|
Appling Atkinson Bacon
Baker
Baldwin Banks
Bartow
Barrow Ben Hill Berrien
Bibb Bleckley
Brantley Brooks Bryan Bulloch Burke
Butts
Calhoun Camden Campbell Candler Carroll Catoosa
Charlton Chatham
Chattahoochee Chattooga Cherokee Clarke Clay
Clayton Clinch Cobb
Coffee Colquitt
Columbia Cook Coweta Crawford Crisp Dade Dawson
Decatur
DeKalb Dodge Dooly Dougherty
Douglas Early Echols Effingham Elbert
Emanuel
Evans Fannin
Fayette Floyd
Forsyth Franklin
Fulton Gilmer
Glascock Glynn Gordon Grady Greene
Gwinnett Habersham Hall Hancock Haralson Harris
Hart Heard
Henry Houston
Irwin
Jackson Jasper Jeff Davis Jefferson Jenkins
Johnson Jones Lamar Lanier Laurens Lee
Liberty Lincoln Long Lowndes Lumpkin Macon
Madison Marion McDuffie McIntosh Merriwether Miller
Milton Mitchell Monroe Montgomery Morgan Murray
Muscogee
Newton Oconee
Oglethorpe
Old Walton
Paulding
Peach Pickens
Pierce Pike Polk Pulaski
Putnam
Quitman Rabun Randolph Richmond Rockdale
Schley Screven Seminole Spalding Stephens Sumter
Talbot
Taliaferro Tattnall
Taylor Telfair
Terrell
Thomas
Tift Toombs Towns Treutlen
Troup Turner Twiggs Union
Upson Walker Walton Ware Warren Washington
Wayne Webster
Wheeler White Whitfield Wilcox
Wilkes
Wilkinson Worth
| |
Chason, John. Runaway Slave Ad, Arch, Decatur,
Dekalb County, GA
Source: Tallahassee Floridian, Oct. 31, 1831
Transcribed and Submitted by Toni Carrier
Ranaway
From the subscriber, on the 25th day of September last, my negro man
ARCH.
He is about 37 or 40 years old; very black; has a scar on the upper
lip;
speaks plain and mildly when spoken to, and is about six feet high,
and well built.
When he went off he had no clothes on but a cotton shirt and a pair
of satinette
pantaloons much worn. He was, also, bare-footed and bare-headed. Any
person who
will bring him to me, or confine him in any jail, will be liberally
rewarded, and
all reasonable expenses paid.
|
|