Abner Green (b. 1762 – d. bef. 1817[1]) was a wealthy planter of the Natchez District in West Florida, later Mississippi, United States.
Abner Green was reportedly born January 21, 1762 in James City County, Virginia.[2] Green was in the Natchez district by 1784 when he sold a man and woman, both 50 years of age, to Richard Harrison for $490. In 1787 he and his brother Thomas M. Green Jr. bought 11 slaves, some native to Jamaica and Africa, from Daniel Clark for $6,050.[3] He served as the treasurer of Mississippi Territory from about 1802 to 1804,[4] having been appointed by William C. C. Claiborne sometime before April 1802.[5] A traveler of 1808 described him as having one of the most "conspicuous" plantations in the vicinity of Natchez, and recorded that "I had now come twelve miles, and it being excessively hot, I stopped at Mr. Green's to request some fodder for my horse, to which Mr. Green obligingly added an invitation to dinner to myself. After dinner, Mr. Green invited me to look at his garden, which was very spacious, and well stocked with useful vegetables, and understanding that I had been in the West Indian islands, he made me observe some ginger in a thriving state, and the cullaloo or Indian kail, also some very fine plants of Guinea grass, which he proposes propagating."[6] Abner Green lived near Second Creek, on a plantation called the Grange.[7] According to one of his sons-in-law, Abner Green was one of the planters to whom future president Andrew Jackson sold slaves.[8]
In his will dictated in 1809, he arranged for the manumission of "Betito and his wife Bess" bequeathing them $700 as well as "cows + calves, three breeding sows, two good work creatures, one yoke of oxen, and one hundred pounds of bacon, fifty pounds of sugar and coffee, and twenty acres of land."[9] Green helped organize the Bank of the Mississippi in 1810.[10] Also in 1810, Green's son Thomas H. Green was murdered by two men they had enslaved.[11]