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Blacks Found in Laurens & Newberry Counties SC Deeds 1785-1827 | Genealogy Research & African American History Records
Blacks Found in Laurens & Newberry Counties SC Deeds 1785-1827 | Genealogy Research & African American History Records

Blacks Found in Laurens & Newberry Counties SC Deeds 1785-1827 | Genealogy Research & African American History Records" (注:原标题似乎与跨境电商商品无关,可能是历史/家谱类文档。我将其优化为更清晰、包含关键词的标题,并添加了使用场景说明。如果是其他类型商品请提供更多信息以便更好优化。)

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Description

This is the second book in which Mrs. Motes makes the genealogical records of South Carolina’s ante-bellum African-American population more accessible to researchers. On the heels of her Free Blacks and Mulattos in the South Carolina 1850 Census, she has now abstracted all references to African Americans that could be found in the Deed Books for Laurens and Newberry counties, South Carolina, between 1780 and 1827. Both of these counties in northwest central South Carolina were formed from the Ninety-Six District in 1785, so some of the record abstracts actually pre-date the existence of the counties by five years, when deeds were first recorded in Charleston.

Based on Laurens County Deed Books A-L and Newberry County Deed Books A-G, Blacks Found in the Deeds of Laurens and Newberry Counties, SC covers Deeds of Gift, Deeds of Sale, Mortgages, and references to manumission found in deeds, among twenty-six different kinds of deeds found in the Deed Books. Each abstract gives the date the deed was filed; the names and counties of residence of all parties to the transaction; the amount of the transaction, if any; the names of the African Americans mentioned in the sources, along with any identifying comments (age, height, children, etc.); the names of witnesses and the justice of the peace; and the date the deed was recorded. In some cases, the abstracts list the surnames of free blacks, their dates of birth, or an occupation. In all, more than several thousand African-American slaves and freed men and women living in South Carolina between 1780 and 1827 have been rescued from the obscurity of South Carolina’s deed books, and each of them is easily found in the index to Mrs. Motes’ carefully transcribed volume.

Margaret Peckham Motes

(2002), 2006, 5.5" x 8.5", paper, 204 pp.

ISBN: 9780806351568

102-9746