In the Antebellum Era (c. 1800-60), Southern slaves gambled regularly, both with each other and with free blacks and poor whites. This fact has received a fair amount of scholarly attention. Curiously, however, the reported court opinions involving such gambling have been all but overlooked. Accordingly, this article collects and discusses these decisions. As will be seen, Southern judges often were exasperated by the less-than-precise wording of the laws that were put in place to punish slaves who gambled and whites who facilitated or participated in such gambling
The role risk taking has played in American history has helped shape current legislation concerning ...
A Look at Antebellum Legal History In Fathers of Conscience, Bernie D. Jones, Assistant Professo...
This paper deals with the complexity of the legal system in the American South during the Antebellum...
In the Antebellum Era (c. 1800-60), Southern slaves gambled regularly, both with each other and with...
Over the last several decades, there has been an increasing trend to move away from general prohibit...
Much of the slave trade in Florida centered in Tallahassee, the heart of the cotton belt. New Orlean...
A few weeks before the Second Annual Masters Tournament, a bill to legalize pari-mutuel wagering loo...
The mules had been shot. When the mules, regularly left to forage for themselves amid the Florida sc...
This article presents the original finding that South Carolina\u27s legal system conducted a majorit...
This Essay examines two major strands of nineteenth-century jurisprudence related to gambling: South...
Only a few decades ago, it was possible to write accounts of the culture or economy of the antebellu...
In June 1820 a Savannah slave named George Flyming was convicted by a jury of white male freeholders...
This legal history article presents a new understanding of the nature of slave property. Slave prope...
This legal history article presents the empirical finding that the risk of family separation at slav...
This article draws on more than 600 higher court cases in eight southern states to show that African...
The role risk taking has played in American history has helped shape current legislation concerning ...
A Look at Antebellum Legal History In Fathers of Conscience, Bernie D. Jones, Assistant Professo...
This paper deals with the complexity of the legal system in the American South during the Antebellum...
In the Antebellum Era (c. 1800-60), Southern slaves gambled regularly, both with each other and with...
Over the last several decades, there has been an increasing trend to move away from general prohibit...
Much of the slave trade in Florida centered in Tallahassee, the heart of the cotton belt. New Orlean...
A few weeks before the Second Annual Masters Tournament, a bill to legalize pari-mutuel wagering loo...
The mules had been shot. When the mules, regularly left to forage for themselves amid the Florida sc...
This article presents the original finding that South Carolina\u27s legal system conducted a majorit...
This Essay examines two major strands of nineteenth-century jurisprudence related to gambling: South...
Only a few decades ago, it was possible to write accounts of the culture or economy of the antebellu...
In June 1820 a Savannah slave named George Flyming was convicted by a jury of white male freeholders...
This legal history article presents a new understanding of the nature of slave property. Slave prope...
This legal history article presents the empirical finding that the risk of family separation at slav...
This article draws on more than 600 higher court cases in eight southern states to show that African...
The role risk taking has played in American history has helped shape current legislation concerning ...
A Look at Antebellum Legal History In Fathers of Conscience, Bernie D. Jones, Assistant Professo...
This paper deals with the complexity of the legal system in the American South during the Antebellum...