Patience
- Name
- Patience
- Sex
- Female
- Record(s) Seen In
- Inventory, Appraisements, and Sales Book 5
- Inventory, Appraisements, and Sales Book 1
- Will Book 1-1: 1839-1885
- Page and Line Number
-
IAS 5: PP. 2
IAS 1: PP. 466 - Date(s) Seen in Records
-
IAS 5: March 28, 1865
IAS 1: December 9, 1848
Will Book 1: April 1849 - Name of Enslaver
- Frances A. Deatin
- Bequeathed to
- John Deaton
- Appraised Alongside
- Willed and appraised alongside the following individuals.
- James
- Peggy
- Harriett
- Priscilla
- Mariah
- Blanch
- Mary
- Paul
- Ellen
- Ned
- John
- William
- Matt
- Henry
- Amelia
- Additional Information
- A value of $250.00 was placed on Patience (in Confederate State dollars).
- In the sale bill dated December 9, 1848 it was said that Patience should remain "in possession" of Frances Deatin's husband John. Mariah and the other enslaved people valued alongside her were "to be hired out for a term of years until their hire shall pay of debt due to the estate of John Foster decd. amounting to five hundred dollars more or less."
- Other enslaved people listed alongside Patience in the December 9 sale bill are Mariah, Amelia, William, Henry, Blanch, Priscilla, Harriet, Peggy, James, Mary, and "their future increases," which is to say their future children and their children's children.
- Bequeathed to Frances Deaton's husband in April of 1849. They were "to be hired out to others to pay off the Deaton family's debt of $650.00, the enslaved individuals are to be freed after" the debt was paid. Once freed they were to be set up with jobs locally and able to keep their earnings, living on the family land until they had enough funds to relocate to a free state. They had the option to decline this offer and pick another "master" or "mistress." Though the wording may have seemed simple, the process for the manumission of enslaved individuals was a more complicated process.
Part of Patience