there upon the libra congress. they have been transcribed and you can get a picture how people were treated at that time. we don't have that in the north because there was a very slow, a very slow, gradual -- i think it was sometime, i think it's july in 1799 the gradual law was passed which says that anyone who has come in the woman that gives birth to a baby that's enslaved, according to the mother, the baby will have 25 years to serve if she's a girl, 28 years to serve the master of her mother, 20 years to serve if the baby is a male. and the loss kept changing. but at the time if you kept that child, you were entitled to $3.50 a month from the state of new york for the upkeep of the child. but many people what the widget is they would take the baby comes you would have to register the birth of that chocolate the town clerk, then you would go to the master and give up the child. and then either the poor match would give the child right back to you or the mast would find someonsome else to take the babd then they