John R. White
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John Rucker White (1872) was a plantation owner, farmer, and interstate slave trader working out of the U.S. state of Missouri in the 25 years prior to the American Civil War. He was primarily active in Missouri and Louisiana, but also trafficked in people from Kentucky and Virginia. He has been described as "by far the largest and most successful slave trader who operated in the mid-Missouri area." According to a 1914 history of slavery in Missouri, "John R. White of Howard County was a wealthy planter of good repute who dealt in slaves." Howard County lies along the banks of the Missouri River, a tributary of the Mississippi River, in a section of Missouri known as Little Dixie (Missouri), Little Dixie, which had plantation slavery very much in the style of the Deep South. There is a "John R. White, Slave Record Book (1846–1860)" in the Chinn Collection of the Missouri Historical Society in St. Louis, from which researchers of slavery garner, "For traders in the lower Mississippi River valley, the most significant development was the arrival of Steamboats of the Mississippi, steamboats during the 1820s. Most large traders in that region, such as John White from Missouri, used these vessels to transport the hundreds of Missouri, Kentucky, and Virginia slaves that they and their agents bought each year to Louisiana and other states in the Deep South."


Biography

John Rucker White was born in approximately 1799 in Kentucky. In 1830, White was a resident of Howard County, Missouri, as head of a household of 17 people, including five slaves. In 1840, White lived in Richmond Township, Howard County, in a household of 20, including 13 slaves. White's place may have been located near Salt Fork (Bonne Femme Creek tributary), Salt Creek. In 1847, a resident of Lafayette, Louisiana placed an ad in a New Orleans newspaper in hopes of finding a 20-year-old "wikt:quarteron, quateroon girl" named Anna or Hanna Johnson, who was "purchased from Col. J. R. White of this city in December, 1845, who brought her to this city from St. Louis, in the state of Missouri." White may have been trading in New Orleans in partnership with a man named William S. Green sometime before 1848. Circa 1848, White may have been part of a firm called White & Tooly. An ad from this company, italics presumably added by the abolitionist author, appears in William I. Bowditch's ''Slavery and the Constitution'' (1849): In 1849, Thomas Selby of Columbia, Missouri, placed a runaway slave ad describing a man named Bill, who had emancipated himself from White's farm (twice). The nature of Selby and White's professional or personal relationship is unclear, but year prior, according to the 20th-century history ''Bench and Bar of Boone County'', "In 1848, 'Lewis, a free person of color', was prosecuted for 'aiding and assisting in decoying Caroline, a slave, the property of Thomas Selby...Selby was proprietor of Selby's Hotel in Columbia, and Caroline waited on the hotel table. Lewis, who had been liberated by his former master, visited Caroline and told her of the benefits of freedom. So Lewis had to go to jail." There was also a slave trader named William Selby working in the area. J. R. White from Fayette, Missouri, Fayette (the county seat of Howard County) was on the guest register at the Verandah Hotel in New Orleans in May 1850, and "J. R. White, Mo." was at the Verandah again in April 1852. In between, he placed a runaway slave ad seeking to find a six-foot-tall man called Bob who "had a great impediment in his speech." White may have operated a Slave markets and slave jails in the United States, slave depot in New Orleans in 1854 in partnership with Thomas Foster (slave trader), Thomas Foster. In 1855 the papers reported that there had been a cholera outbreak in the vicinity of Columbia, Missouri, and that there were "upwards of thirty cases on the farm of Mr. John R. White four miles east of New Franklin, Howard county — one death, a little negro boy. The disease was brought to the farm by a family from St. Louis in which city quite a number of cases have occurred." A month later a doctor visiting White's plantation claimed to have detected Arsenic poisoning, arsenic in the coffee and other food and concluded that there was a plot to poison the family, a crime laid to a missing slave. A runaway slave ad in Louisiana in 1860 sought to recover Sam, who had been purchased from Henry A. Castle who had bought him from Col. John R. White of St. Louis, Mo. At the time of the 1860 U.S. census, White legally enslaved 76 people. In 1864, following the Emancipation Proclamation and the establishment of the U.S. Colored Troops, "Seven of John R. White's slaves—William, Adam, Alfred, Sam, Andy, Preston, and Jacob—all enlisted together at the Fayette [County, Missouri] United States Army Provost Marshal General#American Civil War, provost marshal post in the first weeks of January. White was one of Missouri's largest slaveholders; the seven who joined represented a mere tenth of White's holdings, though it signified collective action on the part of a portion of his slaves." At some point in his trading career, in an example of family separation in American slavery, "John R. White sold a small child to William Quisenberry of Boone County, but sold the mother in Louisiana..." White died in 1872.


Negro-Trader White

There is a figure called Negro-Trader White (or Nigger-Trader White) who appears in the History of slavery in Missouri, histories of slavery in Missouri and History of slavery in Louisiana, Louisiana. It is not entirely clear that the name refers to John R. White, although Frederic Bancroft seemed to think so. In reverse order of appearance in the histories: * From a 2000 article about an 1850s slavery case in Louisiana: "The first of the many questions of identity raised by the Morrison case concerns the slave trader whom she sued. He was originally identified in the case as John Rucker White, a slave trader from Howard County, Missouri. Testimony and documents introduced in the case, however, prove that he was James White (slave trader), James White from Georgia, who owned a slave pen in New Orleans in the 1850s. I take the original mistake to be evidence both of how Alexina Morrison first identified herself when she escaped and of a general local knowledge of the slave trade: She must have identified herself as having run from 'Negro trader White,' and when she did, people thought they knew whom she was talking about." * From a 1908 ''Kansas City Star'' article about Missouri in the American Civil War, "Lafayette County, Missouri, Lafayette county was intensely Southern to its sentiment. There still stands on Main street of the town of Lexington, Missouri, Lexington the building known as the 'slave pen' where 'Nigger Trader White'...kept unruly slaves whom he bought from their owners. When this dealer in 'black ivory' had a boat load sold to the planters down the river the 'pen' was emptied. To be sent 'down the River' was to a Missouri slave the greatest tragedy that could befall him." According to in 1914, there were two slave traders named on an 1861 map of Lexington, one of whom had a three-story pen and was called J. R. White. * The autobiography of H. C. Bruce, published in 1895, recalled the collapsing slave trade in Missouri during the war:


Records

In 1937 the ''Missouri Historical Review'', the journal of the Missouri Historical Society, reported, "Through the courtesy of Mr. R. B. Chinn of Rocheport, Missouri, the Society has been permitted to make photostatic copies of two rare volumes containing the records of John R. White, a slave dealer of central Missouri. The first of these volumes contains records from December 24, 1844, to June 12, 1846; the second seems to date from 1846 to 1860. Note is made of the name of the slave bought, often the vendor, the price paid, to whom sold, and the price received, as well as occasional other data on price of transportation, medical care, board and room, loss by death, and so forth. Twenty-one additional papers, consisting of 44 pages, bring this unusual acquisition to a total of 254 pages."


See also

* List of American slave traders * History of slavery in Missouri * Boone's Lick State Historic Site


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:White, John R. 1790s births 1872 deaths 19th-century American planters 19th-century American slave traders Businesspeople from New Orleans History of slavery in Missouri People from Kentucky People from Howard County, Missouri Year of birth uncertain