List of last survivors of American slavery

Slavery existed in the United States from its inception in 1776 to its partial abolition with the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution on December 5, 1865, under which it was abolished nationally. The last known survivors who were born into legalized slavery or enslaved prior to the passage of the amendment are listed below. The list also contains the last known survivors in various states which abolished legal slavery prior to 1865. Some birth dates are difficult to verify due to lack of birth documentation for most enslaved individuals.

List of last survivors of American slavery

NameImageBirthDeathNotes and References
Elizabeth Cash GreenJune 2, 1862February 20, 1975Born in Midland, Georgia in 1862, moved to Arkansas in 1882, and died Helena, Arkansas in 1975.[1]
Peter MillsOctober 26, 1861September 22, 1972Born in Prince George's County, Maryland, and died after a pedestrian accident in Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania.[2]
Sylvester MageeMay 29, 1841?October 15, 1971Unverified and purportedly died at 130 years old in Columbia, Marion County, Mississippi.[3][4] Age is unverified, and such a claim would have made him the oldest person in the world, so his birthdate is likely after 1841.
William CasbyJanuary 19, 1857[5]August 17, 1970[6]Photographed on March 24, 1963, by Richard Avedon in Algiers, New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana, with multiple generations of his family.[7][8][9]
Mary Hardway WalkerMay 6, 1848?December 1, 1969Purportedly lived to 121 years old; she had a child who died in his 90s, according to the family Bible on Ancestry.com.[citation needed] She moved from Union Springs, Bullock County, Alabama, to Chattanooga, Hamilton County, Tennessee, where a newspaper article was published about her learning to read in 1966 at age 116.[10]
Anna J. Cooper August 10, 1858February 27, 1964Anna Cooper was a notable academic and activist who was born in slavery Raleigh, Wake County, North Carolina.[11][12]
Josephuspre-1865after August 28, 1963Listed in a bulletin for Martin Luther King Jr.'s 1963 March on Washington as supposedly the last surviving American slave.[13]
Jeff DobyFebruary 6, 1858March 26, 1963Believed to be the oldest living person in South Carolina at the time of 1961 and one of the last living former slaves in South Carolina. Jeff was born in Camden, Kershaw County, and died at the age of 105 in 1963. He was featured in the local newspaper after his 103rd birthday and photographed. Two of his sons would also live to be nearly 100 years old.[14]
Fountain Hughes 1859July 4, 1957[citation needed]Former slave freed in 1865 after the American Civil War. Descendant of Betty Hemings, slave matriarch at Thomas Jefferson's plantation Monticello. Hughes was interviewed in June 1949 about his life by the Library of Congress as part of the Federal Writers' Project of oral histories of former slaves persons. The recorded interview is available online through the Library of Congress and the World Digital Library.
Alfred "Teen" BlackburnApril 26, 1842March 8, 1951Received a Confederate pension in 1929 for accompanying his owner during the Civil War; resided in North Carolina.[15]
John Wesley Washingtonc. 1843May 15, 1951[16]Possibly last surviving former slave living in Washington, D.C.
Eliza Moore1843January 21, 1948One of the last verified surviving American slaves; resided in North Carolina.[17]
William Andrew Johnson February 8, 1858May 16, 1943Believed to be the last surviving person owned by a U.S. President (Andrew Johnson); visited FDR at the White House in 1937.[18][19]
Adeline Dade1853December 1941Possibly one of the last living former slaves in New York.[20]
Harriet Wilson WhitelyMarch 15, 1855April 26, 1941The last living former slave in Fairmont, Fairmont County, West Virginia.[21]
Matilda McCrear1857January 1940The last known survivor of the Clotilda in 1859–1860, the last trans-Atlantic slave ship to arrive in America from Africa.[22]
Redoshi 18481937The next to last known survivor of the Clotilda, the last slave ship to arrive in America.[22]
Delia Garlic 18371937 at the earliestBorn in Virginia; was purportedly 100 years old during an interview with Margaret Fowler in the late 1930s.[23][24] Date of death is unclear.
Cudjoe Lewis 1841July 17, 1935One of the last survivors of the Clotilda, the last slave ship to arrive in America.[25]
Perry Lockwoodca. 18441929Allegedly one of the last living former slaves in lower Delaware; died aged 87.[26]
Reuben Freemanc. 1835c. 1915One of the last slaves in Somerset County, New Jersey; lived in Somerville; was enslaved to William Annin of Liberty Corner.[27] Likely other later survivors because final slaves were not emancipated until 1865 in New Jersey.
Julius Lemonsc. 1850after 1915Possibly last survivor of the Wanderer[28]
David Hendrickson17991900Allegedly the last living former slave sold "on the block" in New Jersey.[29] Likely other later survivors because final slaves were not emancipated until 1865 in New Jersey.
Louise Trittonca. 17801891One of the last living former slaves in Connecticut, and oldest person in New Haven, New Haven County.[30]
Adjua D'Wolf17941868Possibly the last surviving slave in Rhode Island. Adjua was enslaved in Africa, brought to Bristol, Bristol County, Rhode Island, in 1803 and sold to the D'Wolf family, a family of slave traders,[31] after new enslavement was made illegal in Rhode Island.[32] Her death in 1868 was noted in several newspapers around the country, including in the South.[33] James Howland (1758-1859) was also one of Rhode Island's last legal former slaves, and was enslaved until 1842.[34][35] D'Wolf and Howland are likely not the last slaves, due to RI's gradual emancipation with several legally slaves still listed in the 1840 census, and likely enslaved until the 1843 RI Constitution banned all slavery.
Hannah Kelleyca. 1760January 15, 1864Died at 103 years old in Cross Creek, Cross Creek Township, Washington County, Pennsylvania, as possibly the last living former slave in Pennsylvania, formerly owned by John Gardner of Jefferson, Jefferson County.[36]
Margaret Pint17781857Purportedly the last living former slave in New York; she was born into slavery in Westchester County.[37] Likely not the last living former slave, because final emancipation in New York did not occur until July 5, 1827.
Venus Roweca. 17541844Purportedly one of the last living former slaves in Massachusetts, resided in Burlington, Middlesex County.[38]

Discredited

NameImageBirthDeathNotes and References
Charlie Smith1842 (claimed) or 1874 or 1879October 5, 1979Allegedly born in Liberia or United States of America, claimed to be the last Civil War veteran and slave, among other false claims. Discredited and died in Florida in 1979.[39]
Mary Duckworth1861 (claimed), likely between 1874 and 1880April 20, 1983Allegedly born into slavery, but discredited due to census and social security records reporting other later birth dates.[40][41]

See also

References