Oppressionc. 1820
Southern States Systematically Restrict and Ban Manumission
Beginning in the 1820s and accelerating after Nat Turner's rebellion, Southern states progressively restricted and then banned the voluntary freeing of enslaved people. After 1831 Virginia required legislative approval for each manumission. Mississippi (1842), Arkansas (1859), and Maryland (1860) effectively banned all manumission. The tightening laws stranded hundreds of people whose enslavers intended to free them and made the legal path from slavery to freedom nearly impossible in the Deep South by the 1850s.