Black slaveholders
It's funny how some pro-blacks try to turn regular blacks against whites and everyone else just so they can keep control of a person's insight, ironically arguing the very thing they practice:
"Black Americans continued to hold slaves through the Civil War. In 1860, some 3,000 blacks owned nearly 20,000 black slaves. In South Carolina alone, more than 10,000 blacks were owned by black slaveholders. [See also "Black Slaveowners."]
Born a slave in 1790, William Ellison owned 63 slaves by 1860, making him one of Charleston's leading slaveholders. In the 1850 census for Charleston City, the port of Charleston, there were 68 black men and 123 black women who owned slaves. In Louisiana's St. Landry Parish, according to the 1860 census, black planter Auguste Donatto owned 70 slaves and farmed 500 acres of cotton fields.
Black slaveholders were the exception to the rule, but so, too, were white ones. Only a small minority of Southern whites owned slaves, little more than five percent of the white population if calculated by individual owner, or some 20 to 25 percent if all the members of the slaveowners' families are included. This means that 75 percent or more of Southerners neither owned slaves themselves nor were members of families who did."
http://www.issues-views.com/index.php/sect/23000/article/23018
DIXIE'S CENSORED SUBJECT BLACK SLAVEOWNERS
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/654735/posts
http://www.webster.edu/~corbetre/haiti/bookreviews/davis1.htm