Milton Public Library

Slavery's Reach, Southern Slaveholders in the North Star State, Christopher Lehman

Label
Slavery's Reach, Southern Slaveholders in the North Star State, Christopher Lehman
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Slavery's Reach
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Christopher Lehman
Sub title
Southern Slaveholders in the North Star State
Summary
From the 1840s through the end of the Civil War, leading Minnesotans invited slaveholders and their wealth into the free territory and free state of Minnesota, enriching the area's communities and residents. Dozens of southern slaveholders and people raised in slaveholding families purchased land and backed Minnesota businesses. Slaveholders' wealth was invested in some of the state's most significant institutions and provided a financial foundation for several towns and counties. And the money generated by Minnesota investments flowed both ways, supporting some of the South's largest plantations. Minnesotans eagerly catered to this source of investment. Politicians and officeholders like Henry Sibley, Henry Rice, and Sylvanus Lowry worked for a slaveholder; the latter two recruited wealthy southern slaveholders to invest in property. Six hundred residents of the new state of Minnesota petitioned the legislature to make slavery legal for vacationing southerners who brought with them enslaved men and women "as body servants, for their comfort and convenience" while they escaped the summer heat of the South. Through careful research in obscure records, censuses, newspapers, and archival collections, Christopher Lehman has brought to light this hidden history of northern complicity in building slaveholder wealth
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Content