Lewis C. Robards
Lewis C. Robards | |
|---|---|
L. C. Robards and Washington Bolton offered a reward of US$1,400 (equivalent to $48,995 in 2024) reward for the recapture of George Keen, Jackson, Jerry, Joe (a blacksmith), John, Morris, and Reuben (The Louisville Daily Courier, November 17, 1854) | |
| Born | c. 1817 Kentucky? |
| Died | Kentucky? |
| Other names | L. C. Robards, Louis C. Robards |
Lewis C. Robards (fl. 1848–1855) was a 19th-century American slave trader of Lexington, Kentucky. He had an unscrupulous reputation as a dealer, and he was widely known for his "special" offerings: fancy girls, meaning young, light-skinned enslaved women and girls offered for sexual exploitation. Robards was also considered a likely culprit in several cases of kidnapping into slavery. His slave pen was funded in part by a loan from John Hunt Morgan; when he could not repay the loan his premises were sold to Bolton, Dickens & Co., a multi-state slave-trading firm based in West Tennessee.