Person or Property
Letters of ownership demonstrated an enslaver’s forcible possession of another person. While these documents contained data similar to contemporary birth certificates, they recognized a person’s legal status as property, rather than as an equal citizen.
![Birth Certificate](/img/temp/temp-comparison-1-580.jpg)
Birth Certificate
The 14th Amendment of 1868 granted full citizenship to persons of African descent born or naturalized in the United States.
Today, a birth certificate is one of many documents that identify a person as a legal citizen. Compare this with an 1803 document from New York that legally classified a person as enslaved.
![](/img/content/037_letter-of-ownership_orig-ratio_w1340.jpg)
Letter of Ownership
In the eyes of the law, enslaved people were property, not citizens. A letter of ownership, like this one for Ruth, made this status clear.
How does this letter show that Ruth was treated as a possession instead of a person with rights?