What were common slave owner names?
What were common slave owner names?
What were common slave owner names?
Slaveholder Names
Slaveholder Last, First Name | County (or Parish), State | Slave Name |
---|---|---|
Bell, Robert and Quarrier, Monroe | Louisville, KY | Ned |
Bell, Robert and Quarrier, Monroe | Louisville, KY | Augustus |
Berry, Thomas J., owner | Spotsylvania, VA | George Jackson |
Berry, Thomas J., owner | Spotsylvania, VA | Henry Ware |
What kind of names were given to slaves?
Enslaved people themselves sometimes chose names denoting weather conditions at the time of their child’s birth or some distinctive feature of his or her appearance. Geographic names were common, as were the names of ships or distant ports for enslaved people born in places such as Wilmington or New Bern.
Where did slaves get last names?
After Emancipation, many former slaves adopted new names and surnames. They did so either to take on a surname for the first time, or to replace a name or surname given to them by a former master. Here, three different former slaves discuss their names and the changes they underwent after Emancipation.
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How did slaves pick their last names?
If their parents were married, they would take their father’s surname. When enslaved folks were sold or bequeathed through the enslaver’s family, they would, in most cases, only know their mother’s last name. But some would choose a new surname entirely. “That’s something you have control over,” Berry said.
Did slaves have their owners last name?
It’s a myth that most enslaved blacks bore the last name of their owner. Only a handful of George Washington’s hundreds of slaves did, for example, and he recorded most as having just a first name, says Mary Thompson, the historian at Mount Vernon.