Volume 32, Number 2 · February 14, 1985

The Free 'Brown' Slaveholders

By C. Vann Woodward
Black Masters: A Free Family of Color in the Old South
by Michael P. Johnson, by James L. Roark

Norton, 422 pp., $22.50

No Chariot Let Down: Charleston's Free People of Color on the Eve of the Civil War
edited by Michael P. Johnson, edited by James L. Roark

University of North Carolina Press, 174 pp., $16.95

Born a slave in 1790, William Ellison purchased his freedom when he was twenty six, and by the time of his death in 1861 he had acquired a fortune. In the numbers of slaves he owned he ranked among the top 1 percent of all slaveholders. He also became a large landowner and planter. Compared with the mean wealth of whites in the South, Ellison's was fifteen times greater. That did not make him the richest free man of color, for there were a half dozen richer in Louisiana, but he was probably the richest who started life as a slave. On the backs of slaves he built his fortune and founded his freedom.



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