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Tayloe House


A government document showing claims paid for emancipated slaves to their former owners.

Credit: Kiplinger Library, Historical Society of Washington, D.C.

[CLICK IMAGE TO ENLARGE]


Five hundred and forty-seven dollars and fifty cents. According to the records of the District of Columbia that is the amount that Benjamin Ogle Tayloe, who lived on Lafayette Square, was paid by the federal government for Melinda Lawson, a slave he was forced to free under the District of Columbia Emancipation Act passed by Congress and signed by Abraham Lincoln on April 16, 1862. At the same time, Tayloe received another $547.50 for a second enslaved woman named Catherine Lawson. Slave owners in Washington were paid an average of $300 for each slave they had to free under the Act and ultimately, the federal government paid almost one million dollars for the freedom of approximately 3100 slaves. The District of Columbia Emancipation Act is the only example of compensated emancipation in the United States.

Perhaps Benjamin Ogle Tayloe received more than the average of $300 for Catherine and Melinda Lawson because he was from a prominent and well-connected family. Even though the Lawsons are the only two slaves Tayloe sought compensation for in 1862, we know that his family had held many other slaves on Lafayette Square. Some are listed in the marriage registry at St. John’s Church, also located on the Square. In both the 1830 and 1840 censuses, 7 people are listed as enslaved in Tayloe household. In the 1860 census, 5 are listed. From census to census, the ages of the enslaved people in the Tayloe household change radically, illustrating that slaves were not always allowed to stay in one place for a long period of time. Whether it was because they were “hired out”—that is, rented to other households—or because they were sold or sent to another of their owner’s properties, the lives of the enslaved people on Lafayette Square were often characterized by instability brought about by the decisions of their owners.







RELATED SUBJECTS

Emancipation
TitleDescription
Emancipation in the President's Neighborhood, 1850Emancipation in the President's Neighborhood, 1850
Emancipation Day in Washington, D.C.Emancipation Day in Washington, D.C.
"The Negro Celebration in Washington"1866 article and engraving about Emancipation Celebration in Washington, DC and President Johnson's address.
Emancipation in the District of Columbia - List of the Petitions FiledGovernment document showing claims paid for emancipated slaves to the former owners.


Enslaved People
TitleDescription
Andrew Jackson Statue, Lafayette SquareA slave helps craft this statue and the Capitol's statue of freedom...
The White HouseFrom slavery to sit-ins....
Dolley Madison's HouseA former slave shows charity toward an impoverished First Lady.
St John's ChurchFree and enslaved African Americans are married and baptized at the President's parish...
Weddings at St. John's ChurchSelected entries from the St. John's Church marriage register.
Daniel Webster's HouseA slave plans a daring escape, but has a change of heart...
Decatur HouseWhere Charlotte Dupuy takes a brave stand against slavery.
Ewell HouseBuying, selling, and resisting.
Charlotte DupuyCharlotte Dupuy, an enslaved woman who sued her owner Henry Clay for her freedom.
Lafayette SquareAn enslaved woman buys her freedom and changes the nation's history....
Elizabeth Keckly (1818-1907)Elizabeth Keckly was born into slavery in 1818. She went on to purchase her own freedom and establish a successful dressmaking business.
Frederick DouglassRevered African American leader.
Members of Gadsby's Enslaved HouseholdA list of their names and ages.
Paul JenningsPaul Jennings
Decatur House Slave QuartersMen, women, and children from two families living together in 900 square feet...
Emancipation in the President's Neighborhood, 1850Emancipation in the President's Neighborhood, 1850
"Negro Life at the South"A 1859 painting by Eastman Johnson depicting urban slavery.
"Mrs. Madison's Slaves Again"1848 Newspaper article about the Madison's slaves.
"The Negro Celebration in Washington"1866 article and engraving about Emancipation Celebration in Washington, DC and President Johnson's address.
President's House Carpenters' Roll from May 1795Payment record for carpenters,including five enslaved men, who constructed the President's House.
Emancipation Day in Washington, D.C.Emancipation Day in Washington, D.C.
Bill of Sale for Charlotte Dupuy to Henry ClayBill of Sale for Charlotte Dupuy from James Condon to Henry Clay.
Bill of Sale for Paul Jennings from Dolley Madison to Pollard WebbDocument recording Dolley Madison's 1847 sale of Paul Jennings to Pollard Webb.
Charlotte Dupuy's PetitionLetter written by Robert Beale on behalf of Charlotte Dupuy petitioning the Judges to summon Henry Clay to court.
Decatur House Slave Quarters Floor PlansFloorplans and architectural drawings of the Decatur House slave quarters.
Thomas Greene Bethune [Wiggins], 1849 -1908Photograph of blind piano prodigy Thomas Greene Bethune, the first African American artist to perform at the White House.
Emancipation in the District of Columbia - List of the Petitions FiledGovernment document showing claims paid for emancipated slaves to the former owners.
First page of a letter from Henry Clay to his agent in Washington, Philip Fendall, regarding Charlotte Dupuy's petition for freedomLetter written written by Henry Clay to his agent in Washington, Philip Fendall, regarding Charlotte Dupuy's bid for freedom.
Gadsby Slave Quarters at Decatur House ca.1937Photograph taken by Volkmar Wentzel in 1937 showing the H Street side of the slave quarters at Decatur House.


Slaves
TitleDescription
Dolley Madison's HouseA former slave shows charity toward an impoverished First Lady.
Decatur HouseWhere Charlotte Dupuy takes a brave stand against slavery.
Ewell HouseBuying, selling, and resisting.
Charlotte DupuyCharlotte Dupuy, an enslaved woman who sued her owner Henry Clay for her freedom.
Members of Gadsby's Enslaved HouseholdA list of their names and ages.
Decatur House Slave QuartersMen, women, and children from two families living together in 900 square feet...
Emancipation in the President's Neighborhood, 1850Emancipation in the President's Neighborhood, 1850
"Mrs. Madison's Slaves Again"1848 Newspaper article about the Madison's slaves.
"Negro Life at the South"A 1859 painting by Eastman Johnson depicting urban slavery.
Bill of Sale for Paul Jennings from Dolley Madison to Pollard WebbDocument recording Dolley Madison's 1847 sale of Paul Jennings to Pollard Webb.
Charlotte Dupuy's PetitionLetter written by Robert Beale on behalf of Charlotte Dupuy petitioning the Judges to summon Henry Clay to court.
Decatur House Slave Quarters Floor PlansFloorplans and architectural drawings of the Decatur House slave quarters.
Emancipation in the District of Columbia - List of the Petitions FiledGovernment document showing claims paid for emancipated slaves to the former owners.
First page of a letter from Henry Clay to his agent in Washington, Philip Fendall, regarding Charlotte Dupuy's petition for freedomLetter written written by Henry Clay to his agent in Washington, Philip Fendall, regarding Charlotte Dupuy's bid for freedom.
Gadsby Slave Quarters at Decatur House ca.1937Photograph taken by Volkmar Wentzel in 1937 showing the H Street side of the slave quarters at Decatur House.


Tayloe House
TitleDescription
"The Negro Celebration in Washington"1866 article and engraving about Emancipation Celebration in Washington, DC and President Johnson's address.
Emancipation in the District of Columbia - List of the Petitions FiledGovernment document showing claims paid for emancipated slaves to the former owners.




RELATED WEBSITES

National Archives Online Exhibit on the District of Columbia Emancipation Act

http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/featured_documents/dc_emancipation_act/