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  2. Children of the plantation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Children_of_the_plantation

    Others treated their multiracial children as property; Alexander Scott Withers, for instance, sold two of his children to slave traders, where they were sold again. Alex Haley's Queen: The Story of an American Family (1993) is a historical novel, later a movie, that brought knowledge of the "children of the plantation" to public attention.

  3. Matilda and Nathaniel Jackson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matilda_and_Nathaniel_Jackson

    His father owned a plantation, relying on the labor of enslaved people. Nathaniel was raised in Alabama. [1] He developed a relationship with Matilda Hicks, an enslaved woman on the Jackson's plantation. [1] [5] She was born around 1801. [6] Their first child was born around 1829. [5] In 1840 and 1850, Nathaniel lived in Wilcox, Alabama.

  4. Emma Tillman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emma_Tillman

    [2] [3] Her maiden name, Faust, had been adopted from the plantation owner who owned her father's family before the Civil War, Cane Faust. [2] [4] The family moved to Glastonbury, Connecticut in 1900, [2] [5] where Tillman became the only African-American attending Glastonbury High School, graduating in 1909 as the first African-American to do ...

  5. Benjamin Harrison IV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Harrison_IV

    Benjamin Harrison IV was born in a small house on the plantation named "Berkeley Hundred" or "Berkeley Plantation". [5] The immigrant of his family is thought to have come from London and earlier from Northampton. [6] He completed his studies at The College of William & Mary and became the family's first college graduate. [7]

  6. Henry Middleton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Middleton

    Henry Middleton was born in 1717 on the family plantation, "The Oaks", near Charleston, Province of South Carolina.He was the second son of Susan (née Amory) Middleton (1690-1722) and Arthur Middleton (1681–1737), a wealthy planter who had served as an acting governor of South Carolina. [2]

  7. Shadow family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shadow_family

    "Family amalgamation among the Men-stealers" (Picture of Slavery in the United States of America by Rev. George Bourne, published by Edwin Hunt in Middletown, Conn., 1834) A shadow family was an unacknowledged child or children created by a white male slave owner with a female slave. Often they lived in physical proximity to their father, and a ...

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  9. Charles Hill Carter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Hill_Carter

    He also paid taxes on another 67 younger slaves, 16 horses, and 70 cattle on that plantation. He had another 16 adult slaves, 22 enslaved children, and additional livestock at his Long Bridge plantation in the same county. [6] Charles Carter also inherited and acquired plantations in other Virginia counties.