Information sur la source

Ancestry.com. Manifestes des esclaves, Nouvelle-Orléans, Louisiane, États-Unis, 1807 à 1860 [base de données en ligne]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. This collection was indexed by Ancestry World Archives Project contributors.
Données originales :

Slave Manifests of Coastwise Vessels Filed at New Orleans, Louisiana, 1807–1860; NAID: 5573655; Microfilm Publication M1895, 30 rolls; Records of the U.S. Customs Service, 1745 - 1997, Record Group 36; The National Archives in Washington, D.C.

 Manifestes des esclaves, Nouvelle-Orléans, Louisiane, États-Unis, 1807 à 1860

Bien qu’une loi de 1807 a interdit le trafic d’esclaves transatlantique aux États-Unis à compter du 1er janvier 1808, les esclaves pouvaient toujours être achetés et vendus (puis transportés) à travers le pays. La même loi qui interdisait le trafic d’esclave étranger régulait également le transport intérieur des esclaves, obligeant les maîtres des navires les transportant via la mer territoriale de fournir un manifeste décrivant leur cargaison d’esclaves lorsqu’ils quittaient ou arrivaient à un port. Les ports de départ ou d’arrivée prévue s’étendaient de la ville de Baltimore dans l’État du Maryland jusqu’au Texas dans le Golf du Mexique. Cette base de données est composée de ces manifestes d’esclaves fournis par les navires quittant ou arrivant au port à la Nouvelle-Orléans.

Historical Background:

Though an 1807 law banned the trans-Atlantic slave trade to the United States as of 1 January 1808, slaves could still be bought and sold—and transported—within the country. The same law that banned the foreign slave trade also regulated the internal transportation of slaves, requiring masters of vessels carrying slaves in coastal waters to provide a manifest detailing their slave cargo when leaving (“outward”) or entering (“inward”) a port. Ports of departure or intended arrival stretched from Baltimore, Maryland, to Texas on the Gulf of Mexico.

About this Database:

Those required slave manifests, provided by ships entering or leaving from the port at New Orleans, make up the records in this database. Not all manifests have survived: there are no inward manifests for 1808–1818 and 1858 and no outward manifests for 1813–1817, 1837, and 1859, for example. Others may have been lost as well.

Using the Records

This collection has recently been indexed by volunteers with the Ancestry World Archives Project and can now be searched by ship name, port and date of departure, date of arrival, name, estimated birth year, gender, and color. The records can also contain the following additional information:

  • Slave’s age and height
  • Date of manifest
  • Slave owners’/shippers’ name(s) and residence
  • Port of destination
  • Captain’s name
  • Dates of certification by the collector of customs

The manifests can also be browsed by date of departure or arrival and ship.

For additional information about this collection, please see the Publication Details, compiled by Clair Prechtel-Klusken, of NARA microfilm series M1895, Slave Manifests of Coastwise Vessels Filed at New Orleans, Louisiana, 1807-1860, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 2007, or visit http://www.archives.gov/genealogy/heritage/african-american/slave-ship-manifests.html.

Updates:
23 Sep 2020: Changes were made to improve the performance of this collection. No new records were added.