Nell Irwin Painter's _Sojourner Truth_, p22 notes that in 1827, slaves born after 1799 could be held as indentured (still slaves in effect - whether the census would describe them as such or not I don't know) until age 28 if male, 25 if female. Slaves born before 1799 were free unconditionally. The footnote cites a secondary source - Carl Nordstrom, "The New York Slave Code", in _Afro-Americans in New York Life and History 4, no. 1 (January 1980), p19-20. I thought maybe someone answered this, but couldn't find it if they did. I know I've seen it elsewhere too, inmore detail, but can't lay hands on it now. Hal Morris: [log in to unmask] -- Editor of: * H-SHEAR Web pages: http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~shear * Tales of the Early Republic: http://www.panix.com/~hal Web Resources: Bibliography, Biographical Dict... (work in progress) * Jacksonian Miscellanies: free email weekly of source exerpts. On Mon, 6 Jul 1998, Edward Knoblauch wrote: > Curiously, the 1830 federal census shows 75 slaves in NYState: > > 26 in Montgomery County > 17 in New York County (Manhattan) > 15 in Oneida County > 8 in Washington County > 4 in Putnam County > 3 in Chenango County > 2 in Albany County > > Does anyone have an explanation for this? Because the remaining slaves seem > concentrated in rural counties, I reject the idea that the slaves are > 'sojourners'. Also, 52 of the 75 (69%) were females between 0-35 years of > age. In 1840, when 4 slaves are listed, they are all females (3 in King's > County, 1 in Putnam). By 1850, no slaves are listed in NY State. > > Curious, eh? > > Edward Knoblauch > > > -----Original Message----- > From: John Weiss <[log in to unmask]> > To: [log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]> > Date: Monday, July 06, 1998 9:59 AM > Subject: EMANCIPATION DAY IN NY STATE > > > >Today in 1827 brought final emancipation to New York State. > > > >I am trying to find out how many remaining slaves there were in New York > >State who were emancipated on 4 July 1827. > > > >I should be grateful for any help towards finding the number, and if > >possible the demographic distribution. Names of newspapers current at > >that date would be useful in the absence of hard data, though collections > >here in the UK might be patchy. > > > >John Weiss <[log in to unmask]> > >---------------------------------------------------------------------- > >Researching the four thousand Black Americans > >who took their freedom in the War of 1812 > > >