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.
America can arrive in many years. indeed all Governments hitherto have been supported more or less by fear & force and must be until some mechanical process of education is invented very different from the tedious complicated and expensive modes heretofore adopted. I even doubt whether Mr. Owen's progress in moral improvement at New Harmony will not be too slow to supersede the necessity of penal laws and an efficient Government for a length of time to come. As the only remaining possibility of geting radically & entirely rid of the Colored people of the U. States is by exterminating the whole, we ought before we begin a Job of such importance (for they constitute fully one sixth part of our whole population) consider well how far the approbation of our own citizens and that of lookers on would go along with us and be well assured that we are on the strong side before we begin. otherwise our situation might be dangerous, as we may see by the cause of the Turks & Greeks now before us how far the World can be led by prejudice. Let us even suppose that we can get rid of our own colored population some way or other; Again we look round and see still a greater difficulty to be overcome. For all around us which ever way we turn our faces, colored people still exist, so numerous that perhaps two thirds of all the remaining population of America is more or less composed of them. Whole Armies of Negroes & black Generals from whom we receive Embassadors and with whom we are already linked by Commercial Treaties! We must either continue to be on friendly terms with all these people and treat them as they treat us or we must be in a state of hostility and shut ourselves up in our Forrests & mountains like the Chinese, we would have no commerce for we should have the whole world against us therefore no place to trade to Florida without mountains and all sea bord would be badly off. Even the Island of Haytie of which Neighbour we entertain so poor an opinion would ruin us by blockading our Ports and carrying off our slaves by force, if we were not shielded by the Respectability of the Government of the U. States of which we fortunately are a member. In short there is no back door for us to get out at, we are fixed in Florida with the sea on both sides. We must have slaves to cultivate our lands and free colored people are a necessary consequence of having slaves. We cannot have the one without having the other and we must be there ourselves and do the best we can with them both. If any word, sentence, or allusion in the smallest degree offends any person who reads the foregoing treatise I do assure them that no Offense was intended but merely an investigation of Facts the consideration of which it was hoped might promote the welfare & happiness of the people of Florida.
Z. Kingsley
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)