Zephaniah Kingsley, Jr. (December 4, 1765 – September 14, 1843) was a plantation owner, slave trader, and merchant who built several plantations in the Spanish colony of Florida in what is now Jacksonville. A plantation he owned and lived at for 25 years is preserved as Kingsley Plantation, part of the Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve that is run by the United States National Park Service.
Kingsley was a relatively lenient slave owner who gave his slaves the opportunity to earn their freedom. He married a total of four women in a polygamous relationship. His first wife, Anna Madgigine Jai Kingsley, was thirteen years old when Kingsley purchased her. He later charged her with running his plantation when he was away on business. His interracial family and his business interests caused Kingsley to be heavily invested in the Spanish system of slavery, which recognized a class of free people of color and allowed multi-racial children to inherit property.
Kingsley became involved in politics when control of the Florida colony passed from Spain to the United States, and he attempted to persuade the new territorial government to maintain the status of the free black population. When this did not come to fruition, he wrote a treatise that defended a system of slavery in 1828 that would allow slaves to purchase their freedom and give rights to free blacks and mixed-race people. When faced with American laws that forbade interracial marriage, Kingsley relocated his family to Haiti between 1835 and 1837. After his death, his estate was the subject of dispute between Anna Jai and other members of Kingsley's family.
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Kingsley was born in Bristol, England, the second of eight children to Zephaniah Kingsley, Sr., a Quaker from London, and Isabella Johnstone of Scotland.[1] The elder Kingsley moved his family to the Colony of South Carolina in 1770. His son was educated in London during the 1780s; Zephaniah Kingsley, Sr. purchased a rice plantation near Savannah, Georgia and several other properties throughout the colonies and Caribbean islands, owning probably around 200 slaves in all.[2] Like other British loyalists, Kingsley, Sr. was forced to leave South Carolina without his family, for New Brunswick, Canada in 1782 following the American Revolutionary War.[3][4]
Zephaniah Kingsley, Jr. returned to Charleston, South Carolina in 1793, swore his allegiance to the United States, and began a career as a shipping merchant. His first ventures were in Haiti, during the Haitian Revolution where coffee dominated his interests.[5] He lived in Haiti for a brief period while the fledgling nation was developing a social system of former slaves transitioning into free citizens. Kingsley traveled frequently, prompted by recurring political unrest among the Caribbean islands.[6] The instability affected his business interests but a sharp increase in demand for slaves in the Southern U.S. occurred around the same time and Kingsley began to travel to West Africa to procure Africans to be traded as slaves between America, Brazil, and the West Indies.[7] In 1798 he became a Danish citizen in the Danish West Indies;[8] he continued to make his living trading slaves and shipping other goods into the 19th century. He became a citizen of Spanish Florida in 1803.[5]
Spain was offering land to settlers in order to populate Florida, so Kingsley petitioned the governor for land but was turned away. After waiting, he decided to purchase a 2,600-acre (11 km2) farm for $5,300 ($756,369 in 2009). It was named Laurel Grove, and its main entrance was a dock on Doctors Lake, south of where Orange Park is located today. Kingsley arrived with ten slaves and began to cultivate it immediately.[9] Another source stated he received a substantial land grant because he brought 74 slaves to Florida.[3][10] The plantation grew oranges, sea island cotton, corn, potatoes, and peas. Kingsley's first slaves were from his family's estate in South Carolina. By 1811, he had acquired a total of 100 slaves at Laurel Grove, obtained from Africa via Cuba.[11] Kingsley trained the slaves at Laurel Grove in agricultural vocations for future sale; Kingsley provided slave buyers with skilled artisans, which allowed him to charge 50 percent more than market price per slave.[3][10] At Laurel Grove, slaves were trained not only in farming, but blacksmithing, carpentry, and cotton ginning.[12]
In 1806, Kingsley took a trip to Cuba and purchased Anna Madgigine Jai (born as Anta Majigeen Ndiaye), a 13-year-old Wolof girl from what is now Senegal. He married her in an African ceremony in Havana soon after purchasing her,[13] although the union was not legally recognized during their lives.[14][15] Kingsley took Anna to Laurel Grove and made it her responsibility to run the plantation in his absence.[16][note 1] In 1811, he petitioned the colonial Spanish government to free Anna and their three children and the request was granted. The Laurel Grove plantation during one year earned $10,000 ($128,440 in 2009), which was an extraordinary amount for Florida. With his earnings, Kingsley purchased several locations on the opposite side of the St. Johns River, including St. Johns Bluff, San Jose, and Beauclerc in what is now Jacksonville, and Drayton Island farther south near Lake George.[3] After gaining freedom, Anna was awarded five acres in a land grant by the Spanish government, and she purchased slaves to help farm it.[13][17][18] Kingsley was furthermore involved in the shipping industry, related to his large-scale slave trading. While at Laurel Grove, Kingsley was attempting to smuggle in 350 slaves (the international slave trade was abolished in 1807) when the ship was captured by the U.S. Coast Guard. Not knowing what to do with so many indigent people, the Coast Guard turned them over to Kingsley, who was the only person in the area who could care for such a number.[10]
During an insurgency that became known as the Patriot Rebellion, in an attempt to annex Florida to the United States, American forces, American-supplied Creeks, and renegades from Georgia crossed the border into the Spanish colony and began raiding the few settlements in North Florida, capturing black people and enslaving them. In 1813, the Americans captured Kingsley and forced him to sign his endorsement of the rebellion.[note 2] They took Laurel Grove and used it as a base to raid other plantations and nearby towns. Kingsley left the area. After assuring her safety with the Spanish forces, Anna burned the plantation down so the rebels could not use it, and took her children and a dozen of her slaves aboard a Spanish gunboat.[19] For her loyalty, Anna received a reward of 350 acres (1.4 km2) by the Spanish colonial government.[13]
Kingsley and Anna moved to a plantation on Fort George Island at the mouth of the St. Johns River in 1814 and they remained there for 25 years. Anna and Kingsley's fourth and last child was born on Fort George Island in 1824. Kingsley furthermore provided for three younger women and fathered children with at least two of them, totaling nine in all.[20] All three women were slaves he eventually freed named Flora Kingsley, Sarah Kingsley, who brought her son Micanopy; and Munsilna McGundo, who brought her daughter, Fatima. The Kingsley family was, according to historian Daniel Stowell, "complex at best".[14] In his will, the only woman Kingsley named as his wife was Anna. Primary documentation by Kingsley is scarce, but historians consider Flora, Sarah, and McGundo as "lesser wives",[3] or "co-wives" with Anna.[21] Stowell suggests "concubines" is a more accurate description.[14] Nonetheless, Kingsley lavished all his children with affection, attention, and luxury. They were educated with the best European teaching he could afford[22] and he entertained visitors at his Fort George plantation with Anna sitting "at the head of the table" and "surrounded by healthy and handsome children" in a parlor decorated with portraits of African women.[23]
The plantation featured a main house and a two-story structure with a kitchen on the ground floor and living quarters on the second called the "Ma'am Anna House", where Anna lived with her children, a custom among the Wolof people. The plantation produced oranges, sea island cotton, indigo, okra, and other vegetables. Approximately 60 slaves were managed under the task system: each slave had a quota of work to do per day. When they were finished, they were allowed to do what they wished.[13][24] Some slaves had personal gardens which they were allowed to cultivate, and from which they sold vegetables. Thirty-two cabins were constructed for and by the slaves, made from tabby, which made them durable, insulated, and inexpensive although labor-intensive. The cabins were located about a quarter of a mile (400 m) from the main house, and slaves were allowed to padlock their cabins and build porches that faced away from the main house. Both of these features were unusual for slave quarters in antebellum America.[25]
Following the transfer of Florida from Spain to the United States in 1821, President James Monroe appointed Kingsley to serve on Florida's Territorial Council, which began to establish an American government. The Council focused primarily on allowing immigrants to Florida access to the 40,000,000 acres (160,000 km2) ceded by Spain, and removing the Seminoles to Indian Territory.[26] Americans settled in the central portion of Florida and built productive plantations worked by slaves; the owners were used to the more strictly divided racial caste system that was practiced throughout the Southeastern U.S. This system contrasted with the standing practice in which Kingsley was invested, which, based on Spanish law as implemented in Florida, supported three social tiers of whites, free people of color, and slaves. The Spanish government recognized interracial marriages and allowed mixed-race children to inherit property. Kingsley's first task with the Territorial Council was an attempt to persuade them to determine the place of free people of color in a U.S.-controlled Florida. He addressed the council stating, "I consider that our personal safety as well as the permanent condition of our Slave property is intimately connected with and depends much on our good policy in making it the interest of our free colored population to be attached to good order and have a friendly feeling towards the white population."[27]
When it became apparent to Kingsley that the council could not make a decision on the rights of free blacks and mixed-race people, he resigned his position.[28] Through the 1820s the council began to enact strict laws separating the races, and Kingsley became worried about his future and the rights of his family. To address these issues, in 1828 he wrote a pamphlet titled A Treatise on the Patriarchal or Co-operative System of Society as it Exists in Some Governments, and Colonies in America, and the United States Under the Name of Slavery With its Necessary Advantages crediting himself as "An Inhabitant of Florida", defending the system to which he had become accustomed. In it, he wrote, "Slavery is a necessary state of control from which no condition of society can be perfectly free. The term is applicable to and fits all grades and conditions in almost every point of view, whether moral, physical, or political." Kingsley asserted that when slavery is associated with cruelty it is an abomination; when it is joined with benevolence and justice, it "easily amalgamates with the ordinary conditions of life".[3][29] He believed that Africans were better suited than Europeans for labor in hot climates, and that their happiness was maximized when they were rigidly controlled; their contentment was greater than whites of a similar class. He furthermore asserted that people of mixed race were healthier and more beautiful than either Africans or Europeans, and considered his mixed race children a barrier to an impending race war.[3][30]
The treatise was published four times in all, the last printing in 1834. Reception to it was mixed. While some Southerners used it to defend the institution of slavery, others saw Kingsley's support of a free class of blacks as a prelude to the abolition of it.[31] Abolitionists considered Kingsley's arguments for slavery weak and wrote that the only logical conclusion Kingsley could come to was eradication of slavery. Lydia Child, a New York-based abolitionist, included him on a list of people perpetuating the "evils of slavery" in 1836.[32] Although Kingsley was wealthy, learned, and powerful, the treatise was a factor in the decline of his reputation in Florida. He became embroiled in a political scandal with Florida's first governor, William DuVal when DuVal was quoted in newspapers making scathingly critical remarks about Kingsley's motives and his mixed-race family after Kingsley petitioned to have DuVal removed from his office for corruption.[33]
After attempting to persuade the new government of Florida to make it possible for his family to have rights as free blacks and his mixed race children to inherit his properties, the independent republic of Haiti became more attractive to Kingsley. Haiti's government was actively encouraging free blacks from across the Americas to settle the island, offering them land and citizenship.[34] Kingsley highlighted its successes as a nation of free blacks in his treatise, writing "...under a just and prudent system of management, negroes are safe, permanent, productive and growing property, and easily governed; that they are not naturally desirous of changes, but are sober, discreet, honest and obliging, are less troublesome, and possess a much better moral character than the ordinary class of corrupted whites of a similar condition."[35] Kingsley's praise of Haiti's new system—which outlawed slavery—combined with his defense of slavery, is notable to author Mark Fleszar, who comments that the paradox in Kingsley's thinking indicated a "disordered worldview".[36] Nevertheless, he was determined to create the society he had written about and defended.
Kingsley's son George and six of his slaves arrived in Haiti to scout for land and found a suitable location on the northeastern shore of the island, in what is today the Puerto Plata Province of the Dominican Republic. By 1835 it became evident that Kingsley's marriage to Anna would not be recognized in the United States, and that in the event of his death, holdings in the name of Anna, Flora, Sarah, McGundo, and their mixed-race children might be confiscated. Over the next two years, most of Kingsley's extensive family relocated — two of his daughters stayed in Florida, as they had married local white planters — to a plantation named Mayorasgo de Koka, which was worked by more than 50 slaves transplanted from the Fort George Island plantation. In Haiti, they were contracted to work as indentured servants, who would earn their full freedom after nine years of labor.[37]
After visiting his family in Haiti in 1843, Kingsley boarded a ship going to New York to conduct business there. His death of pulmonary disease at 78 years old was recorded in New York City, where Kingsley was buried in a Quaker cemetery. He left much of his land to his wives and children, a bequest which was immediately contested on racial grounds by his white relatives. Kingsley's niece, Anna McNeill (who married George Whistler; they bore a son named James Whistler who became an artist and painted his mother in the iconic Whistler's Mother) was among the family members who attempted to remove any of Kingsley's family of African descent from his will.[3] Kingsley's will stipulated that no remaining slaves should be separated from their families, and that they should be given the opportunity to purchase their freedom at half their market price. Anna Madgigine Jai, who kept her African name through the marriage, returned to Florida in 1846 to oppose Kingsley's white relatives in court in Duval County; she was successful, which was also extraordinary in light of the state and local policy that was hostile toward freed slaves or blacks of any status.[38]
After a brief period during the U.S. Civil War (1861–1865), Anna fled to New York for supporting the Union. Anna Madgigine Jai died in April or May 1870 on a farm in the Arlington neighborhood of Jacksonville, where she is buried in an unmarked grave.[13]
The Fort George plantation was sold soon after Kingsley's death. After the Civil War, the Freedman's Bureau controlled the island until 1869, when it was purchased by another planter. The island changed hands under private ownership until 1955, when it was acquired by the Florida Park Service. Kingsley's house, "the oldest standing plantation house in Florida";[39] Ma'am Anna House, and the barn survived the years relatively intact. Most of the slave quarters did as well. The National Park Service established the Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve in 1988 and acquired 60 acres (0.24 km2) of land surrounding the Kingsley Plantation buildings in 1991.[40]