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Anna Madgigine Jai
Kingsley: African Princess, Florida Slave, Plantation Slaveowner
by Daniel L. Schafer
Hardcover: 192 pages
5.5” x 9” (2003)
$24.95
"Undoubtedly the best
documented record of a slave born
in Africa,who married her owner in East Florida, operated a plantation
after
her husband's death, and ruled as matriarch over an extended family
until the
Civil War. Schafer has reconstructed Anna Madgigine Jai Kingsley's
story in a
remarkable way."--Bruce L. Mouser, editor, A Slaving Voyage to
Africa
and Jamaica: The Log of the Sandown, 1793-1794
Anna Kingsley's life story adds a dramatic chapter to histories of the
South,
the state of Florida, and the African diaspora. Working from
surprisingly
extensive records, including information and photographs from
extended-family
members and descendants, Daniel Shafer reconstructs and documents one
slave’s
remarkable story.
Both an American slave and a slaveowner--and possibly an African
princess--Anna
was a teenager when she was captured in her homeland of Senegal in 1806
and
sold into slavery. Zephaniah Kingsley, Jr., a planter and slave trader
from
Spanish East Florida, bought her in Havana, Cuba, and took her to his
St. Johns
River plantation in northeast Florida, where she soon became his
household
manager, his wife, and eventually the mother of four of his children.
Her
husband formally emancipated her in 1811, and she became the owner of
her own
farm and twelve slaves the following year.
For 25 years, life on her farm and at the Kingsley plantation on Fort
George
Island was relatively tranquil. But when Florida passed from Spanish to
American control, and racism and discrimination increased in the
American
territories, Anna Kingsley and her children migrated to a colony in
Haiti
established by her husband as a refuge for free blacks. Amid the
spiraling
racial tensions of the antebellum period, Anna returned to north
Florida, where
she bought and sold land, sued white people in the courts, and became a
central
figure in a free black community. Such accomplishments by a woman in a
patriarchal society are fascinating in themselves. To have achieved
them as a
woman of color is remarkable.
Daniel L. Schafer is professor of history at the University of North
Florida,
Jacksonville.

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