,
specifically Kentucky, Missouri and Arkansas. Nowhere did I say anything
about Mississippi which I do not think was an area highly sought-after by
the outwardly bound Virginians and their slave families.
It is indeed true that small slave owners had slaves owned by other people
on other farms. More often than not, these groups moved in bulk, and webs of
kinship were deep. I do not think that kinships were quite as uprooted as
you would like to believe. Again, the humanity factor comes into play here.
These were not massive cotton plantation families like the in the deep
south. These were close-knit family units. These were real people with real
feelings and attachments. I know this does not fit well into the narrative
of evil white people tearing up black families, but on this I suppose we
will have to disagree.
Craig Kilby
/va-hist.html
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