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User:Smallbones/List of U.S. congressional slaveholders

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This is a proposed list of people who served in the U.S. Congress who enslaved some of their workers or "owned slaves".

List

[edit]
Name State Congr. district First year in Congress Last year in Congress Congresses served in (numbers) Notes on identity References
William Anderson (Pennsylvania) PA 1st 1809 1819 11 – 13, 15 Chester, Delaware County, Pennsylvania [1]
John C. Breckinridge KY 8th,
Senator
1851 1861 32, 33,
37
U.S. vice president [2]
Aaron Burr NY Senator 1791 1797 2 – 4 U.S. vice president [3]
John C. Calhoun SC 6th,
Senator
1810 1850 13 – 15
22 – 31
U.S. vice president [4]
William Henry Harrison OH 1st,
Senator
1816 1828 14, 15
19, 20
U.S. president [5]
Andrew Jackson TN At-large
Senator
1796 1823 4,
5, 18, 19
U.S. president [5]
Andrew Johnson TN 1st,
Senator
1843 1877 28 – 32
25 – 37, 44
U.S. president [5]
Richard Mentor Johnson KY 3rd, 4th, 5th, 13th
Senator
1806 1835 10 – 15, 21 – 24
16 – 20
U.S. vice president [6]
William R. King NC
AL
5th
Senator
1810 1852 12 – 14
16 – 32
U.S. vice president [7]
James Madison VA 5th, 15th 1789 1797 1 – 4 U.S. president [5]
James Monroe VA Senator 1790 1794 1, 2 U.S. president [5]
James K. Polk TN 6th, 9th 1825 1837 19 – 25 U.S. president [5]
John Tyler VA 23rd,
Senator
1816 1836 14 – 16
20 – 24
U.S. president [5]
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Martin Van Buren NY Senator 1821 1828 17 – 20 U.S. president [5]
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Incomplete list

[edit]

|James Abercrombie

Sen.Clement Comer Clay Ala. Dec. 6, 1829 Nov. 14, 1841 21st - 23rd, 25th - 27th Rep.Newton Nash Clements Ala. Mar. 17, 1879 Mar. 2, 1881 46th Rep.David Clopton Ala. Mar. 3, 1859 Jan. 20, 1861 36th Rep.Williamson Robert Winfield Cobb Ala. Mar. 3, 1847 Jan. 29, 1861 30th - 36th Rep.James La Fayette Cottrell

  1. ^ Ashmead, Henry Graham; Hungerford, Austin N. (1884). History of Delaware County, Pennsylvania. Cornell University Library. Philadelphia, L. H. Everts & co.
  2. ^ Klotter, James C. (1986). The Breckinridges of Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. p.43
  3. ^ Burr, Sherri. "Aaron Burr Jr. and John Pierre Burr: A Founding Father and his Abolitionist Son". slavery.princeton.edu. Retrieved 2020-09-25.
  4. ^ Mosso, Kate (May 16, 2019). "Downtown Charleston protest over statue of slave owner, former Vice President gets heated". WCIV (ABCNews4).
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Whitney, Gleaves. "Slaveholding Presidents". Ask Gleaves. Grand Valley State University. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
  6. ^ Shafer, Ronald G. (February 7, 2021). "He became the nation's ninth vice president. She was his enslaved wife". Washington Post.
  7. ^ slave owner and quite possibly gay, Alabama's William Rufus King was country's 13th VP