Slaves, whiskey, horses, cocks, and land: A brief overview of Andrew Jackson as gambler, businessman, and bully
in December 1787 (
Greensboro Daily News, 1925) During his first months living in the
Watauga District near the present-day border between North Carolina and Tennessee, in "summer or early fall 1788", Jackson organized and publicized a race at the semicircular Greasy Cove racetrack at what is now
Erwin,
Unicoi County, pitting his racehorse against one fielded by
Robert Love, Jackson's acquaintance of four years past, and a veteran of battles with the British, Cherokee, and
Shawnee (). The planned matchup between the two horses triggered an absolute frenzy of wagering: "Guns, furs, iron, clothing, cattle, horses, negroes, crops, lands and all the money procurable were staked on the result." Jackson personally rode in the race, and reacted to his defeat with a "
Vesuvius of rage", during which display "Jackson denounced the Loves as a 'band of land pirates,' because they held the ownership of nearly all the choice lands in that section." Shortly thereafter, on November 17, 1788, in
Washington County, Jackson made his first recorded slave purchase, a woman named Nancy who was between 18 and 20 years old. According to historian Whitney Snow, Jackson's employment income as an attorney was unpredictable, and insufficient to cover his financial losses, so he "began dabbling in mercantilism,
land speculation, and the
interstate slave trade" and found that of the three, "slave trading not only relieved Jackson of debt but also allowed him to accumulate a larger-than-average work force of slave labor, a sure sign of status at the time." The debts accumulated because Jackson was prone to making imprudent financial investments (such as a disastrous deal with fellow speculator
David Allison);
status symbol purchases including "large sums for fine wines, expensive furnishings, hand-painted wallpaper, various ''
objets d'art'', and costly
cut glass;" and, throughout his life, extravagant wagers on sporting events. As one example of Jackson's grandiosity in gambling, it is told that in 1815 a large friend saw fit to physically pick up Jackson and carry him away in order to prevent him from betting that his horse Yellow Queen would win her race against Jesse Haynie's Maria. Yellow Queen lost, Maria won. took this photograph of a formerly enslaved woman (believed to be
Betty Jackson) and two children, possibly her great-grandchildren, at the Hermitage in 1867; 27-year-old Andrew Jackson bought 24-year-old
Hannah and her "child called Bet" from Charles Carter on July 8, 1794, for "the consideration of eighty pounds
Virginia currency," when Betty was about a year old (Hermitage Historic Collection,
University of Tennessee Libraries) Regarding the accumulation of slaves, as Frederick M. Binder put it in his
The Color Problem in Early National America (1968), "There was much about [Jackson] to remind one of the rude
frontiersman, but one need only read his letters concerning family affairs and
plantation management to recognize marks of the
Southern aristocrat." Yet, according to a study of
agriculture in Tennessee by
Harriette Simpson Arnow, "Jackson's letters in particular are relatively untouched with remarks on the nature of the
soil about him,
the weather, and the swing of the crops through the seasons...farming was for Andrew Jackson...a capitalistic enterprise in which he invested, not himself, but only money." The frontier south measured wealth in slaves as much or more than in land holdings, because enslaved men, women, children, and babies were the "chief security, the most salable and the major part of all agricultural property." In pursuit of income, if not fortune, merchant and slave trader Jackson used a
flatboat to get from
Stones River to the Cumberland River (or from the
Watauga to the
Holston to the
Tennessee) to the
Ohio River, to the Mississippi, and thence south to the
Natchez slave market in Spanish West Florida and/or the
New Orleans slave market in colonial Louisiana. Lacking
steamboats, which had not yet been invented, Jackson and companions made the return trip on foot (if they were slaves) or horseback (if they were traders). The only route was the
Natchez Trace, an ancient track through the hundreds of miles of Chickasaw and Choctaw territory between the northern fork of Bayou Pierre and the Tennessee River. Journey's end was Jackson's farm, originally
Poplar Grove, then
Hunter's Hill, and after 1804,
The Hermitage. There is no record of Jackson owning land or operating a plantation of his own on Bayou Pierre. Historian
J. Winston Coleman wrote that at the turn of the 19th century, "Tennessee was as wild and rough a frontier country as the nation possessed. Life in those parts was both hard and turbulent, and a short one for many a man who tried to get on for himself in that fast-growing section of young America. Reckless gambling, hard drinking, and fighting to the death with pistol and knife were the order of the day. Men fought for their rights and for their lives...cut-throats of every description defied the laws of the back country districts, and the towns themselves were scarcely less barbarous." Jackson was in business at a time and place when "Money was scarce, and the interchange of goods was difficult and hazardous.
Barter was still commonly employed in conducting commercial transactions." According to the editors of
The Papers of Andrew Jackson, "Between 1795 and 1807 Jackson followed general-store merchandising at least as fully as farming, the law, or the military." Goods from
Philadelphia resold in the Cumberland were marked up triple. Cotton from the Cumberland resold for double in New Orleans. Products for sale include fabric, "salt, grindstones, hardware, gunpowder, cow bells, and whatever else the people of the neighborhood wanted. In payment for these commodities, they took, not money, but cotton, ginned and unginned, wheat, corn, tobacco, pork, skins, furs, and, indeed, all the produce of the country." Middle Tennessee had originally produced mostly corn and stock animals, but by 1800 cotton had become so lucrative a
cash crop that cotton bales served as a local currency. As explained by a news writer in 1882, to be a merchant in Nashville at the turn of the 19th century was "vastly different" than it would be even 50 years later because the nation was then just beginning to build the vast internal transportation and communications networks necessary for commerce, and "Merchants usually kept a miscellaneous stock of goods, which stock was annually replaced by a visit to
Baltimore or
Boston. For several years goods were hauled by wagon from Baltimore to Nashville." In addition to manufactured goods, stock animals, and cotton, frontier Tennessee merchants dealt in slaves. For instance, in 1805, Jackson and his nephew accepted $25 in cash and "A Negro Woman namd. Fan a bout forty five years of age" to pay off Andrew Steele's $150 past-due account at their store. in the 1790s and early 1800s (map created 1880) Jackson's commercial hub in Tennessee was at
Clover Bottom, which was being developed as a plantation when "men from nearby places, Jackson included, formed a
jockey club...and laid out a racecourse here." In 1805 Jackson oversaw construction at Clover Bottom of a racetrack and horse stables, viewing stands, "a tavern or lodging facility", a store, and "booths for hucksters." There was gambling going on in this establishment, as well as throughout the settlement. (According to court records, popular hobbies in the Cumberland included a card game called
loo, another game called
fives, and the crime "assault and battery.") Sometime between 1805 and 1810, Josephus H. Conn, a Nashville merchant, brought a young boy to Clover Bottom on the occasion of a planned race between Jackson's horse Doublehead and Lazarus Cotton's horse Greyhound. Many decades later, when the boy was Nashville judge and local historian
Old Jo Guild of
Rose Mont, he estimated that 20,000 people had been present, and he recalled that "a large
pound was filled with horses and Negroes bet on the result of the race." This was probably the brick-built Gallatin stable where Jackson lost $500 to
Edward Ward, president of the Clover Bottom Jockey Club, in a bet on a fight between
gaffed cocks. The bet was for
gold, and Jackson apparently tried to avoid the payout by
working the refs. The Clover Bottom was also where Jackson's company sold and launched flatboats for other travelers going downriver. River-traffic statistics involving flatboats illustrate how early Jackson came to Mississippi, and thus how closely he must have been involved in its colonization. According to writer
David O. Stewart, in 1792 "only a dozen flatboats made the journey downriver to New Orleans", but by 1802, it was more than 500, and by 1807, the count was closer to 2,000 a year. According to another account, in 1790, 64 flatboats docked at Natchez the entire year, while on a single day in 1808 a visitor counted 150 flatboats tied up at the Natchez landing. There is a surviving 1803 contract between a riverman and Jackson's partner
John Coffee arranging for a flatboat to depart from
Haysborough, Tennessee for New Orleans loaded with 25 bales of cotton and 77 hogs, which offers some sense of the scale of Jackson's shipments. In 1803 his firm built 27 boats "for the
war department in expectation of difficulty with Spain in Louisiana." One of these boats, long and
across the beam, and apparently never used for its commissioned purpose, was sold to
Williamson County merchant John Hardeman on February 23, 1804, for . In the course of the 1806–07 expedition that came to be known as the
Burr conspiracy,
Aaron Burr ordered five of Jackson's boats, picked up two that were ready at Clover Bottom, and set off for the south from Jackson's landing at Stones River, weeks later surrendering himself to authorities at
Peter Bruin's house at Bruinsburg. These boats were themselves valuable in the lower Mississippi, which had a shortage of planed lumber. The Clover Bottom store, where Jackson built and sold flatboats, raced horses, and took people as a form of payment, was "a two-story building near today's Downeymead Drive." (
Saint Louis Art Museum 33813) Jackson's mercantile enterprises and gaming operations appear to have been entangled with his slave trading, real estate speculation, and his imperial designs on Indigenous lands, which was the case throughout pioneer-era Tennessee, whose politicians, militia officers, and "land-grabbers" were men whose "classifications...greatly overlapped." As a merchant, Jackson bought and sold as the market demanded, and as explained by researcher Bill Carey, "In the early 1800s, Tennessee's retail world had not advanced to the point where there were separate grocery, drug, and furniture stores. Customers bought all types of products from auctioneers, who might have furniture one week, blankets the next, and slaves the third." As Nashville historian Anita S. Goodstein put it, "Land speculators, merchants, self-made lawyersall dealt in slaves. Indeed they used slaves almost as currency." It was common to treat slaves as a cash equivalent: as debt
collateral,
by mortgaging them, or by staking them on the turn of a
faro game. (
One of Jackson's friends from North Carolina was even accused of buying his way into a judicial clerkship with "the present
docket profits and three negroes.") Slaves were "
liquid assets" that served as a ready currency for land owners with unreliable income. The financial system of the frontier U.S. south was based on the inherent fundamental value of the enslaved, all while guaranteeing a lifetime of insecurity for the people used as security. An example of the use of slaves to repay debts is Stockley Donelson's 1791 offer to pay off Jackson with "one likely Country born Negro boy or girl." Historian
Chase C. Mooney, in his 1957
Slavery in Tennessee, came to the conclusion that
John Overton, Jackson's business associate and political patron, "might be classed as a slave traderbut not of the
coffle-driving typefor he both purchased and sold quite a number of Negroes. Some of his purchases follow: Robin and Pol, $530; Sam, Phyllis, and Ezekiel, $1050; Mathew and wife (slaves of John Coffee, purchased through the
United States marshal), $710; Charles, $180 in 'horse flesh, and one hundred and ten dollars in notes'; Lewis, $400; Betty, $800; Elijah, $450; Wood, $600; Bob, $500; Huldy, $375; Tom, $300; Ben, $385; Arthur, $315; Washington, $340; Adam, $500; Martin and Oliver, $365; and 'two negroes,' $700.28." In 1819, Overton asked Jackson to have
John Brahan, of
Huntsville,
Alabama Territory, repay him for a debt of approximately $800 in "one or two likely healthy boys of 12 or 13 years of age at such price as you may think they are worth in Cash, and as you would trade for yourself." According to Goodstein's analysis of 452 Nashville-area transactions involving approximately 700 enslaved persons in the period from 1783 to 1804, "The overwhelming number of sales were of a single slave, man or woman or child. Of the 452 transactions only 116 involved transfers of more than one slave...Almost half of those for whom we have age data were under 16. It was not uncommon for children to be sold separately, away from parents or friends. Witness Aron, age six, sold to Andrew Jackson in 1791." Jackson paid
£100 to buy Aron from George Augustus Sugg on December 21, 1791. Aron was not resold but grew up at the Hermitage where he worked as the plantation
blacksmith and had a wife and three children as of 1825. If the Hermitage kept to the pattern found elsewhere in the south, Aron's work tasks would have included shoeing horses, making nails, repairing metalwork, forging chains, and locking shackles and collars on other slaves, which was called "ironing negroes." ==Slave trading, 1789–1799==