Shadrack F. Slatter

Shadrack F. Slatter
Chartres (previously Moreau) and Esplanade, illustration made 1866 (New Orleans Notarial Archive)
Born(1798-12-13)December 13, 1798
Georgia, U.S.
DiedJuly 5, 1861(1861-07-05) (aged 62)
Mississippi, U.S.
Other namesS. F. Slatter, Col. Slatter
Occupation(s)Slave trader, real estate investor

Shadrack Fluellen Slatter (December 13, 1798 – July 5, 1861), usually listed as S. F. Slatter in advertisements and often called Col. Slatter in later life, was a 19th-century American slave trader and capitalist. In the 1830s and 1840s he was part of the coastwise slave trade in partnership with his older brother Hope H. Slatter, who bought slaves in Baltimore for S. F. Slatter to sell at New Orleans. It was typical for interstate traders like the Slatters to have a buying location in the Upper South and a selling location in the Lower South.[1] After quitting the retail slave trade, he was a real estate developer and landlord in New Orleans. In the late 1850s he was heavily involved in promoting and funding the freelance invasion of Nicaragua by William Walker (with the end goal of expanding the slave-holding territory of the United States). Fort Slatter in Nicaragua was named in Slatter's honor.

  1. ^ Johnson, Walter (2009). Soul by Soul: Life Inside the Antebellum Slave Market. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. pp. 48 (interstate firms), caption of illustration 8 (Slatter–Wilson–Bruin). ISBN 9780674039155. OCLC 923120203.