Item shows sale of enslaved man for $500 to settler of
Spanish Natchez
Bobby Dennis, executive director of the Natchez Museum of
African American History and Culture, left, and Richard Burke, Mayor Dan
Gibson’s executive assistant, display a scanned copy of an 1828 bill of sale
involving the sale of a 21-year-old enslaved man. The document was donated to
the museum by an anonymous donor.
“In witness whereof we have hereunto set our hands and seals at Natches this twenty seventh day of December 1828.
Witness: Warren Offutt, R. C. Ballard”
David Slay, chief of interpretation for the Natchez
National Historical Park, said the document is significant for several reasons.
“It documents the existence of a 21-year-old Aaron and
the other enslaved people from the McInnis estate, which will be of value to
genealogists in that Aaron and the others likely have descendants in this
region,” Slay said. He noted this could be a key piece to someone's ancestry
search one day.
“It is a tangible artifact of the domestic slave trade in
this region,” Slay said. “It is a physical object representing the selling
of a man's life in Natchez in 1828, who was bound both ‘mind and body’ to John
Henderson.”
According to the information provided with the document,
on the day of the sale, “Henderson advertised an auction of ten slaves in two
families from the estate of Norman McInnis of Concordia, Louisiana, to be sold
at auction on January 2, 1829.” However, three years later, he penned a letter
to a Washington, D.C. newspaper in which he proposed “a method for the gradual
abolition of slavery.”
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