According to the 1790 US Census, 94% of US slaves lived south of the Mason-Dixon Line.
By 1750, about 200,000 slaves lived in the colonies.
Know more than 500 slaves lived ina plantation
?Roman slaves were not "stored". They were given living quarters and some of them may have been a type of hut, especially the rural slaves. However for the most part slaves lived in their own quarters. The public slaves and the slaves of the large farms lived in barracks, while domestic slaves lived in the same house as their owner.
They Were No More Slaves?
slaves and english
The effect of the American Revolutionary War on African Americans depended on where they lived. If they were slaves in the New England States, they were freed soon after the war ended. If they were slaves north of the Mason Dixon Line, they were freed about 30 years after the adoption of the constitution. If they were south of the Mason Dixon Line, some were freed but most were not.
i believe most plantations were privately owned so i think you would probably be best off looking for who had the most land, money, house capabilities, etc. back before the emacipation proclimation that lived below the mason dixon line. i would say it would be a pretty safe bet to say if they lived below that line and had fields of cash crops, that's where the most slaves would be kept. just my 2 cents spend them wisely.
There are many Bain families in the US. Unless some specific Bain ancestors are identified, along with where and when they lived, it would be impossible to answer this question.
President Ronald Reagan once lived in Dixon, Illinois when he was growing up.
They were slaves....so bad.
Perry Mason lived in Los Angeles in an apartment.
By 1750, about 200,000 slaves lived in the colonies.
George mason lived in Gunston Hall Virgina.
depends on how many slaves there were
Know more than 500 slaves lived ina plantation
?Roman slaves were not "stored". They were given living quarters and some of them may have been a type of hut, especially the rural slaves. However for the most part slaves lived in their own quarters. The public slaves and the slaves of the large farms lived in barracks, while domestic slaves lived in the same house as their owner.
462,198 slaves lived in GA according to the official US census of 1860.