THE TERRITORIES AND THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.
| Area in Square Miles. | Population. | |||
| Indian Territory | 71,127 | |||
| Kansas" | 114,798 | |||
| Minnesota" | 166,025 | 6,077 | ||
| Nebraska" | 335,882 | |||
| N. Mexico" | 207,007 | 61,547 | ||
| Oregon" | 185,030 | 13,294 | ||
| Utah" | 269,170 | 11,380 | ||
| Washington" | 123,022 | |||
| Columbia, Dist. of | 60 | [2]51,687 | ||
| Aggregate of Area and Population, | 1,472,121 | 143,985 |
NUMBER OF SLAVEHOLDERS IN THE UNITED STATES—1850.
| Alabama | 29,295 | |
| Arkansas | 5,999 | |
| Colombia, District of, | 1,477 | |
| Delaware | 809 | |
| Florida | 3,520 | |
| Georgia | 38,456 | |
| Kentucky | 38,385 | |
| Louisiana | 20,670 | |
| Maryland | 16,040 | |
| Mississippi | 23,116 | |
| Missouri | 19,185 | |
| North Carolina | 28,303 | |
| South Carolina | 25,596 | |
| Tennessee | 33,864 | |
| Texas | 7,747 | |
| Virginia | 55,063 | |
| Total Number of Slaveholders in the United States | 347,525 | |
CLASSIFICATION OF THE SLAVEHOLDERS—1850.
| Holders of | 1 | slave | 68,820 | ||
| Holders of | 1 | and under | 5 | 105,683 | |
| Holders of | 5 | and under | 10 | 80,765 | |
| Holders of | 10 | and under | 20 | 54,595 | |
| Holders of | 20 | and under | 50 | 29,733 | |
| Holders of | 50 | and under | 100 | 6,196 | |
| Holders of | 100 | and under | 200 | 1,479 | |
| Holders of | 200 | and under | 300 | 187 | |
| Holders of | 300 | and under | 500 | 56 | |
| Holders of | 500 | and under | 1,000 | 9 | |
| Holders of | 1,000 | and over | 2 | ||
| Aggregate Number of Slaveholders in the United States | 347,525 | ||||
It thus appears that there are in the United States, three hundred and forty-seven thousand five hundred and twenty-five slaveholders. But this appearance is deceptive. The actual number is certainly less than two hundred thousand. Professor De Bow, the Superintendent of the Census, informs us that “the number includes slave-hirers,” and furthermore, that “where the party owns slaves in different counties, or in different States, he will be entered more than once.” Now every Southerner, who has any practical knowledge of affairs, must know, and does know, that every New Year’s day, like almost every other day, is desecrated in the South, by publicly hiring out slaves to large numbers of non-slaveholders. The slave-owners, who are the exclusive manufacturers of public sentiment, have popularized the dictum that white servants, decency, virtue, and justice, are unfashionable; and there are, we are sorry to say, nearly one hundred and sixty thousand non-slaveholding sycophants, who have subscribed to this false philosophy, and who are giving constant encouragement to the infamous practices of slaveholding and slave-breeding, by hiring at least one slave every year.
In the Southern States, as in all other slave countries, there are three odious classes of mankind; the slaves themselves, who are cowards; the slaveholders, who are tyrants; and the non-slaveholding slave-hirers, who are lickspittles. Whether either class is really entitled to the regards of a gentleman is a matter of grave doubt. The slaves are pitiable; the slaveholders are detestable; the slave-hirers are contemptible.
With the statistics at our command, it is impossible for us to ascertain the exact numbers of slaveholders and non-slaveholding slave-hirers in the slave States; but we have data which will enable us to approach very near to the facts. The town from which we hail, Salisbury, the capital of Rowan county, North Carolina, contains about twenty-three hundred inhabitants, including three hundred and seventy-two slaves, fifty-one slaveholders, and forty-three non-slaveholding slave-hirers. Taking it for granted that this town furnishes a fair relative proportion of all the slaveholders, and non-slaveholding slave-hirers in the slave States, the whole number of the former, including those who have been “entered more than once,” is one hundred and eighty-eight thousand five hundred and fifty-one; of the latter, one hundred and fifty-eight thousand nine hundred and seventy-four; and, now, estimating that there are in Maryland, Virginia, and other grain-growing States, an aggregate of two thousand slave-owners, who have cotton plantations stocked with negroes in the far South, and who have been “entered more than once,” we find, as the result of our calculations, that the total number of actual slaveholders in the Union, is precisely one hundred and eighty-six thousand five hundred and fifty-one—as follows: