From NKAA, Notable Kentucky African Americans Database (main entry)
Bullitt County (KY) Enslaved, Free Blacks, and Free Mulattoes, 1850-1870
Bullitt County is located in the western Bluegrass Region of Kentucky, bordered by four other Kentucky counties. Shepherdsville is the county seat, named for Adam Shepherd, an engineer and Revolutionary War veteran. The town was founded in 1793, three years before the county was established. Bullitt County was formed from parts of Jefferson and Nelson Counties and named after Alexander Scott Bullitt, the state's first Lieutenant Governor.The total population in 1800 was 3,542, according to the Second Census of Kentucky: 2,564 whites, 969 enslaved, and nine free colored. In 1830, there were two African American slave holders in the town of Mount Washington. The 1860 population was 5,631, according to the U.S. Federal Census, excluding the enslaved. Below are the figures for the slave holders, enslaved, and free Blacks and Mulattoes from 1850-1870.
1850 Slave Schedule
- 252 slave owners
- 1,186 Black slaves
- 169 Mulatto slaves
- 23 free Blacks
- 4 free Mulattoes
- 294 slave owners
- 1,067 Black slaves
- 391 Mulatto slaves
- 13 free Blacks
- 3 free Mulattoes [women]
- 984 Blacks
- 189 Mulattoes
- About 17 U.S. Colored Troops listed Bullitt County, KY as their birth location.