Slave names
Joel S. Berson
Berson at ATT.NET
Tue Dec 11 15:17:19 UTC 2007
At 12/11/2007 09:59 AM, Jonathan Lighter wrote:
>Since none of us are quite old enough to remember the period in
>question, the perception that slaves were often given Classical
>names ("Caesar" and "Pompey" in particular) must come from books or
>films. Perhaps "assumption" would be a better word.
>
> Despite the proof that some slaves were indeed given these names,
> the few numbers I've seen don't indicate that they were actually
> "prevalent" at any time. There could have been a thousand more
> prosaically named slaves for every "Caesar."
True -- I have not tried to count the "Adam"s and "Jeremiah"s or the
"John"s and "Mary"s, and the census records aren't reliable for
race. (Although the names in the index to Lorenzo Greene's "The
Negro in Colonial New England" are perhaps useful evidence, and I did
count and compare those names that were "Classical".) But I am
planning to look at the 1937 article mentioned here previously, and
see what kind of data it has.
Joel
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