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A Troublesome Statistic: Traders and Coastal Shipments in the Westward Movement of Slaves

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 August 2013

Richard H. Steckel
Affiliation:
Professor, Economics Department, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210. E-mail: Steckel.1@osu.edu.
Nicolas Ziebarth
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor, Economics Department, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52245. E-mail: nicolas-ziebarth@uiowa.edu.

Abstract

We analyze all slave manifests housed at the National Archives—some 24,400 documents involving approximately 135,000 slaves who were transported in the coastwise trade from 1810 to 1861. The manifests list the name of the owner or shipper, which allows us to match names with traders found in other sources. We also utilize demographic characteristics of the manifests to estimate the probability that a trader organized the shipment. Commercial transactions increased over the antebellum period, and on average were responsible for approximately 55 percent of slaves who migrated from Atlantic to Gulf coast ports.

“No one has ever suggested a method for finding what proportion of the slaves transported from one state to another were taken by their original masters or their heirs for their own use.”

Bancroft 1931, p. 397

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Economic History Association 2013 

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Footnotes

The authors thank Stanley Engerman, Jonathan Pritchett, Richard Sutch, two anonymous reviewers, and commentators at the 2012 Social Science History Association meetings for suggestions and advice. Laura Crispin, Adam Gay, and Andreas Schick provided valuable research assistance.

References

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