fbpx
Wikipedia

Franklin and Armfield Office

The Franklin and Armfield Office, which houses the Freedom House Museum, is a historic commercial building in Alexandria, Virginia (until 1846, the District of Columbia). Built c. 1810–1820, it was first used as a private residence before being converted to the offices of the largest slave trading firm in the United States, started in 1828 by Isaac Franklin and John Armfield. Another source, using ship manifests (lists of slaves) in the National Archives, gives the number as "at least 5,000".[4]

Franklin and Armfield Office
Freedom House in 2022
Location1315 Duke Street,
Alexandria, Virginia
Coordinates38°48′14″N 77°3′17″W / 38.80389°N 77.05472°W / 38.80389; -77.05472
Area27 acres (11 ha)
Built1810 (1810)
ArchitectRobert Young
Architectural styleFederal
NRHP reference No.78003146
VLR No.100-0105
Significant dates
Added to NRHPJune 2, 1978[2]
Designated NHLJune 2, 1978[3]
Designated VLROctober 16, 1979[1]

The 1315 Duke Street building is located just west of Alexandria's Old Town, on the north side of Duke Street between South West and South Payne streets. It is a three-story brick building, topped by a mansard roof and resting on a brick foundation. Its front facade is laid in Flemish bond, while the sides and rear are laid in common bond. It has Federal-period styling, with windows and the entrance door set in segmented, arch openings, with gabled dormers at the roof level.[5]

The building was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1978, and has also been designated a Virginia Historic Landmark. The building was formerly owned by the Northern Virginia Urban League which operated it as a museum, with exhibits about the slave trading firm and the life of a slave.[6][7]

The City of Alexandria purchased the building in March of 2020 and reopened it as a museum in June of 2022.[8]

History edit

The building was constructed as a residence in the 1810s by Robert Young, a brigadier general in the District of Columbia Militia. Due to financial reverses, Young was soon afterward forced to sell the house.

Franklin & Armfield edit

The building was purchased in 1828 by Isaac Franklin and his intimate friend and nephew-by-marriage John Armfield, who established it as their Washington-area office, and the residence of Armfield.[9]

 
The Franklin and Armfield house with its neighboring slave pens in 1836.
Cash in Market.

The subscribers having leased for a term of years the large three story brick house on Duke Street, in the town of Alexandria, D.C. formerly occupied by Gen. Young, we wish to purchase one hundred and fifty likely young negroes of both sexes, between the ages of 8 and 25 years. Persons who wish to sell will do well to give us a call, as we are determined to give more than any other purchasers that are in market, or that may hereafter come into market.

Any letters addressed to the subscribers through the Post Office at Alexandria, will be promptly attended to. For information, enquire at the above described house, as we can at all times be found there.

FRANKLIN & ARMFIELD

— advertisement in the Alexandria Phoenix Gazette, May 17, 1828[4]

The property then extended further east, and they added structures for holding and trading in slaves. They also provided, for 25¢ a day, housing in their jail for slaveowners visiting Washington.[10]: 292  The two-story extension to the rear of this house was part of the slave-holding facilities, which included high walls, and interior chambers that featured prison-like grated doors and windows.

The firm also commissioned three slave ships for use as packets. One of their ads describing these was reprinted in William I. Bowditch's Slavery and the Constitution (1849): "ALEXANDRIA AND NEW ORLEANS PACKETS. — Brig Tribune, Samuel C. Bush, master, will sail as above on the 1st January; brig Isaac Franklin, William Smith, master, on the 15th January; brig Uncas, Nathaniel Boush, master, on the 1st February. They will continue to leave this port on the 1st and 15th of each month, throughout the shipping season. Servants that are intended to be shipped will at any time be received for safe keeping at twenty-five cents a day. JOHN ARMFIELD, Alexandria."[11]

Circa 1833–34, Franklin & Armfield had trading agents in at least five cities:[12][13]

Other agents associated with Franklin & Armfield included:

  • John Ware, Port Tobacco, Md.
  • William Hooper, Annapolis, Maryland
  • A. Grimm, Fredericksburg, Virginia.

Franklin left the business, starting in 1835, and Armfield sold the property to their former trading agent George Kephart in 1836.

Franklin and Armfield sold more enslaved people, separated more families, and made more money from the trade than almost anyone else in the United States. They amassed a fortune equalling billions in today's dollars (2021) and were two of the nation's richest men. Franklin sold slaves from an office in Natchez, Mississippi, with branch offices in New Orleans, St. Francisville, and Vidalia, Louisiana. His nephew Armfield handled the supply, sending agents door-to-door in Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware looking for enslaved people their owners might like to sell, and arranging transportation.[14][15]

Maryland and Virginia had surpluses of slaves and spoke of slaves as an export, like livestock. As portrayed in Uncle Tom's Cabin, there was a vast, internal forced migration of enslaved people from the Upper South to the Lower South, and Franklin and Armfield were central to that business. "In surviving correspondence, they actually brag about raping enslaved people who they’ve been processing through the firm."[14]

Price, Birch and Co. edit

 
"Price Birch & Co Dealers in Slaves", Alexandria, Virginia, 1862

From 1858, the building was occupied by Price, Birch & Co. an American slave trading company founded in 1858 by George Kephart, William Birch, J. C. Cook, and C. M. Price.[10]: 29 [16][17]

Price, Birch & Co. ceased business in 1861.[18][19] Arriving at the Duke street office of the company on May 14, 1861, the Union Army discovered that "The firm had fled, and taken with them all but one of the humans that they sold as slaves — an old man, chained to the middle of the floor by the leg."[20][21] Union forces then took possession of the building until February 2, 1866, using it as a military prison.[5][22][23] Late in the war, it was used as L'Ouverture Hospital for black soldiers, and as housing for contrabands.[10]: 293 

Use after the Civil War edit

After the war, the building's outlying slave pens, of which there are photographs,[17] were torn down. The bricks may have been reused in the construction of the adjacent townhouses.[5] After serving a variety of other uses, the main building is now used for Freedom House Museum, with exhibits devoted to the slave trade. The second floor houses the offices of the Northern Virginia Urban League.

In 2005, the Virginia Department of Historic Resources erected the following marker in front of the building:

Franklin and Armfield
Slave Office (1315 Duke Street)

Isaac Franklin and John Armfield leased this brick building with access to the wharves and docks in 1828 as a holding pen for enslaved people being shipped from northern Virginia to Louisiana. They purchased the building and three lots in 1832. From this location Armfield bought bondspeople at low prices and shipped them south to his partner Franklin, in Natchez, Mississippi, and New Orleans, Louisiana, to be sold at higher prices. By the 1830s they often sold 1,000 people annually, operating as one of the largest slave-trading companies in the United States until 1836. Slave traders continually owned the property until 1861.[24]

Freedom House Museum edit

The Northern Virginia Urban League purchased the building in the 1990s and installed an exhibit in the basement. The rest of the building was used for offices and classroom space.[25]

The Office of Historic Alexandria partnered with the Northern Virginia Urban League in February of 2018 in an effort to maintain and interpret the building. The Urban League received $50,000 from the National Trust for Historic Preservation's African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund that same year.[25]

The City of Alexandria purchased the building from the Urban League in March of 2020.[26][8]

The Freedom House Museum reopened in June of 2022. It houses three exhibits that tell the story of the Black experience in Alexandria and the United States.[27]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Virginia Landmarks Register". Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Retrieved May 12, 2013.
  2. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  3. ^ . National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived from the original on December 31, 2007. Retrieved June 26, 2008.
  4. ^ a b Sweig, Donald (October 2014). "Alexandria to New Orleans: The Human Tragedy of the Interstate Slave Trade" (PDF). Alexandria Gazette-Packet. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
  5. ^ a b c "NHL nomination for Franklin and Armfield Office". National Park Service. Retrieved January 26, 2016.
  6. ^ "Freedom House Museum". The Smithsonian Associates. Retrieved October 5, 2015.
  7. ^ "Alexandria museum of slave trade damaged by winter storms". The Washington Post. March 4, 2015. Retrieved October 5, 2015.
  8. ^ a b "Once a notorious slave pen, it is now a museum on slavery — and freedom". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved February 10, 2023.
  9. ^ Gudmestad, Robert H. (Fall 2003). "The Troubled Legacy of Isaac Franklin: The Enterprise of Slave Trading". Tennessee Historical Quarterly. 62 (3): 193–217. JSTOR 42627764.
  10. ^ a b c Loewen, James W. (1999). Lies Across America. What Our Historic Sites Get Wrong. The New Press. ISBN 1565843444.
  11. ^ "Slavery and the Constitution. By William I. Bowditch". HathiTrust. p. 87. Retrieved January 13, 2024.
  12. ^ Bancroft, Frederic (2023) [1931, 1996]. Slave Trading in the Old South (Original publisher: J. H. Fürst Co., Baltimore). Southern Classics Series. Introduction by Michael Tadman (Reprint ed.). Columbia, S.C.: University of South Carolina Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-64336-427-8. LCCN 95020493. OCLC 1153619151.
  13. ^ Skolnik, Benjamin A. (January 2021). 1315 Duke Street – Building and Property History (PDF) (Report). Office of Historic Alexandria - City of Alexandria, Virginia. pp. 28–29
  14. ^ a b Natanson, Hannah (September 14, 2019). "They were once America's cruelest, richest slave traders. Why does no one know their names?". Washington Post.
  15. ^ Ball, Edward (November 2015). "Retracing Slavery's Trail of Tears". Smithsonian Magazine.
  16. ^ "Andrew Joseph Russell | Slave Pen, Alexandria, Virginia".
  17. ^ a b My Genealogy Hound. "Alexandria, Virginia, Price and Birch, Armsfield and Franklin, Slave Pen, Historic Photos". Retrieved February 12, 2018.
  18. ^ "Out of the Attic: Notorious local slave dealer had hand in Solomon Northup's kidnapping | Alexandria Times | Alexandria, VA". November 7, 2013.
  19. ^ "Franklin and Armfield Office (U.S. National Park Service)".
  20. ^ Conway, Moncure Daniel (1865). Testimonies Concerning Slavery. London: Chapman and Hill. p. 22.
  21. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 14, 2020. Retrieved September 15, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  22. ^ Friedman, Saul S. (2000). Jews and the American Slave Trade. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 9781412826938.
  23. ^ "Congressional series of United States public documents". 1870.
  24. ^ http://www.markerhistory.com/Images/Low%20Res%20A%20Shots/e-131%20franklin%20and%20armfield%20slave%20office%20(1315%20duke%20street).jpg[bare URL image file]
  25. ^ a b "How A Once-Notorious Site of Enslavement Became a Bastion of Black History in Alexandria, Virginia | National Trust for Historic Preservation". savingplaces.org. Retrieved February 10, 2023.
  26. ^ Scott, Chadd. "Reopened Freedom House Museum Focal Point For Exploring Alexandria, Virginia's Rich Black History". Forbes. Retrieved February 10, 2023.
  27. ^ "Journey to Freedom". www.connectionnewspapers.com. Retrieved February 10, 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Artemel, Janice G.; Crowell, Elizabeth A.; Parker, Jeff (1987). The Alexandria slave pen : the archaeology of urban captivity. Washington, D.C.: Engineering Science. OCLC 19028845.
  • Labbe, Savannah (2018). "Hidden History: Alexandria's Slave Pen and the Domestic Slave Trade". The Gettysburg Compiler: On the Front Lines of History. The Gettysburg Compiler: On the Front Lines of History. 329. Retrieved April 3, 2021.

External links edit

  • City of Alexandria: Freedom House Museum
  • Northern Virginia Urban League: Freedom House Museum
  • Freedom House Museum official Web page

franklin, armfield, office, which, houses, freedom, house, museum, historic, commercial, building, alexandria, virginia, until, 1846, district, columbia, built, 1810, 1820, first, used, private, residence, before, being, converted, offices, largest, slave, tra. The Franklin and Armfield Office which houses the Freedom House Museum is a historic commercial building in Alexandria Virginia until 1846 the District of Columbia Built c 1810 1820 it was first used as a private residence before being converted to the offices of the largest slave trading firm in the United States started in 1828 by Isaac Franklin and John Armfield Another source using ship manifests lists of slaves in the National Archives gives the number as at least 5 000 4 Franklin and Armfield OfficeU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkVirginia Landmarks RegisterFreedom House in 2022Show map of Alexandria Historical DistrictShow map of Northern VirginiaShow map of VirginiaShow map of the United StatesLocation1315 Duke Street Alexandria VirginiaCoordinates38 48 14 N 77 3 17 W 38 80389 N 77 05472 W 38 80389 77 05472Area27 acres 11 ha Built1810 1810 ArchitectRobert YoungArchitectural styleFederalNRHP reference No 78003146VLR No 100 0105Significant datesAdded to NRHPJune 2 1978 2 Designated NHLJune 2 1978 3 Designated VLROctober 16 1979 1 The 1315 Duke Street building is located just west of Alexandria s Old Town on the north side of Duke Street between South West and South Payne streets It is a three story brick building topped by a mansard roof and resting on a brick foundation Its front facade is laid in Flemish bond while the sides and rear are laid in common bond It has Federal period styling with windows and the entrance door set in segmented arch openings with gabled dormers at the roof level 5 The building was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1978 and has also been designated a Virginia Historic Landmark The building was formerly owned by the Northern Virginia Urban League which operated it as a museum with exhibits about the slave trading firm and the life of a slave 6 7 The City of Alexandria purchased the building in March of 2020 and reopened it as a museum in June of 2022 8 Contents 1 History 1 1 Franklin amp Armfield 1 2 Price Birch and Co 1 3 Use after the Civil War 2 Freedom House Museum 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory editThe building was constructed as a residence in the 1810s by Robert Young a brigadier general in the District of Columbia Militia Due to financial reverses Young was soon afterward forced to sell the house Franklin amp Armfield edit The building was purchased in 1828 by Isaac Franklin and his intimate friend and nephew by marriage John Armfield who established it as their Washington area office and the residence of Armfield 9 nbsp The Franklin and Armfield house with its neighboring slave pens in 1836 Cash in Market The subscribers having leased for a term of years the large three story brick house on Duke Street in the town of Alexandria D C formerly occupied by Gen Young we wish to purchase one hundred and fifty likely young negroes of both sexes between the ages of 8 and 25 years Persons who wish to sell will do well to give us a call as we are determined to give more than any other purchasers that are in market or that may hereafter come into market Any letters addressed to the subscribers through the Post Office at Alexandria will be promptly attended to For information enquire at the above described house as we can at all times be found there FRANKLIN amp ARMFIELD advertisement in the Alexandria Phoenix Gazette May 17 1828 4 The property then extended further east and they added structures for holding and trading in slaves They also provided for 25 a day housing in their jail for slaveowners visiting Washington 10 292 The two story extension to the rear of this house was part of the slave holding facilities which included high walls and interior chambers that featured prison like grated doors and windows The firm also commissioned three slave ships for use as packets One of their ads describing these was reprinted in William I Bowditch s Slavery and the Constitution 1849 ALEXANDRIA AND NEW ORLEANS PACKETS Brig Tribune Samuel C Bush master will sail as above on the 1st January brig Isaac Franklin William Smith master on the 15th January brig Uncas Nathaniel Boush master on the 1st February They will continue to leave this port on the 1st and 15th of each month throughout the shipping season Servants that are intended to be shipped will at any time be received for safe keeping at twenty five cents a day JOHN ARMFIELD Alexandria 11 Circa 1833 34 Franklin amp Armfield had trading agents in at least five cities 12 13 R C Ballard amp Co Richmond Va J M Saunders amp Co Warrenton Va George Kephart amp Co Fredericktown Md James F Purvis amp Co Baltimore Thomas M Jones Easton Eastern Shore Md Other agents associated with Franklin amp Armfield included John Ware Port Tobacco Md William Hooper Annapolis Maryland A Grimm Fredericksburg Virginia Franklin left the business starting in 1835 and Armfield sold the property to their former trading agent George Kephart in 1836 Franklin and Armfield sold more enslaved people separated more families and made more money from the trade than almost anyone else in the United States They amassed a fortune equalling billions in today s dollars 2021 and were two of the nation s richest men Franklin sold slaves from an office in Natchez Mississippi with branch offices in New Orleans St Francisville and Vidalia Louisiana His nephew Armfield handled the supply sending agents door to door in Virginia Maryland and Delaware looking for enslaved people their owners might like to sell and arranging transportation 14 15 Maryland and Virginia had surpluses of slaves and spoke of slaves as an export like livestock As portrayed in Uncle Tom s Cabin there was a vast internal forced migration of enslaved people from the Upper South to the Lower South and Franklin and Armfield were central to that business In surviving correspondence they actually brag about raping enslaved people who they ve been processing through the firm 14 Price Birch and Co edit nbsp Price Birch amp Co Dealers in Slaves Alexandria Virginia 1862From 1858 the building was occupied by Price Birch amp Co an American slave trading company founded in 1858 by George Kephart William Birch J C Cook and C M Price 10 29 16 17 Price Birch amp Co ceased business in 1861 18 19 Arriving at the Duke street office of the company on May 14 1861 the Union Army discovered that The firm had fled and taken with them all but one of the humans that they sold as slaves an old man chained to the middle of the floor by the leg 20 21 Union forces then took possession of the building until February 2 1866 using it as a military prison 5 22 23 Late in the war it was used as L Ouverture Hospital for black soldiers and as housing for contrabands 10 293 Use after the Civil War edit After the war the building s outlying slave pens of which there are photographs 17 were torn down The bricks may have been reused in the construction of the adjacent townhouses 5 After serving a variety of other uses the main building is now used for Freedom House Museum with exhibits devoted to the slave trade The second floor houses the offices of the Northern Virginia Urban League In 2005 the Virginia Department of Historic Resources erected the following marker in front of the building Franklin and Armfield Slave Office 1315 Duke Street Isaac Franklin and John Armfield leased this brick building with access to the wharves and docks in 1828 as a holding pen for enslaved people being shipped from northern Virginia to Louisiana They purchased the building and three lots in 1832 From this location Armfield bought bondspeople at low prices and shipped them south to his partner Franklin in Natchez Mississippi and New Orleans Louisiana to be sold at higher prices By the 1830s they often sold 1 000 people annually operating as one of the largest slave trading companies in the United States until 1836 Slave traders continually owned the property until 1861 24 Freedom House Museum editThe Northern Virginia Urban League purchased the building in the 1990s and installed an exhibit in the basement The rest of the building was used for offices and classroom space 25 The Office of Historic Alexandria partnered with the Northern Virginia Urban League in February of 2018 in an effort to maintain and interpret the building The Urban League received 50 000 from the National Trust for Historic Preservation s African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund that same year 25 The City of Alexandria purchased the building from the Urban League in March of 2020 26 8 The Freedom House Museum reopened in June of 2022 It houses three exhibits that tell the story of the Black experience in Alexandria and the United States 27 See also edit nbsp Virginia portal nbsp Modern history portalAlexandria Black History Museum Contrabands and Freedmen Cemetery List of National Historic Landmarks in Virginia Lumpkin s Jail National Register of Historic Places listings in Alexandria Virginia Slave trade in the United States Slave markets and slave jails in the United States List of American slave tradersReferences edit Virginia Landmarks Register Virginia Department of Historic Resources Retrieved May 12 2013 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service April 15 2008 Franklin amp Armfield Office National Historic Landmark summary listing National Park Service Archived from the original on December 31 2007 Retrieved June 26 2008 a b Sweig Donald October 2014 Alexandria to New Orleans The Human Tragedy of the Interstate Slave Trade PDF Alexandria Gazette Packet Retrieved February 13 2018 a b c NHL nomination for Franklin and Armfield Office National Park Service Retrieved January 26 2016 Freedom House Museum The Smithsonian Associates Retrieved October 5 2015 Alexandria museum of slave trade damaged by winter storms The Washington Post March 4 2015 Retrieved October 5 2015 a b Once a notorious slave pen it is now a museum on slavery and freedom Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved February 10 2023 Gudmestad Robert H Fall 2003 The Troubled Legacy of Isaac Franklin The Enterprise of Slave Trading Tennessee Historical Quarterly 62 3 193 217 JSTOR 42627764 a b c Loewen James W 1999 Lies Across America What Our Historic Sites Get Wrong The New Press ISBN 1565843444 Slavery and the Constitution By William I Bowditch HathiTrust p 87 Retrieved January 13 2024 Bancroft Frederic 2023 1931 1996 Slave Trading in the Old South Original publisher J H Furst Co Baltimore Southern Classics Series Introduction by Michael Tadman Reprint ed Columbia S C University of South Carolina Press p 59 ISBN 978 1 64336 427 8 LCCN 95020493 OCLC 1153619151 Skolnik Benjamin A January 2021 1315 Duke Street Building and Property History PDF Report Office of Historic Alexandria City of Alexandria Virginia pp 28 29 a b Natanson Hannah September 14 2019 They were once America s cruelest richest slave traders Why does no one know their names Washington Post Ball Edward November 2015 Retracing Slavery s Trail of Tears Smithsonian Magazine Andrew Joseph Russell Slave Pen Alexandria Virginia a b My Genealogy Hound Alexandria Virginia Price and Birch Armsfield and Franklin Slave Pen Historic Photos Retrieved February 12 2018 Out of the Attic Notorious local slave dealer had hand in Solomon Northup s kidnapping Alexandria Times Alexandria VA November 7 2013 Franklin and Armfield Office U S National Park Service Conway Moncure Daniel 1865 Testimonies Concerning Slavery London Chapman and Hill p 22 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 14 2020 Retrieved September 15 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Friedman Saul S 2000 Jews and the American Slave Trade Transaction Publishers ISBN 9781412826938 Congressional series of United States public documents 1870 http www markerhistory com Images Low 20Res 20A 20Shots e 131 20franklin 20and 20armfield 20slave 20office 20 1315 20duke 20street jpg bare URL image file a b How A Once Notorious Site of Enslavement Became a Bastion of Black History in Alexandria Virginia National Trust for Historic Preservation savingplaces org Retrieved February 10 2023 Scott Chadd Reopened Freedom House Museum Focal Point For Exploring Alexandria Virginia s Rich Black History Forbes Retrieved February 10 2023 Journey to Freedom www connectionnewspapers com Retrieved February 10 2023 Further reading editArtemel Janice G Crowell Elizabeth A Parker Jeff 1987 The Alexandria slave pen the archaeology of urban captivity Washington D C Engineering Science OCLC 19028845 Labbe Savannah 2018 Hidden History Alexandria s Slave Pen and the Domestic Slave Trade The Gettysburg Compiler On the Front Lines of History The Gettysburg Compiler On the Front Lines of History 329 Retrieved April 3 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Franklin and Armfield Office City of Alexandria Freedom House Museum Northern Virginia Urban League Freedom House Museum Freedom House Museum official Web page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Franklin and Armfield Office amp oldid 1195280694, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.