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Title: First Slave Owner in America was Black
Source: Wikipedia
URL Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Johnson_(colonist)
Published: Jun 23, 2015
Author: Wikipedia
Post Date: 2015-06-23 14:28:57 by cranko
Keywords: None
Views: 12654
Comments: 50

I love actual history. Not the stuff the left makes up, but real, actual history.


Anthony Johnson was an Angolan who achieved freedom in the early 17th century Colony of Virginia, where he became one of the first black property owners and slaveholders. Held as an indentured servant in 1621, he earned his freedom after several years, which was accompanied by a grant of land. He later became a successful tobacco farmer. Notably, he is recognized for attaining great wealth after having been an indentured servant and has been referred to as “'the black patriarch' of the first community of Negro property owners in America".

Johnson was captured in his native Angola by an enemy tribe and sold to Arab slave traders. He was eventually sold as an indentured servant to a merchant working for the Virginia Company.

Johnson was sold to a white planter named Bennet as an indentured servant to work on his Virginia tobacco farm. Servants typically worked under an indenture contract for four to seven years to pay off their passage, room, board, lodging and freedom dues. In the early colonial years, most Africans in the Thirteen Colonies were held under such contracts of indentured servitude.

When Anthony Johnson was released from servitude, he was legally recognized as a "free Negro." He developed a successful farm. In 1651 he owned 250 acres, and the services of four white and one black indentured servants.

In 1653, John Casor, a black indentured servant whose contract Johnson appeared to have bought in the early 1640s, approached Captain Goldsmith, claiming his indenture had expired seven years earlier and that he was being held illegally by Johnson. A neighbor, Robert Parker, intervened and persuaded Johnson to free Casor.

Parker offered Casor work, and he signed a term of indenture to the planter. Johnson sued Parker in the Northampton Court in 1654 for the return of Casor. The court initially found in favor of Parker, but Johnson appealed. In 1655, the court reversed its ruling.[10] Finding that Anthony Johnson still "owned" John Casor, the court ordered that he be returned with the court dues paid by Robert Parker.

This was the first instance of a judicial determination in the Thirteen Colonies holding that a person who had committed no crime could be held in servitude for life.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 10.

#5. To: cranko, Justified, BobCeleste (#0) (Edited)

Blacks and free slaves has much more rights before the Revolution and a generation after for a while - then the Southern Slave states forced free blacks out of the states in many cases. In fact laws were passed that a free slave needed to move on or they would be re-enslaved again.

So by the start of the Civil War southern blacks were less free with fewer rights than ever before. So your effort to white wash (pun not intended but it works) the south is a fail.

If the USA was such a great nation it would have outlawed slavery before the British did between 1833 and 1843.

Pericles  posted on  2015-06-23   15:22:12 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Pericles (#5) (Edited)

If the USA was such a great nation it would have outlawed slavery before the British did between 1833 and 1843.

Oh please. A couple of decades is the difference between Britain being "great" and America being evil? Give us a break.

America has a federalist system, not a a central one. It is also much larger than the U.K. So, change doesn't happen all at once -- it happens over time, one state at a time.

Here are the U.S. States that abolished slavery before Great Britain: Vermont (1777), Pennsylvania (1780), New Hampshire (1783), Massachusetts (1783), Connecticut (1784), Rhode Island (1784), Northwest Territory (1787 - - Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota were never slave states), New York (1799), New Jersey (1804), and Maine (1820).

Who still practices Slavery today? Black Africans. This is yet another fact that the American left doesn't want us to know.

Slavery still haunts Africa, where millions remain captive

cranko  posted on  2015-06-23   15:50:55 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: cranko, Pericles (#7)

(1787 - - Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota were never slave states)

Sorry, Land o' Lincoln Illinois mythology is a pet peeve.

Illinois was a slave state, and when it purportedly "eliminated" slavery, it implemented 99-year indentured servitude.

Illinois Constitution of 1818:

ARTICLE VI.

SECTION I. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude shall hereafter he introduced into this State, otherwise than for the punishment of crimes, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted; nor shall any male person, arrived at the age of twenty one years, nor female person arrived at the age of eighteen years, be held to serve any person as a servant, under any indenture hereafter made, unless such person shall enter into such indenture while in a state of perfect freedom, and on condition of a bona-fide consideration received or to be received for their service. Nor shall any indenture of any negro or mulatto, hereafter made and executed out of this State, or if made in this State, where the term of service exceeds one year, be of the least validity, except those given in cases of apprenticeship.

SEC. 2. No person bound to labor in any other State shall be hired to labor in this State, except within the tract reserved for the salt-works near Shawneetown; nor even at that place for a longer period than one year at anyone time; nor shall it be allowed there after the year 1825. Any violation of this article shall effect the emancipation of such person from his obligatioft to service.

SEC. 3. Each and every person who has been bound to service by contract or indenture in virtue of the laws of Illinois Territory heretofore existing, and in conformity to the provisions of the same, without fraud or collusion, shall be held to a specific performance of their contracts or indentures; and such negroes and mulattoes as have been registered in conformity with the aforesaid laws shall serve out the time appointed by said laws: Provided, however, That the children hereafter born of such person, negroes, or mulattoes, shall become free, the males at the age of twenty-one years, the females at the age of eighteen years. Each and every child born of indentured parents shall be entered with the clerk of the county in which they reside, by their owners, within six months after the birth of said child.

One must read that carefully and not stop at the first sentence. Life indenture is another name for slavery. The later 99-year indenture was pretty much slavery under another name, except for Methuselah.

How can a source on Illinois slave history forget the Matson Case. In a state that suppposedly never had slavery, up pops the 1847 Matson trial where Abraham Lincoln represented slave-owner Matson in his effort to retain his slaves.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matson_Trial

Matson Trial

The Matson Trial (1847), officially in re Bryant, was a freedom suit by former slave Anthony Bryant on behalf of his family in Coles County, Illinois. It is noted for the unusual circumstance where Abraham Lincoln, the future emancipator of slaves, defended a slave-owner against a slave. The case pitted Lincoln and former Illinois Attorney General Usher F. Linder against former US Representative Orlando B. Ficklin. Ficklin's case proved successful, and Bryant's family was emancipated based on free soil doctrine.

Kentucky native Robert Matson purchased land in Coles County, Illinois, in 1836. Matson skirted the state laws that banned slavery by bringing slaves for only a year, returning them to Kentucky, and then replacing them with new slaves. Matson emancipated one of his slaves, Anthony Bryant, who acted as his foreman. Bryant's family joined him in Coles County in 1845. Two years later, there was an altercation between Bryant's wife, Jane, and one of Matson's white housekeepers. After the housekeeper threatened Bryant's family, Matson sent one of Bryant's children back to Kentucky.

Concerned about his family, Bryant and his family sought refuge with two local abolitionists, Hiram Rutherford and Gideon Ashmore. Since the rest of his family was still enslaved, this violated state fugitive slave laws. Matson sought to recover the family and enlisted the help of former Illinois Attorney General Usher F. Linder. Linder had recently joined the Whig Party, where he befriended fellow lawyer Abraham Lincoln. Like Lincoln, Linder opposed slavery. He was able to convince a local justice of the peace to imprison the Bryant family in the fall.

Trial

The ensuing court case, in re Bryant, opened in October 1847. Ashmore and Rutherford requested the legal assistance of Lincoln, but found that Lincoln had already agreed to work with Linder to defend Matson. After learning about the request, Linder gave Lincoln permission to instead defend the abolitionists, but Rutherford refused. The abolitionists, on behalf of Bryant, instead enlisted the help of former US Representative Orlando B. Ficklin against Linder and Lincoln.

During the proceedings, Lincoln argued that Bryant intended to only temporary house the Bryants and thus they were covered by an exception for slaves in transit. He also provided evidence supporting the character of Matson. Ficklin defended the Bryants by arguing that any man in a free state becomes free. The Coles County judges sided with Ficklin, noting that the Bryants' two-year tenure in Illinois exceeded any possible transit exception.

Aftermath

The Bryants later resettled in Liberia. Similar arguments to Lincoln's were used by Chief Justice Roger B. Taney in the Dred Scott v. Sandford decision. The case remains a controversial event in the development of Lincoln's views on slavery. Lincoln may have taken the case because of recent financial troubles. He may also have defended Matson knowing that he could not win, or perhaps because he did believe that Matson's legal rights were being violated.

http://216.125.204.247/People/Slavery%20In%20Illinois.htm

Slavery In Illinois

Jarrot v. Jarrot

by Vincent J. Lopinot

[...]

The first session of the new state legislature in 1819 saw the passage of a set of black laws copied from the slave codes of Virginia and Kentucky. These laws were passed with intention of driving free Negroes either out of Illinois or into the voluntary servitude system. Under these laws the free black man had no civil or political rights. He could not testify in court, hold political office or vote. A Negro could be subject to execution and sale as personal property. A free black person in Illinois could be sold into involuntary slavery if he did not possess the correct certificate of freedom. There was little difference between the alternatives which the black man faced. Both alternatives were servitude; only the title was different.

The Supreme Court of Illinois in the case of Phoebe v. Jay (1828) recognized the reality of the "involuntary system." The majority opinion stated that,

Nothing can be conceived farther from the truth, than the idea that there could be a voluntary contract between a negro and his master. The law authorizes the master to bring his slave here, and take him before the clerk and if the negro will not agree to the terms proposed by the master, he is authorized to remove him to his original place of servitude. It would be an insult to common sense to contend that the negro has any free agency. The only choice given him was a choice of evils. On either hand servitude was to be his lot.

The case of Phoebe v. Jay recognized that the effect of "voluntary servitude" was the same as slavery. In both cases the negro was held in servitude. Through the Northwest Ordinance prohibited slavery, the system of "voluntary servitude" provided for in the Illinois constitution of 1818 and the Black laws of the next year, was virtually just that; slavery.

[...]

It was reported in the New York Times,

But from the year 1807 to, perhaps, the present hour, a considerable class of persons in the State of Illinois have been held in involuntary servitude, in nearly all respects the same as Slavery proper, in, at least, seeming contravention of the ordinance of 1787. The contrivances introduced to elude the ordinance are ingenious, and in the hands of dishonest or blundering politicians and complaisant judges, have been eminently successful.

”Slavery in Illinois”, New York Times, 17 Mar 1854.

Illinois has admitted it,

http://ilga.gov/legislation/95/SJR/09500SJ0044.htm

		SJ0044 		LRB095 11803 KXB 34806 r

1 SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION

2 WHEREAS, The State of Illinois, at the time of its 3 acceptance into the Union in 1818 and for a longtime 4 thereafter, practiced de facto slavery masqueraded as 5 "indentured servitude"; the census of 1840 enumerated slaves in 6 Illinois in violation of the Ordinance of 1787, which outlawed 7 slavery in the Northwest Territories; and

8 WHEREAS, The State of Illinois passed the infamous and 9 unjust Black Laws (1819), otherwise known as the Black Codes, 10 which were a denial of human rights designed to cover up 11 slavery and the slave trade within the borders of the State; 12 and

13 WHEREAS, The State of Illinois supported the Black Codes 14 for more than forty-six years until they were finally repealed; 15 and

16 WHEREAS, In the State of Illinois the majority of Illinois 17 citizens favored closing the State to African-American 18 residents and withholding the right of citizenship from those 19 African-American residents already living in the State; and

20 WHEREAS, The State of Illinois passed dehumanizing laws 21 stating that slaves were not persons, but property, and as

		SJ0044 	- 2 - 	LRB095 11803 KXB 34806 r

1 property the ownership of enslaved Africans was to be fully 2 protected by Illinois law; and

3 WHEREAS, For many years, Black people, free or otherwise, 4 had no legal status as citizens in the State of Illinois; and

5 WHEREAS, The East St. Louis massacre on July 2, 1917 was 6 the scene of violent attacks on the Black populace; a bitter 7 and destructive riot ran on for nearly a week; 312 buildings 8 were destroyed; some reports claimed 39 African-Americans were 9 killed, while another source reported 200 to 300 deaths, 10 including women and children; and

11 WHEREAS, On August 14 and 15, 1908, a riot broke out in the 12 State Capital of Springfield; Scott Burton was lynched during 13 the riot and Joe James was lynched after the riot; there were 14 lootings, buildings and property were destroyed, and Walter 15 Donegan was hung in a tree, his throat slit open, and his body 16 mutilated; and

17 WHEREAS, Chicago faced a riot in the week of July 27 18 through August 2, 1919; one of the country's most violent and 19 racially motivated attacks on Blacks occurred; 38 people were 20 killed, 537 were injured, and 1,000 people found themselves 21 homeless; and

 
		SJ0044 	- 3 - 	LRB095 11803 KXB 34806 r

1 WHEREAS, The Chicago Commission on Race Relations rendered 2 a full report studying the Black Community (The Negro in 3 Chicago) and ignored studies of the white offenders and their 4 communities; and

5 WHEREAS, The racial altercations throughout the State of 6 Illinois during the turbulent decade of the 1960's resulted in 7 the Kerner Commission Report, or The Report of the National 8 Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders; and

9 WHEREAS, There is a need for special investigations into 10 the unknown number of African-Americans killed during race 11 riots in the State of Illinois; therefore, be it

12 RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE NINETY-FIFTH GENERAL 13 ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 14 CONCURRING HEREIN, that a special commission, to be known as 15 the Illinois Riot and Reparations Commission, be formed to 16 study historical events in the State of Illinois, particularly 17 those events that resulted in the loss of African-American 18 lives and property; and that if the study presented by the 19 Commission warrants a second commission be formed to look into 20 the payment of reparations to the survivors and their 21 descendants; and be it further

22 RESOLVED, That the Commission be made up of four members of

 
		SJ0044 	- 4 - 	LRB095 11803 KXB 34806 r

1 the Illinois Senate, two to be chosen by the President of the 2 Senate, and two to be chosen by the Senate Minority Leader; 3 four members of the Illinois House of Representatives, two to 4 be chosen by the Speaker of the House, and two to be chosen by 5 the House Minority Leader; the Executive Director of the 6 Illinois Human Rights Commission, or his or her designee, and 7 the Director of the Illinois State Historical Society, or his 8 or her designee; all of whom shall serve without compensation 9 but shall be reimbursed for their reasonable and necessary 10 expenses; and be it further

11 RESOLVED, That the Commission shall meet at the call of the 12 President of the Senate and shall make a report of its findings 13 to the General Assembly no later than January 7, 2009, and upon 14 making its report shall be dissolved; and be it further

15 RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be 16 delivered to the Executive Director of the Illinois Human 17 Rights Commission and the Director of the Illinois State 18 Historical Society.

Below is a site which provides links to documents of 99-year indentured servitude. This is what Illinois considered the elimination of slavery, and some modern myth makers say there was never slavery in the state of Illinois.

http://www.eiu.edu/past_tracker/esrace.php

African American

Indenture of Judith, Pope County, 1818 / Typed Transcription

This indenture was written in 1818, the year Illinois became a state. The indenture system was used to get around the abolition of slavery in Illinois. It resulted in slave conditions, as evidenced by this indenture of a woman named Judith. The 17-year-old was bound to 99 years of service through this indenture.

Citation: Turnbaugh, Dr. Roy C. Jr. and Robert E. Bailey. Windows to the Past: A Selection of Illinois County Records from 1818 to 1880. Springfield: Illinois State Archives, 1985. Used by permission of the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency.

nolu chan  posted on  2015-06-23   19:05:55 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 10.

#15. To: nolu chan (#10)

Illinois was a slave state, and when it purportedly "eliminated" slavery, it implemented 99-year indentured servitude.

But the good news was that they became free after working for 99 years!

sneakypete  posted on  2015-06-23 19:19:07 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#22. To: nolu chan (#10)

Illinois was a slave state, and when it purportedly "eliminated" slavery, it implemented 99-year indentured servitude.

Okay, so instead of just posting it here, go update Wikipedia. They would love you because you have references to cite.

cranko  posted on  2015-06-23 20:14:31 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 10.

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