Fran Spielman (4 de mayo de 2004). «Bank Adds to Slavery Disclosure». Chicago Sun-Times(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 8 de octubre de 2020. Consultado el 13 de noviembre de 2020. «The documents from Riggs, Peabody and Co., a predecessor of J.P. Morgan Chase, include a December 1833 receipt for a pair of shoes for a slave named Sally. For William W. Corcoran, a client of George Peabody, there was a receipt for an August 1832 ad placed in the Columbia Gazette for the private sale of slaves. And there was a Peabody and Riggs receipt listing slaves transported on a ship called the Aurora.»
Fran Spielman (4 de mayo de 2004). «Bank Adds to Slavery Disclosure». Chicago Sun-Times(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 8 de octubre de 2020. Consultado el 13 de noviembre de 2020. «The documents from Riggs, Peabody and Co., a predecessor of J.P. Morgan Chase, include a December 1833 receipt for a pair of shoes for a slave named Sally. For William W. Corcoran, a client of George Peabody, there was a receipt for an August 1832 ad placed in the Columbia Gazette for the private sale of slaves. And there was a Peabody and Riggs receipt listing slaves transported on a ship called the Aurora.»