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  • Writer's pictureZann Nelson

The Louisiana 16: The Route South

Jan 25, 2018 Orange County Review


The departure date is rapidly approaching. Last week I alluded to the considerable factors that fueled route decisions.


The 16 whom I seek, left their home, their families—literally everything they had ever known—for a distant place that might as well have been the moon. Their knowledge of this place called Louisiana was either nonexistent or tainted by rumors of an unbearable climate, deadly diseases and the promise to never see loved ones again.


I cannot take just any path!


It is my considered opinion that they were force-marched the approximately 1,100 miles. I have at the ready several arguments and will detail those at a later date; then readers can decide for themselves. In the interim, it is sufficient to note that records indicate that the largest of slave traders, Armfield and Franklin of Alexandria, transported at least 50 percent of those sold to Louisiana by an overland route.


More compelling is the fact that William Taylor’s destination for the 16 was not New Orleans, but rather his own sugar and cotton fields positioned on the Mississippi upriver from that largest hub of human auction houses and a relatively short 60 miles from Natchez, Miss. He had no need to expend the significantly greater funds to send them by boat to the Port of New Orleans.


In Edward Ball’s article, “Retracing Slavery’s Trail of Tears,” (Smithsonian Magazine 2015), he documents a route taken by Armfield and Franklin in 1834 while transporting overland an estimated 300 slaves destined for sale in New Orleans. This route travels the Great Valley Road of Virginia to Knoxville and Nashville, Tenn., then along the Natchez Trace to Natchez, Miss., where they were loaded onto a boat bound for New Orleans. A map of the various Domestic Slave Trade routes accompanied the article and is included here. I draw your attention to the route marked with a broken line, a route that appears to be more direct and cuts through the northwest corner of Alabama near Huntsville to Natchez. The legend explains that the “precise path [is] unknown.”


I find no benefit in traveling a route that others have well-defined and that today would provide little in the way of period viewscapes. The lesser-known roads were calling; however, a wild goose chase was not the ticket, either. Further research was required.


After what seemed like futile searching, I discovered a digitized booklet “The Traveller’s Directory through the United States…,” published in 1825. In this gem was a route from Washington to New Orleans by way of Huntsville, Ala., via Natchez with this note: “This road is comparatively new but will be a great leading road in a short time.” The route referred to other sections and in each the towns’ distances between them and river crossings were enumerated. I needed to locate a place called Pitchlyns, Miss., and my route would be complete.


Supposedly, Pitchlyns was about three miles from Columbus, Mo. but was showing up nowhere, nada, zilch. A major point on the trail and I was lost. Not quite ready to throw in the towel, I began a search for 1830s maps with roads of Mississippi.


Eureka! On an 1836 map of that cotton- bearing state, Pitchlyns had been noted southwest of Columbus. All the towns listed in the 1825 booklet before it and afterward were recorded on the 1836 map. I had my route and now needed only to map it by Google directions. Stay tuned.


Until next week, be well.


Note: The weekly Buried Truth columns will continue while I am on the project. If you have access to a computer and the Internet and would like to read the more frequent blogs please check out the website www.historyinvestigator.net. You can sign up with an email address for automatic delivery of every posting.


Zann Nelson is a researcher specializing in historical investigations, public speaker and award -winning freelance writer and columnist. She is the President of History Quest and Special Project Director for The African American Descendants’ Quest.

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