Source
State Library of Florida, Federal Documents Collection
Description
Address to the Territorial Legislative Council of Florida by Zepahaniah Kingsley, a member of the Council and a slaveholder. Kingsley shares his views on the necessity of slavery for Florida's economy and how best to manage the presence of both slaves and free persons of color in the territory.
& oppression without having committed any crime.
We are the causes of their existence and they have natural and certain rights to that existence equal with our selves. we are not obliged to associate with them or with any one whose condition we think inferior to our own but from choice. let them go as they please and come as they please acquire property hold it & enjoy it as they Please. In short all our acts of Legislation should be confined within a proper sphere, and directed to fit objects otherwise we act against ourselves which is allways bad Pollicy never followed by sound Polliticians. If merit consisted in colour a Majority prejudiced in favor of any particular shade might drive out or exterminate the rest to make room for their favorite complexion. This would most likely depend upon what color they had been most used to as custom commonly regulates our degrees of prejudice. Ingenuity has long been racked and all its inventive faculties put in requisition to find out some way of getting entirely rid of the black & colloured population of the U. States. some Mathematicians who depended more on miracle than demonstration and who forgot to compare the bulk of the article with the means of transportation held out the plausibility of an African establishment for getting rid of this great imaginary burthen without first considering that all the suitable lands in Africa (which is a very small proportion) were already thickly settled and occupied from the earliest ages by an agricultural & economical people so that no spare room for new inhabitants existed without displacing an equal numbers of old ones which could only be done by force. Even if the inhabitants had been wandering Tribes like our own of North Ammerica its distance would have precluded the possibility of transportation only on a scale sufficient to answer the purposes of Colonisation & which may yet suit the object of speculation or evaporating a redundance of Missionary Zeal and scouring our Colloured population of idle vagrants which greatly needs. Had the Zealots of Colonization been serious and awake at the last evacuation of the Spanish part of St. Domingo & compromised the Right of settlements with the Haytian chiefs. They then had an opportunity of securing a very respectable Colony of free colored people immediately, which certainly would have rendered that Island more formidable than it otherwise can become in many years and by cultivating the arts & Sciences have made it a much more respectable Neighbourhood than it now is; entirely dependant on a military Government for peace & protection and which It as well as all the new Governments of America needs & must have! otherwise property will not be secure. All or most Political economists are already satisfied from experiment that a secure Government of civil laws without military protection requires a very enlightened state of society to which none of those new Governments of
Chicago Manual of Style
Kingsley, Zephaniah, 1765-1843. Address to the Legislative Council of Florida on the Subject of Its Colored Population by Zephaniah Kingsley, 1823. 1823. State Archives of Florida, Florida Memory. <https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/345199>, accessed 8 June 2026.
MLA
Kingsley, Zephaniah, 1765-1843. Address to the Legislative Council of Florida on the Subject of Its Colored Population by Zephaniah Kingsley, 1823. 1823. State Archives of Florida, Florida Memory. Accessed 8 Jun. 2026.<https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/345199>
AP Style Photo Citation
(State Archives of Florida/Kingsley)