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The records referenced in these pages highlight some of the records pertaining to slavery that are available at the National Archives. Information and records are arranged by government branch and record group. Series, folders, and items are identified with brief descriptions. This page may provide actual documents that have been digitized and are in the National Archives Catalog. Some of the records are microfilmed, and have been noted.
For more information, see Walter B. Hill Jr. Return to American Slavery Main Page. Phillips, George-Yard, Lombard-Street, Links will take you to the National Archives Catalog description. Some Census records are available in the catalog, others may be offered through Partner Websites.
Congress created the Customs Service on July 31, and made it a part of the Department of Treasury September The service assisted other agencies in the enforcement of the slave trading laws that were passed between to In particular, the law prohibited the transportation of enslaved people after , and section 9 required that all vessels of 40 tons or more carrying enslaved persons in the coastwise trade file duplicate manifests ports of origin and destination showing name, age and description of each person, the name and residence of exporter and consignee, and pledge that the enslaved person had not been imported after Slave Manifests are manifests a document listing the cargo, passengers, or crew of a ship filed with the collector of customs at various ports, of enslaved people transported in coastwise trade during the period Manifests can be "inward" for vessels arriving to a port, and "outward" for vessels departing a port.
Records are usually arranged by type of manifest, and then chronologically. An inward coastwise manifest for the sloop Charles of Wareham, Joshua Gibbs, master, recording the importation, into the Port of Annapolis, on January 15, , of an enslaved person named Ephraim. The document also contains the outward coastwise manifest for the Charles , also dated January 15, , indicating that Ephraim was exported to the individual he was consigned to in Charleston.
An inward coastwise manifest for the sloop Sally and Nancy , J. Vickens master, recording the importation, into the Port of Baltimore, on June 27, This document lists the names of the enslaved persons on board, names of the holder of the enslaved persons, and the enslaved person's place of residence.