Home > > Post Content
|
Like I stated in this blog that his claim is bogus about plantation slavery created this new people particularly from North Carolina. When I researched the archives in Washington, D.C. & Colonial Williamsburg collaborated my hunch.
Two documented plantations in Forsyth & Guilford Counties and the Hairston plantation in Forsyth was only 900 acres????????
The current population of the Piedmont Triangle is 1,589,200 and the so-called black american make-up at least of third of the population.???
Now do the numbers and check-out the data from the records in Raleigh, N.C. the capital.
Source:
African Americans make up nearly a quarter of North Carolina's population. The number of middle-class blacks has increased since the 1970s. African Americans are concentrated in the state's eastern Coastal Plain and in parts of the Piedmont Plateau, where they had historically worked and where the most new job opportunities are. African-American communities number by the hundreds in rural counties in the south-central and northeast, and in predominantly black neighborhoods in the cities: Charlotte, Raleigh, Durham, Greensboro, Fayetteville, Wilmington and Winston-Salem.
Until the mid-1820s, North Carolina had more small farms and fewer plantations than adjacent South Carolina and Virginia. These "yeoman" farmers were non-slave-holding (or owning few slaves), private land owners of tracts of approximately 500 acres (2 km²) or less. Relatively few blacks live in the state's mountains and rural areas of the western Piedmont. In some mountain counties, the black population has historically numbered in the few dozens at most.
Free African Americans migrated in the colonial and post-Revolutionary period to frontier areas of North Carolina from Virginia. Detailed family histories of 80% of those counted as "all other free persons" in the 1790-1810 federal census show they were descendants of African Americans free in Virginia during the colonial period. As boundaries were then more permeable, most free African families descended from unions between white women, free or servant, and African men, free, servant or slave. Indians who adopted English customs became part of free African American communities and married into the families. Some of the lighter-skinned descendants formed their own distinct communities, often identifying themselves as Indian or Portuguese to escape effects of the color line.
Native Indian Population Source Data:
North Carolina has the highest American Indian population in the East Coast. The estimated population figures for Native Americans in North Carolina (as of 2004) is 110,198. To date, North Carolina recognizes eight Native American tribal nations within its state borders:[18]
- The Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians were federally recognized in 1868 and received state recognition in 1889. The Eastern Cherokee live in eastern Swain County, as well as Graham and Jackson counties, and have roughly 13,400 enrolled members, most of whom live on a reservation properly called the Qualla Boundary. The Reservation is slightly more than 56,000 acres (230 km²), and is held in trust by the federal government specifically for the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.
- The Lumbee tribe, the largest in the state with 54,000 members, was recognized by the state in 1885. In 1956, Congress recognized the Lumbee but denied them benefits received by other federally recognized tribes. Since the 1980s, the Lumbee have been seeking full federal recognition. The Lumbee are concentrated chiefly in the southeastern portions of the state in Robeson, Scotland, Hoke and Cumberland counties.
- The Haliwa-Saponi Tribe of Native Americans received state recognition in 1965. The tribe comprises a little more than 3,800 enrolled members who reside in northeastern North Carolina's Halifax and Warren counties.
- The Waccamaw Siouan Indian Tribe received state recognition in 1971. The almost 2,000 members are located in the mid-Atlantic North Carolina counties of Bladen, andColumbus.
- The Coharie Tribe first received state recognition in 1911. North Carolina rescinded recognition in 1913 but formally recognized the tribe in 1971. The population of 1,781 enrolled members is located in Sampson and Harnett counties.
- The Sappony received state recognition in 1911 as the Indians of Person County. In 2003 they officially received state permission to change their name to the Sappony Tribe. They have 850 enrolled members.
- The Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation received state recognition in 2002. They have a population of 800 members who reside in Orange and Alamance counties.
- The Meherrin are a tribe of Iroquoian-descent located primarily in rural northeastern Hertford, Bertie, and Gates counties, with a population of 557 enrolled members.
Furthermore, though they are not state-recognized, Robeson County has a significant number of descendants of the Tuscarora, who are currently attempting to gain state recognition. Only five states: (California, Arizona, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Texas), have larger Native American populations than North Carolina.[19] The total Native American and Alaska Native population in the United States is 2,824,751, or 0.95% of the total.
This is Harry's response to my question to him.
He had none and he needs to stop this charade telling everyone that all black americans came from plantation slavery with that Old Englishmen put his seed into his compliant black american female slave???
Response:
Now since the Piedmont Triangle Towns of Winston-Salem- High Point- Greensboro has tons of black americans dating back to at least the 1700's?
Why were there only two documented "Slave Plantations" in that entire region and Reynolds Tobacco built their fortune in that city?
The closest county was Rockingham County with three plantations!
Since all black americans come from slave plantation explain this in your own backyard please? Monday, September 7th 2015 at 4:10PM Yaiqab Saint | delete |
 |
Saint,
I am not from Winston Salem, N.C. but I have to be here and inside the territory God is giving us. I am divinely claiming it that when it happens you would believe that I am Black America’s first genuine prophet. Our country will be from the Northern borders of N.C. and Virginia into the Gulf of Mexico and from the middle of the Mississippi River into the Atlantic Ocean
It is quick a few. Escaping was fruitless! God had to come for us!
Monday, September 7th 2015 at 4:40PM |
Posted By: Yaiqab Saint
Tuesday, September 8th 2015 at 10:04AM
You can also
click
here to view all posts by this author...
|
 |
More information and since the population of North Carolina currently is only eclipsed by Texas, Florida, Georgia (barely), Virginia (barely). Plus the size and number of black americans are huge. It is impossible to believe his fantasy that all black americans were created by the so-called white English man from the fruits of plantation slavery. To support my statement in 1729 North Carolina had only 6000 slaves in the entire state ???? Reference Statement: The growth of slavery in North Carolina From Slavery in North Carolina. Provided by UNC Libraries. Colonial legacies Slavery has been part of North Carolina’s history since its settlement by Europeans in the late 1600s and early 1700s. Many of the first slaves in North Carolina were brought to the colony from the West Indies or other surrounding colonies, but a significant number were brought from Africa. Records were not kept of the tribes and homelands of African slaves, however, so it’s impossible to know the exact ethnic make-up of North Carolina’s slave population. Because of its geography, North Carolina did not play a large part in the early slave trade. The string of islands that make up its Outer Banks made it dangerous for slave ships to land on most of North Carolina’s coast, and most slave traders chose to land in ports to the north or south of the colony. The one major exception is Wilmington; located on the Cape Fear River, it became a port for slave ships due to its accessibility. By the 1800s, blacks in Wilmington outnumbered whites 2 to 1. The town relied on slaves’ abilities in carpentry, masonry, and construction, as well as their skill in sailing and boating, for its growth and success. The colony also lacked the extensive plantation system of the Lower South colonies. When Carolina split into the North and South colonies in 1729, North Carolina had about 6,000 slaves, a fraction of the slave population of South Carolina. As the plantation system expanded across the Lower South, many North Carolina slaves were “sold south” to work on these large plantations. Slaves deeply feared this fate because it usually meant permanent separation from friends and family. Because extensive records were not kept, and many existing records have been lost, we don’t know a great deal about the slaves of the North Carolina colony beyond basic information. By 1767, there were about 40,000 slaves in the colony. About 90 percent of these slaves were field workers who performed agricultural jobs. The remaining 10 percent were mainly domestic workers, and a small number worked as artisans in skilled trades, such as butchering, carpentry, and tanning. Records do exist detailing the colonial laws that whites enacted to control slaves. The first set of these laws, the North Carolina Slave Code of 1715, required slaves to carry a ticket from their master whenever they left the plantation. The ticket stated where they were traveling and the reason for their travel. The 1715 code also prevented slaves from gathering in groups for any reason, including religious worship, and required whites to help capture runaway slaves. A second set of even stricter laws was put into place in 1741. These laws prevented slaves from raising their own livestock and from carrying guns without their master’s permission, even for hunting. The law also limited manumission, or freeing of slaves. It stated that a master could only free a slave for “meritorious services,” and even then the decision had to be approved by the county court. Perhaps the most ominous of all the laws was the one regarding runaway slaves. It stated that if runaways refused to surrender immediately, they could be killed and there would be no legal consequences. After the Revolution The ban on importing slaves to North Carolina was lifted in 1790, and the state’s slave population quickly increased. By 1800, there were around 140,000 blacks living in North Carolina. A small number of these were free blacks, who mostly farmed or worked in skilled trades. The majority were slaves working in agriculture on small- to medium-sized farms. As in the colonial period, few North Carolina slaves lived on huge plantations. Fifty-three percent of slave owners in the state owned five or fewer slaves, and only 2.6 percent of slaves lived on farms with over 50 other slaves during the antebellum period. In fact, by 1850, only 91 slave owners in the whole state owned over 100 slaves. Because they lived on farms with smaller groups of slaves, the social dynamic of slaves in North Carolina was somewhat different from their counterparts in other states, who often worked on plantations with hundreds of other slaves. In North Carolina, the hierarchy of domestic workers and field workers was not as developed as in the plantation system. There were fewer numbers of slaves to specialize in each job, so on small farms, slaves may have been required to work both in the fields and at a variety of other jobs at different times of the year. Another result of working in smaller groups was that North Carolina slaves generally had more interaction with slaves on other farms. Slaves often looked to other farms to find a spouse, and traveled to different farms to court or visit during their limited free time.
Tuesday, September 8th 2015 at 1:09PM
Yaiqab Saint
|
 |
Saint, You are just talking about North Carolina! But, I am talking about 8 confederate slave states from the northern borders of N.C. into the Gulf of Mexico and from the middle of the Mississippi into the Atlantic Ocean is going to be our country. However, all Black American slaves are my people and that includes Texas and Virginia e.g. other states out side of what states our country is going to consist off. So, I am not just talking about N.C. my son. I am talking about more states than N.C. my boy! Don’t read what you want to read. Read exactly what is there. Read just what I am saying and nothing else.
Tuesday, September 8th 2015 at 3:11PM
Harry Watley
|
 |
Okay please list all the States I will refute your claims as easily as North Carolina. I want an exact list too!. You must be getting nervous now???????
Tuesday, September 8th 2015 at 4:17PM
Yaiqab Saint
|
 |
Give me a county that you where born in too??? or adjacent for further proof your wrong about so-called black americans being born out of the ashes of the Old Englishman???? Because the Old Dutch men, Germans, Irish, Polish, and other groups of Caucasians owned slaves too! I will give you the statistical numbers of each European slaveowner by country of origins too!
Tuesday, September 8th 2015 at 4:21PM
Yaiqab Saint
|
Home
|
|
|