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slavery in pennsylvaniaSlave merchants and dealers used by Pennsylvaniansarticle by George F. Nagle,
Afrolumens Project editor. IntroductionPennsylvania residents who wished to purchase a slave had several options. They could buy a slave in a privately arranged sale, from a neighbor or acquaintance who had a slave for sale. They could also read their local newspapers, or regional newspapers, such as The Pennsylvania Gazette, for advertisements of slaves being offered for sale (see examples of slave advertisements from newspapers). Some of these were private sales, while others were public sales, or auctions, generally held to settle the estate of a deceased slave holder. Most of these options are discussed in detail on the webpage "Buying a Slave."Another option was to visit a professional dealer in slaves. Prior to passage of the Gradual Abolition Law by the Pennsylvania legislature in the year 1780, the sale of slaves by merchants was legal. Several slave merchants were located in or near Philadelphia, as the ports and wharves of that city made it easy to import slaves on merchant ships. When, in 1761, legislation was passed imposing a hefty £10 duty on imported slaves, the mercantile firms simply landed the slave ships at wharves in Delaware and New Jersey, and took customers to the slaves for inspection. Many of the Pennsylvania merchants who sold slaves also carried a large inventory of other items, and none are known to have been solely involved in slave trading. After 1780, it became illegal to purchase slaves for importation into Pennsylvania. But slave traders flourished in nearby cities, notably Baltimore, Richmond and Washington. Some Pennsylvania residents maintained residences in Maryland or Virginia, where they could legally hold slaves. Pennsylvania
OthersThe following persons may or may not have been regular Pennsylvania merchants. Some may have been itinerant merchants or traveling entrepreneurs who did limited business in Philadelphia, moving from port to port hawking their cargo of goods, including slaves. Many do not list a regular place of business, advertising instead to meet clients at a particular wharf, or at another established place of business. Additional information from our readers on any of these persons is welcome.
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2007
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