9 of the Biggest Slave Owners in American History

thoughtone

Rising Star
Registered
source: Atlanta Black Star


Col. Joshua John Ward of Georgetown, South Carolina: 1,130

Screen-Shot-2014-12-19-at-5.36.36-PM-600x611.jpg



Known as “King of the Rice Planters,” Ward had 1,130 enslaved Blacks on the Brookgreen plantation in South Carolina. In 1850, Ward controlled six large plantations and produced 3.9 million pounds of rice.


Dr. Stephen Duncan of Issaquena, Mississippi: 858

Screen-Shot-2014-12-19-at-5.40.26-PM-600x428.jpg



Duncan was a businessman who collectively enslaved more than 2,000 Blacks during his time as one of the best cotton producers. The most he enslaved at one time was 858 in Issaquena. Duncan owned more than 15 plantations in Mississippi and Louisiana.


John Burneside of Ascension, Louisiana: 753

ABS_Houmas-House-Plantation-in-Burnside.jpg



Burneside was the largest sugar producer in the country during his time at the Houmas Plantation. Before he died, he owned 10 different plantations.


Meredith Calhoun of Rapides, Louisiana: 709

Screen-Shot-2014-12-19-at-5.44.45-PM-600x477.png



Plantations belonging to Calhoun surrounded the riverboat landing that would one day become the town of Colfax. At the peak of production, the Calhoun plantations held more than 700 Blacks in slavery and produced more cotton than any other property in Louisiana. The Calhouns established one of the largest sugar mills in Louisiana, and the estate was valued in excess of $1 million in the 1860 census, a considerable holding at that time.


William Aiken of Colleton, South Carolina: 700

ABS_William-aiken-600x886.jpg



Aiken was one of the state’s wealthiest citizens, owner of the largest rice plantation in the state — Jehossee Island — with over 700 enslaved Blacks on 1,500 acres under cultivation, almost twice the acreage of the next largest plantation. By 1860, Aiken owned the entire Jehossee Island, and the plantation produced 1.5 million pounds of rice in addition to sweet potatoes and corn — in the middle of the 19th century, rice was king in South Carolina — of the 10 largest cash crops in 1850, seven were rice, two cotton and one sugar. After the Civil War, the plantation regained its preeminence, producing 1.2 million pounds of rice. Today, descendants of the Aiken family, the Maybanks, still own part of the island, having sold the remainder in 1992 to the U.S. as part of the ACE Basin National Wildlife Refuge.


Gov. John L. Manning of Ascension, Louisiana: 670

Screen-Shot-2014-12-19-at-5.24.23-PM-600x440.jpg



Manning owned at least two plantations holding 670 Blacks against their will. One in South Carolina and another in Louisiana. He was a major supporter of succeeding from the Union.


Col. Joseph A. S. Acklen of West Feliciana, Louisiana: 659

ABS_YoungCol-Joseph-Acken-600x779.jpg



As the second husband to “the mistress of Belmont” Adelicia Acklen, Joseph Acklen tripled the value of his wife’s million-dollar estate. They had seven Louisiana cotton plantations; the 2,000-acre Fairvue Plantation in Gallatin, Tennessee; more than 50,000 acres of undeveloped land in Texas; stocks and bonds; and 659 enslaved Blacks.


Gov. Robert Francis Withers Allston of Georgetown, South Carolina: 631

ABS_-Robert.jpg



His family was able to maintain two houses in Georgetown and several plantations, including the Allston ancestral home on the Pee Dee River, Chicora Wood — one of the five plantations Robert Allston owned, with over 900 acres and more than 600 enslaved Blacks.


Joseph Blake of Beaufort, South Carolina: 575

ABS_BonnyHall-Plantation-600x312.jpg



The Blake family enslaved Black people for generations on a rice plantation in Beaufort (Prince William’s Parish). Joseph Blake had two plantations, one in Prince William’s Parish and another in St. Peter’s Parish. The former one was called Bonnie/Bonny Hall, on the Combahee River, south of the town of Yemassee, with 330 acres.
 
Kefta. Say that shit....

Sent from Clayton County Department of Corrections using Pay Phone
 
damn those dudes look so easy to kill to...

I just want to know how many slave rebellions


were there really?


and if that was the real reason blacks became free..?
 
<s>Plantations</s>
Slave Labor Death Camps


gordonHIRESAP6301010507-400.jpg



"...By 1820, the ability of enslaved people in southwestern frontier fields to produce more cotton of a higher quality for less drove most other producing regions out of the world market. Enslaved African Americans were the world’s most efficient producers of cotton. And they got more efficient every year, which is why the real price of the most important raw material of the industrial revolution declined by 1860 to 15 percent of its 1790 cost, even as demand for it increased by 500 percent (see Table 4.1). Cotton also drove US expansion, enabling the young country to grow from a narrow coastal belt into a vast, powerful nation with the fastest-growing economy in the world..."


The excerpt above is from the book below. 98% of you peeps will not read the book. Slave labor death camps built the United States into the 'superpower' it became. The slave laborers were African Americans. The slave ships carrying captive African bodies from Africa stopped arriving at Charleston South Carolina in 1808. The vast expansion of the slave labor camps was populated henceforth by forcing African women to breed as many children as possible. The tremendous increase in the amount of cotton grown & harvested (productivity) was accomplished by the "whipping-machine". The "whipping-machine" was 24/7 torture and terrorism against the African American slave labor captives. Slaves were assigned a daily quota amount of cotton to be picked daily. If the slave didn't meet the quota he/she was whipped with the bull whip. If the slave meet the quota, the quota was then slightly increased. If the increased quota was not met the slave was whipped with the bull whip. The threat of having a child or sibling sold off to another slave labor camp was also used to terrorize a slave laborer into increasing their "productivity". The bull whip was used incessantly. Many slave labor commandants including George Washington and Thomas Jefferson thought that all slave labor camp workers should receive periodic bull whip whippings even if they met their quotas; they saw the bull whip whipping as a pertinent reminder to the slave laborer ****** for he/she to remember that they were just ni66ers. Read the book, The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism





baptist_the_half_has_never_been_told_slavery_and.jpg


Download Epub ebook

Code:
http://depositfiles.com/files/b5snw4qt4



25% of American adults have not read a single book in the past year; they haven't cracked a paperback, fired up a Kindle, or even hit play on an audiobook while in the car. The number of non-book-readers has nearly tripled since 1978! READ- HERE







Narrative from the video above starts @ 1:20-<blockquote>

"....A slave entered the world in a one room dirt floor shack, drafty in winter, reeking in summer. Slave cabins breed typhus, pneumonia, cholera, lockjaw, tuberculosis. A child who survived to be sent to the fields at 12 was likely to have rotten teeth, worms, dysentery, and malaria. Fewer than four slaves out of 100 lived to age sixty. Work began at sunrise and continued 14 hours, unless there was a full moon when the work continued longer...."
</blockquote>




<hr noshade color="#0000ff" size="10"></hr>
 
Back
Top