The Montgomery Slave Trade - Montgomery, AL
Posted by: hoteltwo
N 32° 22.766 W 086° 18.659
16S E 564812 N 3582703
Marker provides some history behind the enourmous slave trade that occurred in Montgomery in the 1800's. Marker located on Commerce Street near the Hank Williams Museum.
Waymark Code: WMJP3A
Location: Alabama, United States
Date Posted: 12/11/2013
Views: 4
Inscription:
Montgomery had grown into one of the most prominent slave trading communities in Alabama by 1860. At the start of the Civil War, the city had a larger slave population than Mobile, New Orleans, or Natchez, Mississippi. Montgomery attracted a growing number of major slave traders whose presence dominated the city’s geography and economy. The Montgomery probate office granted at least 164 licenses to slave traders operating in the city from 1848 to 1860. Slave trader’s offices were located primarily along Commerce Street and Market Street (now Dexter Avenue). Over time, Montgomery became one of the most important and conspicuous slave trading communities in the United States. After the Alabama legislature banned free black people from residing in the state in 1833, enslavement was the only legally authorized status for African Americans in Montgomery.
Marker Name: The Montgomery Slave Trade
Marker Type: Urban
Addtional Information:: Erected by the Black Heritage Council, Equal Justice Initiative and the Alabama Historical Commission.
Date Dedicated / Placed: 2013
Marker Number: Not Listed
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Visit Instructions:
Please post a photo of you OR your GPS at the marker location. Also if you know of any additional links not already mentioned about this bit of Alabama history please include that in your log.