Forrest & MaplesForrest & Maples was an American slave-trading company based in Memphis, Tennessee, United States during the mid-1850s. The principals, Josiah Maples and Nathan Bedford Forrest, were in business together as Forrest & Maples from July 1854[1] to December 31, 1855.[2] HistoryIn November 1854 Forrest & Maples sold a nine-year-old girl named Page to Lavinia and Lemuel Smith for $600.[3] According to Forrest biographer Jack Hurst:
On July 9, 1855, they sold Adisson, age 22, to V. Beckworth for $1,000.[4] Also in 1855, Forrest & Maples sold Mary, age 15, for $800.[5] One interesting case of a runaway slave ad placed by the firm is told in Chase C. Mooney's Slavery in Tennessee (1957): "Forrest and Maples offered the largest known reward for one of their escapees. They would pay $500 to the deliverer of Richard—if taken in a free state—a Charleston-reared carpenter about thirty years old who could read and write well".[6] On New Year's 1856 the Maples and Forrest partnership was dissolved. [2] See alsoReferences
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