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The only loss of census records for 1830 involved some countywide losses in Massachusetts, Maryland, and Mississippi. It determined the population of the 24 states to be 12,866,020, of which 2,009,043 were slaves. The center of population was about 170 miles (274 km) west of Washington, D.C. in present-day Grant County, West Virginia. This was ...
In the 1830 federal census, his household included ten enslaved Blacks. [2] Two decades later, in the first federal census with detailed slave schedules and the last before his death, Goode owned 41 enslaved people in Mecklenburg county, ranging from 70 and 50 year old Black women, to 15 children 10 years old or younger.
In the 1830 federal census, Bassett owned 109 enslaved men and women in New Kent County, and 18 in James City County. Edward Bates: Democratic-Republican (Before 1825) National Republican (1825–1834) Whig (1834–1854) American (1854–1860) Republican (1860–1869) Missouri's at-large district Dec. 2, 1827 Mar. 2, 1829 Yes
In the 1830 federal census, Braxton owned 44 slaves in King William County. [6] A decade later, he owned 59 slaves, less than half of whom were employed in agriculture. [ 7 ] In the last census in his lifetime, in 1850, Braxton owned 66 slaves in King William county, including 15 boys and 15 girls 10 years old or younger.
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; United States Census, 1830
Rev. Ruffner owned 4 slaves in the 1820 federal census, [11] 6 slaves in the 1830 federal census, [12] and 4 slaves in the 1840 federal census. [13] He may have freed his slaves after his 1847 publications discussed below, but is missing from the 1850 census as digitized, though entries include merchant Lewis Ruffner in Louisville, Kentucky ...
Theophilus Freeman appears in the 1830 census of Prince William County, Virginia—which is just outside the District of Columbia in northern Virginia—with one enslaved man in his household. [4] There was a letter waiting for Theophilus Freeman at the Monticello, Georgia post office in 1831. [5]
Robert Garlick Hill Kean (October 7, 1828 – June 13, 1898) was a Virginia lawyer. A Confederate States Army officer and bureaucrat during the American Civil War, he helped promulgate the Lost Cause of the Confederacy after the war, particularly since he became one of the last surviving members of the Confederate States bureaucracy.