Book contents
- Williams’ Gang
- Williams’ Gang
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgments
- Williams–Milburn genealogy
- Introduction The Slave Depot of Washington, D.C.
- Chapter 1 An Ambush
- Chapter 2 The Yellow House
- Chapter 3 Sale and Transportation
- Chapter 4 Mobile to New Orleans
- Chapter 5 Legal Troubles
- Chapter 6 The Millington Bank
- Chapter 7 State v. Williams
- Chapter 8 Slave Trading in “Hard Times”
- Chapter 9 Politics of the Slave Pen
- Chapter 10 Brothers
- Chapter 11 The Louisiana State Penitentiary
- Chapter 12 Closure
- Chapter 13 Perseverance
- Chapter 14 Violet
- Epilogue The Legal Legacy of the Domestic Slave Trade
- Book part
- Notes
- Index
Chapter 8 - Slave Trading in “Hard Times”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 January 2020
- Williams’ Gang
- Williams’ Gang
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgments
- Williams–Milburn genealogy
- Introduction The Slave Depot of Washington, D.C.
- Chapter 1 An Ambush
- Chapter 2 The Yellow House
- Chapter 3 Sale and Transportation
- Chapter 4 Mobile to New Orleans
- Chapter 5 Legal Troubles
- Chapter 6 The Millington Bank
- Chapter 7 State v. Williams
- Chapter 8 Slave Trading in “Hard Times”
- Chapter 9 Politics of the Slave Pen
- Chapter 10 Brothers
- Chapter 11 The Louisiana State Penitentiary
- Chapter 12 Closure
- Chapter 13 Perseverance
- Chapter 14 Violet
- Epilogue The Legal Legacy of the Domestic Slave Trade
- Book part
- Notes
- Index
Summary
While William H. Williams was in jail and otherwise occupied in New Orleans, his jailers, Joshua Staples and Ebenezer Rodbird, and his brother Thomas Williams assumed control of the family slaving operations. This chapter analyzes the Williams brothers’ human cargoes, the geographic scope of their business, and the specific business practices that made them so successful in the trade. Meanwhile, in 1844, Louisiana’s Attorney General, Christian Roselius, secured a re–hearing before the Louisiana state Supreme Court on Williams’ case, based on different legal grounds than in the previous trial. This time, the Supreme Court ruled against William H. Williams.
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- Williams' GangA Notorious Slave Trader and his Cargo of Black Convicts, pp. 187 - 206Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020