John McDonogh Papers. Land transactions involving free people of color, 1829-1832. - John McDonogh Papers. Land transactions involving free people of color, 1829-1832.

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Title
John McDonogh Papers. Land transactions involving free people of color, 1829-1832.
Biographical Information
John McDonogh (1779-1850) was a merchant, land speculator, plantation owner, slaveholder, and philanthropist of Baltimore and New Orleans. At his plantation near New Orleans, McDonoghville, he gave his enslaved persons religious and vocational training as well as the ability to purchase their freedom after fifteen years of work. He collaborated with the American Colonization Society to send about 80 of his freed slaves to Liberia in 1842. Born in Baltimore, Maryland to John and Elizabeth Wilkins McDonogh, he lived in New Orleans from 1800 until he died in 1850. In his will, he bequeathed the bulk of his fortune to the cities of Baltimore and New Orleans for the purpose of building public schools for poor white and freed black children.</br></br>Andrew Durnford (1800-1859) was a free person of color and slaveholder who owned the St. Rosalie Plantation in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. He was the son of Rosaline Mercier, a free woman of color, and Thomas Durnford, a white merchant. When his father died, the curatorship of his estate fell to his friend, John McDonough, who subsequently became Andrew's business associate, mentor, and friend. Andrew married Marie Charlotte Remy, a free woman of color; their children were Thomas, Rosema, and Andrew, Jr.</br></br>Marie Rose Jusson (flourished 1830) was a French-speaking, free woman of color and landowner of Jefferson Parish, Louisiana. She owned property in the city of McDonogh, which she purchased from John McDonogh.
Date Created
1829 - 1832
Description
Acts of sale for land tracts sold by John McDonogh to Andrew Durnford and Marie Rose Jusson, who were free people of color. The transactions of 1829 and 1832 convey parcels of land in Plaquemines Parish to Andrew Durnford, expanding the site of the St. Rosalie Plantation. The conveyance of 1830 transfers land in the city of McDonogh to Marie Rose Jusson. One document in French.
Type of Resource
text
Size
3 items.
Language
English
Source
Louisiana Research Collection, Howard-Tilton Memorial Library, Tulane University, New Orleans, La., http://larc.tulane.edu/
Digital Collection
Revealing an Unknown Past: Free People of Color in Louisiana and the Lower Mississippi Valley
Repository Collection
John McDonogh Papers, Manuscripts Collection 30, Louisiana Research Collection, Tulane University.
Shelf Location
Manuscripts Collection 30, Box 14
Contact Information
To inquire about ordering copies of these images, email larc@tulane.edu.
Rights
Physical rights are retained by the Louisiana Research Collection. Copyright of the original material is retained in accordance with U.S. copyright laws. Permission to reproduce this image must be requested through the repository that holds the original.
Preferred Citation
John McDonogh Papers, Manuscripts Collection 30, Louisiana Research Collection, Howard-Tilton Memorial Library, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 70118.
Related Collections
John McDonogh Papers, RG 13, Louisiana State Museum Historical Center.; Nicholas Bauer Collection, RG 243, Louisiana State Museum Historical Center.; St. Rosalie Plantation Record, Manuscripts Collection B-90, Louisiana Research Collection, Tulane University.
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