Hector E. Davis

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Hector E. Davis

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Goochland County, Virginia, United States
Death: January 07, 1863 (46)
Richmond, Virginia, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of John Shelton Davis and Jane Watkins Davis
Husband of Courtney Thornton Davis
Partner of Ann Banks Davis
Father of Hector Lafayette Davis; Virginia Davis; Matilda Davis and Victorine Davis
Half brother of Isaac Davis; Elizabeth Davis; Mary B. Davis; Catherine Nellie Davis; Anne W. Davis and 1 other

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Hector E. Davis

Hector Davis

https://www.encyclopediavirginia.org/Davis_Hector_1816-1863

Hector Davis was a prominent slave trader in Richmond in the years leading up to the American Civil War (1861–1865). Born probably in Goochland County, Davis moved to Richmond sometime in the 1840s and established there a slave trading business. He ran a so-called jail, where enslaved men, women, and children were confined awaiting sale. In 1859 his auction house alone did business the value of which exceeded all the flour and equaled all the tobacco exported from Virginia that year. Early in 1860 he and thirteen other men chartered the Traders Bank of Virginia, with Davis serving as the president. Davis never married, but he had several children with an enslaved woman he owned, Ann Banks Davis, whom he moved to Philadelphia about 1860 and freed in his will. Davis died in Richmond in 1863.

Early Years

Davis was born on December 4, 1816, the son of John S. Davis and Jane W. Matthews Davis, the second of his three wives. They resided in Goochland County, the probable place of his birth. The record of Davis's birth that a niece later copied into a family Bible includes a middle initial E., but the initial appears in no other document, and if he had a middle name it is not known. He was probably not closely related to Hector Davis, of Hanover County and the city of Richmond, who served in the Convention of 1850–1851.

Slave Trader

Sometime in the 1840s Davis moved to Richmond, where city directories and newspaper advertisements identified him most often as an auctioneer. In reality, for more than a decade he operated a slave jail, a place of confinement for enslaved persons whose owners had consigned them to auctioneers for sale. Davis became well known during the 1850s in Virginia and also to traders and planters in other states who sold him slaves or purchased slaves from him. He and the other large-scale traders in Virginia annually purchased and sold between 8,000 and 10,000 men, women, and children for transportation to markets in the southwestern states. They engaged in the largest commercial business in the state. In 1859 Davis's Richmond auction house, alone, sold slaves with a market value of more than $2.67 million, more than the value of all of the flour exported from Virginia that year, when Richmond had two of the largest mills in the country, and almost equal to the value of all of the tobacco exported from Virginia to other countries.

As traders often did, Davis conducted business with a series of partners as well as on his own account. For several years in the 1850s he and David M. Pulliam operated their auction enterprise as Pulliam & Davis. In 1850 Davis lived next door to Silas Omohundro, another prominent slave trader. Davis occupied buildings in the city's Shockoe Creek area north of East Franklin Street near Fifteenth Street. The fashionable Exchange Hotel stood diagonally across from the Davis establishment, and his office was in the nearby and equally fashionable Saint Charles Hotel. Davis's large brick and stone jail was still standing in 1937. Visitors to the city before the Civil War left several descriptions of his jail and of sales at his auction house and in other, similar houses in the same vicinity. Also recording an account was Wallace Turnage, who was thirteen years old when Davis bought him early in 1860 to work in the jail and auction room. After a short time, Davis sold Turnage for $1,000 and made an easy $50 profit.

A successful trader in one of the city's most lucrative and important businesses, Davis earned the respect of the city's other business leaders. Early in 1860 he and thirteen other men, including several other slave dealers, chartered the Traders Bank of Richmond, perhaps to assist with financing their trading. Davis became the president of the bank. The $50 banknotes that it issued depicted an enslaved man carrying a large basket of cotton, and the $20 notes featured a paternalistic engraving of a male slave picking cotton, a woman spinning thread with factory smokestacks in the background, and a portrait of Henry Clay. The images were intended to appeal to southern planters and to men of commerce.

Davis never married. He served as guardian for the three daughters of one of his brothers, but, like his fellow traders Robert Lumpkin and Silas Omohundro and perhaps others, he had a long-term physical relationship with an enslaved woman, who had three daughters and one son born during the 1850s, all of whom were probably his. When Davis wrote his will in March 1859 he bequeathed $15,000 to be divided equally among his three orphaned nieces and left $5,000 to a nephew. He also ordered that his "servant woman Ann" and her children be freed and sent to a free state and that $20,000 be invested in state securities for her and for the children's education. Davis specified that any resources remaining after those bequests should be applied for the benefit of one of his sisters and her children. The servant, Ann Davis, and her children had resided in Philadelphia as early as 1860. Whether they intentionally passed as free and white or let other people decide for themselves is not clear, but census enumerators did not list them as black or mulatto. Davis's son, Audubon Davis (who married a white woman and named his own son Hector Davis), became a journalist.

Death

Davis died in Richmond on January 7, 1863, at the midpoint of the Civil War. His burial place is not recorded. One motive for creating the Confederate States of America in 1861 had been to preserve a way of life based on slavery, but the defeat of the Confederacy in 1865 destroyed slavery and also the plans for aiding his family that Davis had outlined in his will. At the time of his death his estate, in addition to land in Richmond and Arkansas, was valued at nearly $100,000, including about $14,000 worth of slaves and a large quantity of bank stock. The fire that consumed Richmond's business district in April 1865 also burned his bank and rendered that stock worthless; and the state and Confederate securities that his executor had purchased for the benefit of Ann Davis and her children also became largely worthless after the war. Davis's sister sued his executor to obtain what she could for her children, a lawsuit that preserved valuable information about the Davis family and his finances but revealed that little money remained for his legatees. Ann Davis also sued Davis's sister and brother-in-law, asserting the prior claim of herself and her children to a large part of the estate, but because the resources invested for their benefit were then worthless, she and they received nothing.

Time Line

December 4, 1816 - Hector Davis is born, probably in Goochland County.

1859 - Hector Davis purchases a brick house on Lombard Street in Philadelphia for $3,100 and in the next year moves his enslaved concubine and their children there from Richmond.

1859 - Hector Davis's Richmond slave auction house sells slaves with a market value of more than $2.67 million. March 1859 - Hector Davis writes his will, distributing his significant wealth between his white and enslaved children, whom he frees along with their mother.

Early 1860 - Hector Davis and thirteen other men, including several slave dealers, charter the Traders Bank of Richmond.

January 7, 1863 - Hector Davis dies in Richmond. His burial place is not recorded.

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Hector E. Davis's Timeline

1816
December 4, 1816
Goochland County, Virginia, United States
1853
1853
1854
1854
1858
November 28, 1858
1863
January 7, 1863
Age 46
Richmond, Virginia, United States
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