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Updated: June 6, 2025
G.W. KEETON. Judge of the Parish of Concordia" From the "Arkansas Advocate," May 22, 1837. "By virtue of a Deed of Trust, executed to me, I will sell at public auction at Fisher's Prairie, Arkansas, sixty LIKELY NEGROES, consisting of Men, Women, Boys and Girls, the most of whom are WELL ACCLIMATED. GRANDISON D. ROYSTON, Trustee." From the "New Orleans Bee," Feb. 9, 1838.
"A Frenchman truly a French gentleman a man of truth and courage and spirit and honor and everything good. A man who wouldn't tell a lie or do a mean thing, or flatter a silly woman, or persecute a very unhappy girl no, not to save his soul, Mr. Sheppard. Do you happen to know any such man?" "No such man lives in Keeton." He was surprised into simple earnestness.
"You kind and believing little poetess full of faith in simple true love and all the rest of it! Mr. Sheppard likes what he considers a respectable connection in Keeton. Failing in one chance he will find another, and there is an end of that." "I don't think so," Miss Blanchet said gravely. "Well, we shall see." "We shall not see him any more. We shall live a glorious, lonely, independent life.
One is in the "Planter's Intelligencer," Alexandria, La., March 22, 1837, containing one hundred and thirty slaves; and the other in the New Orleans Bee, a few days later, April 8, 1837, containing fifty-one slaves. The former is a "Probate sale" of the slaves belonging to the estate of Mr. Charles S. Lee, deceased, and is advertised by G.W. Keeton, Judge of the Parish of Concordia, La.
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