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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 6. (ed. Frank Moore). Search the whole document.
Found 14 total hits in 10 results.
Cincinnati (Ohio, United States) (search for this): chapter 77
New Orleans (Louisiana, United States) (search for this): chapter 77
New-Orleans, Oct. 10.--A case of some interest to the cullered population was decided, yesterday, by Judge Kinsman.
It appears that a free colored man named John Montamat was married to a slave woman, by whom he had two children, one of which died; the other, a little girl about eleven years of age, a bright mulatto, quite fair to look upon, still survives, and was the subject of the present legal proceedings.
Montamat, at the time of his marriage, determined to purchase the freedom of his wife from her owner, and, in furtherance of that object, had paid six hundred dollars. In order to secure the freedom of his surviving child, he sent her to Cincinnati, where she was baptized into the Catholic Church.
Montamat, the father, subsequently became involved in debt in this city, and mortgaged his daughter as a slave to secure his creditors.
The mortgage was foreclosed in February, 1862, and the child of this father was sold to a Mr. Slavoie, at sheriffs sale.
In the present case,
A. P. Field (search for this): chapter 77
Slavoie (search for this): chapter 77
Roselius (search for this): chapter 77
Oct (search for this): chapter 77
New-Orleans, Oct. 10.--A case of some interest to the cullered population was decided, yesterday, by Judge Kinsman.
It appears that a free colored man named John Montamat was married to a slave woman, by whom he had two children, one of which died; the other, a little girl about eleven years of age, a bright mulatto, quite fair to look upon, still survives, and was the subject of the present legal proceedings.
Montamat, at the time of his marriage, determined to purchase the freedom of his wife from her owner, and, in furtherance of that object, had paid six hundred dollars. In order to secure the freedom of his surviving child, he sent her to Cincinnati, where she was baptized into the Catholic Church.
Montamat, the father, subsequently became involved in debt in this city, and mortgaged his daughter as a slave to secure his creditors.
The mortgage was foreclosed in February, 1862, and the child of this father was sold to a Mr. Slavoie, at sheriffs sale.
In the present case,
Kinsman (search for this): chapter 77
New-Orleans, Oct. 10.--A case of some interest to the cullered population was decided, yesterday, by Judge Kinsman.
It appears that a free colored man named John Montamat was married to a slave woman, by whom he had two children, one of which died; the other, a little girl about eleven years of age, a bright mulatto, quite fair to look upon, still survives, and was the subject of the present legal proceedings.
Montamat, at the time of his marriage, determined to purchase the freedom of his wife from her owner, and, in furtherance of that object, had paid six hundred dollars. In order to secure the freedom of his surviving child, he sent her to Cincinnati, where she was baptized into the Catholic Church.
Montamat, the father, subsequently became involved in debt in this city, and mortgaged his daughter as a slave to secure his creditors.
The mortgage was foreclosed in February, 1862, and the child of this father was sold to a Mr. Slavoie, at sheriffs sale.
In the present case,
John Montamat (search for this): chapter 77
New-Orleans, Oct. 10.--A case of some interest to the cullered population was decided, yesterday, by Judge Kinsman.
It appears that a free colored man named John Montamat was married to a slave woman, by whom he had two children, one of which died; the other, a little girl about eleven years of age, a bright mulatto, quite fair to look upon, still survives, and was the subject of the present legal proceedings.
Montamat, at the time of his marriage, determined to purchase the freedom of his wife from her owner, and, in furtherance of that object, had paid six hundred dollars. In order to secure the freedom of his surviving child, he sent her to Cincinnati, where she was baptized into the Catholic Church.
Montamat, the father, subsequently became involved in debt in this city, and mortgaged his daughter as a slave to secure his creditors.
The mortgage was foreclosed in February, 1862, and the child of this father was sold to a Mr. Slavoie, at sheriffs sale.
In the present case,
February, 1862 AD (search for this): chapter 77
October 10th (search for this): chapter 77