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Note: This website was inspired by Andrew Levy’s 2001 article “The Anti-Jefferson,” about Robert Carter III, who freed more slaves than any other slaveholder in American history. Levy has now written a book about Carter, The First Emancipator. I recommend it to anyone interested in the history of slavery or the American character. Details are available in the bibliography. |
It should be a simple question but a search on the web produces a lot of
contradictory answers. One reason is that there are really two questions:
1. How many presidents owned slaves during
their lives? 2. How many presidents owned slaves while they were
president? In the table below I attempt to answer both
questions. I have also included selected quotations from the presidents
and relevant actions they took. Anything in this font refers to something the president did while
serving as president. Anything in this font
refers to an activity of a member of the president’s
family, rather than the president himself. I would appreciate hearing of any mistakes or omissions so
that I can correct them.
Rob Lopresti
revised 8/05
Of the first five presidents, four owned slaves. All four of these owned slaves while
they were president.
Of the next five presidents (#6-10), four owned slaves. Only two of them owned slaves while
they were president.
Of the next five presidents (#11-15), two owned slaves. Both of these two owned slaves while they were president.
Of the next three presidents (#16-18) two owned slaves. neither of them owned slaves while serving as
president.
The last president to own slaves while president was #13, Zachary Taylor (1849-1850).
The last president to own slaves at all was #18, Ulysses S. Grant (1869-1877).
So twelve of our presidents owned
slaves and eight of them owned slaves while serving as president.
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President |
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State
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Did he own slaves?
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Quotations and Actions
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1. George Washington |
1789-1797 |
VA |
Yes.When GW took over While GW was
serving as president in In 1796 Oney
(or Ona) Judge ran away to New Hampshire.She
was one of GW’s slaves – Martha’s
personal servant. President GW asked the Treasury Secretary and a
customs agent for help in getting her back – by force, if necessary - but she
never returned.(Wilkins. P82. also: Gerson) When GW left the presidency
he apparently left some house slaves behind in When he died in 1799 his will called for his manservant William Lee to be
freed immediately, and given a pension. The other slaves were to be
freed when his widow died. Martha chose to free them two years later. According to Abigail Adams this was
because MW feared her life might be in danger, since her death meant freedom
for the slaves.(Hirschfield p 214) Neither
GW nor MW could legally free the dower slaves which still belonged to the Custis estate. |
1786“I can only say that no man living wishes more sincerely than I do to see the abolition of (slavery)…But when slaves who are happy & content to remain with their present masters, are tampered with & seduced to leave them… it introduces more evils than it can cure."(Hirschfield,p187)
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2. John Adams |
1797-1801 |
Mass |
No. |
1820: “I shudder when I think of the calamities
which slavery is likely to produce in this country. You would think me mad if I were to
describe my anticipations. If the
gangrene is not stopped I can see nothing but insurrection of the blacks
against the whites.”(Smith,p 138) click here for more |
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3. Thomas Jefferson |
1801-1809 |
VA |
Yes. TJ inherited many slaves. His wife brought a
dowry of more than 100 slaves, and he purchased many more throughout his
life. At some points he was one of the largest slaveowners
in In 1790 TJ gave his newly married daughter and her husband
1000 acres of land and 25 slaves.(Miller) In 1798 TJ owned 141 slaves, many of them elderly. Two years later he owned 93. (Bigelow,p537.) One of TJ’s slaves was Sally Hemings,
allegedly the half-sister of his deceased wife. During TJ’s presidency a rumor appeared in print that she was
his mistress. TJ denied this story, which was also passed on as Hemings family tradition.The
youngest of Heming’s six children (and the only one
whose paternity can be traced through DNA)
definitely descended from the TJ freed one of Heming’s children and allowed another to run away unpursued.Both of them were light enough to successfully pass for White.(See Miller, p165.) TJ freed five slaves in his will, all members of the Hemings
family.Sally was not among them; TJ’s daughter Martha freed her years later.(See Miller,
p168.) |
1776:“(King
George III) has waged cruel waragainst human
nature itself, violating its most sacred rights of life and liberty in the
persons of a distant people who never offended him, captivating &
carrying them into slavery in another hemisphere, or to incur miserable death
in their transportation thither. This piratical warfare, the opprobrium of
infidel powers, is the warfare of the CHRISTIAN king of
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4. James Madison |
1809-1817 |
VA |
Yes. In 1833 JM sold several of his farms but not his slaves. A year later he sold 16 slaves to a relative - with their permission. (Brant, p637) He did not free his slaves in his will. (Brant p640) |
1819: "A general emancipation of slaves ought
to be 1. gradual. 2. equitable
& satisfactory to the individuals immediately concerned. 3.
consistent with the existing & durable prejudices of the nation...
To be consistent with existing and probably unalterable prejudices in the
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5. James Monroe |
1817-1825 |
VA |
Yes. JM inherited a slave named Ralph. When
he owned the farm |
1801:“We perceive an existing evil which commenced
under our Colonial System, with which we are not properly chargeable, or if
at all not in the present degree, and we acknowledge the extreme difficulty
of remedying it."(Monroe,
1903.v3, p 292-294.)
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6. John Quincy |
1825-1829 |
Mass |
No.
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1841: "What can I do for the cause of God and man, for the progress of human emancipation, for the suppression of the African slave-trade? Yet my conscience presses me on; let me but die upon the breach."(Adams, p 519)
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7. Andrew Jackson |
1829-1837 |
SC |
Yes. AJ bought his first slave, a young woman, in 1788.By 1794 his business included slave trading and he had purchased at least 16 slaves.(Remini,p.37, 55) In the 1820s He did not free his slaves in his will. |
1822: "As far as lenity can be extended
to these unfortunate creatures I wish you to do so; subordination must be
obtained first, and then good treatment."(James,p31)
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8. Martin Van Buren |
1837-1841 |
NY |
Yes, but not while he was president. When MVB was young his father
owned six slaves.(Cole,p13) His only slave, Tom, ran away in 1814 (approx.).When Tom
was found 8 years later, MVB offered him for sale to the finder for
$50. (Cole,p110) |
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9. William Henry Harrison |
1841 |
VA |
Yes, but not while he was president. WHH’s father and
grandfather owned many slaves. WHH took seven of them with him
to the 1801: WHH purchase a runaway slave and later freed
him. He stayed on for many years as a servant.(Cleaves,p351) 1804: WHH was appointed Governor of Indiana territory, which was
“free soil.” He attempted to have slavery made legal there, but
generally followed the law by keeping Blacks as indentured servants who were
free after about a decade of service. (Cleaves,p351) |
1820:“We cannot emancipate the slaves of the other states without their consent… (except) by producing a convulsion which would undo us all. We must wait the slow but certain progress of those good principles which are everywhere gaining ground, and which assuredly will ultimately prevail.” (Cleaves.p254)
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10. John Tyler |
1841-1845 |
VA |
Yes.
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1838:“(God) works
most inscrutably to the understandings of men; - the negro is torn from click here for more |
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11. James K. Polk |
1845-1849 |
NC |
Yes. In 1832 he had fifteen slaves. |
1830:“A slave dreads the punishment of stripes (i.e.
whipping) more than he does imprisonment, and that description of
punishment has, besides, a beneficial effect upon his fellow-slaves.” (Sellers,p186) click here for more |
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12. Zachary Taylor |
1849-1850 |
VA |
Yes. ZT's father owned 26 slaves in
1800. ( In 1847 ZT owned more than 100 slaves. ( ZT supposedly never sold a slave. (Hamilton.P31) |
1847:“So far as slavery is concerned, we of the
south must throw ourselves on the constitution and defend our rights under it
to the last, and when arguments will no longer suffice, we will appeal to the
sword, if necessary.“
(Hamilton. p45) click here for more |
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13. Millard Fillmore |
1850-1853 |
NY |
No.
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1850:“God knows that I
detest slavery, but it is an existing evil, for which we are not responsible,
and we must endure it, and give it such protection as is guaranteed by the
constitution, till we can get rid of it without destroying the last hope of
free government in the world.”(Rayback,p162)
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14. Franklin Pierce |
1853-1857 |
NH |
No.
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1838:“The citizen of
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15. James Buchanan |
1857-1861 |
PA |
Technically no. While
running for the senate from Pennsylvania JB discovered that his sister’s husband owned two slaves in JB was the only president who never
married. For more than a decade he shared a home with Senator William
Rufus King of |
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16. Abraham Lincoln |
1861-1865 |
KY |
No.
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1865:“I have always
thought that all men should be free; but if any should be slaves it should be
first those who desire it for themselves, and secondly those who desire it
for others. Whenever I hear any one arguing for slavery I feel a strong
impulse to see it tried on him personally.”(Lincoln,
1953, v8, p360-1) |
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17. Andrew Johnson |
1865-1869 |
NC |
Yes, but not while he was president. AJ
bought his first slave, a manservant named Sam, in 1837. He eventually owned
8. (Thomas, p87)
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18. Ulysses S. Grant |
1869-1877 |
OH |
Yes. The only evidence that USG owned slaves is a
document he signed in 1859 freeing one, William Jones. However, Grant
certainly had some control over and use of slaves his father-in-law gave his
wife.(Simon, p347) |
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