In 1837, the United States inaugurated a vice president who had, for more than two decades, lived openly with a woman he referred to as his wife. They shared a home, raised two daughters together, and presented themselves publicly as a family. He gave the children his surname, acknowledged them openly, educated them, and granted them valuable land. Yet the woman at the center of this household was never legally his wife, because she was his slave. Her name was Julia Chin, and Richard Mentor Johnson never granted her freedom.
Julia Chin died in 1833. She died enslaved. After her death, Johnson took another enslaved woman into his household. When that woman attempted to escape with another man, Johnson ordered her captured, punished, and sold. Four years after Julia’s death, in 1837, Richard Mentor Johnson was sworn in as Vice President of the United States.
How did a man with such a life become vice president? In part because he emancipated his two daughters, but never their mother. And what became of those daughters after Johnson’s death? This is a story his family worked hard to erase. His brothers destroyed personal letters, denied Julia’s existence, and seized the inheritance meant for his children. Nearly two centuries later, the record finally resurfaced.

Kentucky, 1815. When Robert Johnson died, his son Richard inherited a thriving plantation, dozens of enslaved people, and a young woman named Julia Chin. She was around 25 years old and classified at the time as an “octoroon,” meaning she was predominantly of European ancestry with one Black ancestor. She had been raised in the Johnson household, educated by Richard’s mother, and was legally considered his property.
Richard Mentor Johnson was a lawyer, a politician, and a celebrated war hero known for killing the Shawnee leader Tecumseh during the War of 1812. He served in Congress and harbored ambitions for higher office. But when he returned to his plantation, Blue Spring Farm in Great Crossing, Kentucky, he made a choice that would follow him for the rest of his life.
Because interracial marriage was illegal in Kentucky, Julia could never legally be his wife. Still, from roughly 1811 to 1833, they lived together as a married couple. They had two daughters. Johnson publicly acknowledged the girls, gave them his last name, ensured they were educated, and never denied that Julia was their mother.
This openness shocked society. While many white politicians and planters kept enslaved mistresses in secret, Johnson did not hide his relationship. What most people did not know was that despite calling Julia his wife, despite losing political standing over her, he never freed her. For 22 years, she lived as his partner and died as his legal property.
When Robert Johnson’s will was read in 1815, Richard inherited Blue Spring Farm—2,000 acres of fertile land, buildings, and 40 enslaved people. Among the names listed was Julia Chin. She had been raised by Richard’s mother, taught to read, write, sew, cook, and manage a household. She played the piano, spoke with refined grammar, and had light skin. None of that mattered under Kentucky law. One drop of African ancestry classified her as Black, and Black meant enslaved.
Richard moved back to Blue Spring Farm shortly after. Julia prepared the house, managed the move, directed other enslaved workers, and welcomed him home. In the weeks that followed, a routine developed. Richard handled accounts and politics. Julia managed the household. They dined together and spoke openly about plantation affairs.
One evening, their relationship shifted from implied to real. Julia had no legal power to refuse. Enslaved women could not consent. Historians disagree on her exact age when she gave birth to her first child, but what is certain is that by 1812, Julia was pregnant with Richard’s child.
When their first daughter was born, Richard did something unusual. He acknowledged the child publicly and gave her his surname: Adaline Chin Johnson. He recorded the birth officially, listing himself as the father and Julia as the mother. In a society where white men often sold or erased evidence of mixed-race children, Johnson did the opposite.
In 1815, Julia gave birth to a second daughter, Imogene Chin Johnson. Again, Richard publicly recognized the child and gave her his name. He now had two daughters by an enslaved woman and no white wife. Julia lived in the main house, accompanied him to church, and managed the household. Yet in the plantation records, her name remained listed among the enslaved.
For 22 years, Julia lived knowing that if Richard died, she could be sold. If he chose to abandon her, she could be sent to the fields. He referred to her as his wife in public, but he never signed the document that would free her.

Julia also raised their daughters to live in a world that rejected them. The girls were educated, dressed well, and taught music and languages. Richard hired tutors. Guests watched them perform on the piano, applauding politely while privately mocking the spectacle of enslaved children trained like white daughters.
Legally, both girls were slaves. Despite their surname, their education, and their father’s status, Kentucky law dictated that children followed the condition of their mother. Julia lived with the constant fear that her daughters could be sold.
When Richard traveled to Washington for long periods, Julia ran the plantation alone. She managed finances, oversaw workers, negotiated with merchants, and signed receipts. Written orders instructed white employees to obey her. She exercised authority that few enslaved women ever held, yet she owned nothing—not even herself.
In 1825, Julia organized a massive reception at Blue Spring Farm for the Marquis de Lafayette. She coordinated food, staff, decorations, and hospitality. She greeted Lafayette as the mistress of the house, and her daughters performed music for him. The guests applauded. Kentucky society did not forget.
As the daughters grew, Julia taught them how to navigate a society that refused to accept them. They were excluded from white social circles, stared at in shops, and seated with enslaved people at church despite their appearance and education.
Richard planned to marry his daughters to white men, which required freeing them first. In 1830, he emancipated Imogene so she could marry Daniel Pence. In 1832, he did the same for Adaline. Both received land, money, and enslaved workers as dowries.
Julia, however, remained enslaved.
By 1833, Julia was 43 years old. She had managed the plantation, raised Richard’s children, and endured decades of scandal. She was still listed as property valued at $500.
That summer, a cholera epidemic swept through Kentucky. Julia was caring for sick children at the Choctaw Academy, a school Richard had founded. She nursed students day and night. Eventually, she fell ill herself. Richard was away. Julia died on July 29, 1833.
She was buried somewhere on the plantation. No marker was placed. No record preserved the location.
Two days later, Richard arrived. He did not publicly mourn her. He did not write about her death. Her name was simply crossed out in the inventory as “deceased.”
Within months, Richard took another enslaved woman as his partner. When she tried to escape, he ordered her captured, punished, and sold. He then took a third woman. The pattern was unmistakable.
In 1836, President Andrew Jackson pushed for Richard Mentor Johnson to become the Democratic vice-presidential nominee. His personal life became ammunition for political attacks. Pamphlets mocked Julia and her daughters. Racist caricatures circulated widely.
Johnson failed to secure enough electoral votes and became the only vice president in U.S. history chosen by the Senate. In 1837, he was sworn in as the 9th Vice President of the United States.
Julia had been dead for four years. She had died enslaved.
Johnson served four years in office. Afterward, he returned to Kentucky, where he continued owning enslaved people. When he died in 1850, his brothers denied the existence of his daughters and seized his estate. They destroyed his papers and attempted to erase Julia from history.
Some property was eventually recovered by Imogene and her children, but much was lost. Julia’s grave remains unmarked. Her story nearly vanished.
Richard Mentor Johnson’s tomb identifies him as a war hero and vice president. It says nothing of Julia Chin. She left behind no monument, no legal recognition, no freedom—only records that survived long enough to tell the truth.
For 22 years, Johnson lived with Julia Chin as if she were his wife. He acknowledged their children, endured public scandal, and paid political costs. Yet he never freed her.
This is not a story of forbidden love. It is a story of power. Richard Mentor Johnson had the authority to free Julia at any time. He chose not to. He freed his daughters when it suited his plans. He never freed their mother.
Julia Chin lived. She worked. She loved. And she died enslaved.