Slavery by Another Name

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Slavery by Another Name Page 8

by Douglas A. Blackmon


  of Smith's, Col. C. C. Huckabee, was a planter and longtime major

  slaveholder. His forced workers were a key element of his

  investment in the enterprise, and in its expansion during the war.

  Enormous numbers of men were needed to provide the quantities

  of wood, ore, and limestone required by a nineteenth-century

  furnace. "I set al my niggers to work in the woods," Huckabee later

  recal ed, "and for many a day after that, the axes sounded like

  thunder in the pines."30

  At the Wares’ Shelby Iron Works, slaves were the salvation of the

  operation's ability to continue supplying thousands of tons of iron

  to the Confederacy. Perhaps owing to his New England origins,

  Ware had never seriously considered extensive use of black labor in

  the rst fteen years of business. In 1859, however, he inquired

  about the industrial use of slaves in a let er to Joseph R. Anderson,

  about the industrial use of slaves in a let er to Joseph R. Anderson,

  manager of the Tredegar Works and perhaps the most famous

  southern industrialist of the era. Anderson responded

  enthusiastical y and o ered to sel Ware some of Tredegar's wel -

  trained factory slaves.31

  Ware didn't buy any of the African Americans available from

  Virginia, but he did bring in as partners several of Alabama's most

  prominent proponents of industrialism.32 They in turn began to

  acquire black laborers aggressively Soon, Shelby Works, with

  dozens of African American forced laborers on its balance sheet,

  was the largest owner of slaves in the county. Nearby, the Alabama

  Coal Mining Co. owned another dozen slaves, al men aged twenty-

  six to sixty.33

  In 1862, the Shelby Works contracted with the Confederate

  government to produce the vast quantity of twelve thousand tons of

  iron a year for the war e ort, e ectively placing the operation

  under the control of the Confederate chief of ordnance in

  Richmond, Col. Josiah Gorgas, and his iron agent at the rebel

  arsenal and munitions factory in Selma, Col. Colin J. McRae. For

  the course of the war, the Shelby Works at empted to keep its

  furnaces in near constant blast—producing huge quantities of iron

  to be shipped to gun barrel makers in Mississippi and Georgia,34

  and to the cannon and plate armor manufacturers at Selma. A

  second furnace was added in 1863 to boost the war ef ort.35

  With most of the white male population already mustered or

  conscripted into ghting units, the company's only option for

  ful l ing its obligations was to rely almost entirely on slaves.

  Borrowing from the practices of railroads and the few other

  industrial systems already familiar to businessmen of the South, the

  Shelby Works quickly came to rely on "leased" slave labor that

  would prove both extraordinarily ef ective and resilient.

  To procure the slaves, the Shelby Works hired a labor agent

  named John M. Til man to lease African Americans from plantation

  owners in central Alabama, northeastern Mississippi, and eastern

  Georgia. Til man's duties also included acquiring as many mules as

  Georgia. Til man's duties also included acquiring as many mules as

  possible, and the feed corn to feed both the four-legged and two-

  legged creatures he col ected.36

  Leased slave laborers typical y cost $120 a year near the

  beginning of the war, but their cost more than doubled by the crisis

  years of 1864 and 1865. Slaves with a particularly useful skil , such

  as carpentry or prior iron-making experience, fetched $500 or more

  per year. The great majority were men aged twenty to forty- ve,

  engaged in the back-breaking work of cut ing timber in nearby

  forests and digging iron ore and limestone. They were

  supplemented by a much smal er number of women and their

  children who performed menial tasks such as cooking and cleaning.

  Soon, Ware was the master of between 350 and 400 slaves. His

  company remained hungry for more.37

  Ware's slaves worked under the control of a white overseer,

  mostly in gangs of men assigned to speci c tasks. Under terms of

  the contracts, owners received quarterly payments, and their slaves

  were provided with basic food, clothing, and shelter. If a slave

  escaped, it was the responsibility of the company to pay a fee for

  the slave's arrest and return to the ironworks. As an incentive to

  work hard and fol ow rules, slaves were permit ed to earn smal

  amounts of cash for themselves—typical y less than $5 a month—by

  agreeing to perform extra tasks such as tending the furnace at night,

  cut ing extra wood, or digging additional ore.38

  The company overseer, cal ed "boss" or "captain" by the slaves,

  was not empowered to severely discipline the leased slaves in his

  charge. Punishment remained the province of the owner. When

  slaves at empted to ee, stole, or refused the orders of the overseer,

  Shelby Works wrote the owner for instructions on how to handle

  his property. The punishments meted out by plantation masters to

  the slaves who worked under their direct employ were often harsh

  in the extreme, even torturous by modern sensibilities. But few

  slave masters encouraged the forge operators to treat their valued

  stock with brutality, particularly when the e ciency of the slave

  had no bearing on his nancial return to the owner. Slaves who at

  had no bearing on his nancial return to the owner. Slaves who at

  Christmas reported to their owners that the managers of the

  ironworks had abused them often were not made available to the

  company again. Moreover, slaves with wives stil living back at the

  plantations from which they had come were al owed to return

  home periodical y, sometimes several times a year.

  Industrialists were embracing the same practices across the South.

  An advertisement placed by the Empire State Iron and Coal Mining

  Company of Trenton, Georgia, in the Huntsvil e, Alabama,

  Confederate in 1863 sought to "hire or buy, 100 able-bodied hands,

  to be employed at their works … 20 miles southwest of

  Chat anooga."39

  In 1862, an Alabama engineer named John T Milner and his

  business partner, Frank Gilmer, convinced the Confederate

  government to nance the construction of a blast furnace on Red

  Mountain in Je erson County to produce iron for the war e ort.

  The plant, constructed and operated primarily by slaves, marked

  the birth of the vast industrial complex that would surround the

  new city of Birmingham by the end of the century. By the time the

  Red Mountain furnace was in operation in 1863, Milner and Gilmer

  had also opened a complex of mines operated with slave labor near

  the town of Helena, Alabama.40 Within a decade after the war, the

  Helena mines would be manned entirely by convict forced laborers

  and set an early standard for the depredations against ostensibly

  emancipated African Americans.

  Everywhere in the South that could produce coal or iron during

  the war, southern industrialists were being pressured to increase

  production at existing mines and furnaces, or to seize and reopen


  idled business. In a move that would hang ominously over the

  descendants of the Cot ingham slaves, southern industrialists in

  1861 took over a mining company near Tracy City, Tennessee,

  previously control ed by a syndicate of northern investors.

  With the outbreak of war, the formerly New York-control ed

  mines of Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad Co. were placed in the

  hands of Confederate-sympathizing businessmen. Arthur S. Colyar,

  hands of Confederate-sympathizing businessmen. Arthur S. Colyar,

  the southerner who took over management of the company in

  1861, immediately placed forty slaves in the concern's Sewanee

  Mines. He was quickly pleased with their performance, tel ing a

  newspaper reporter: "In a few months they were doing good service

  and not one of the party failed in the ef ort to learn to dig coal."41

  The business would become the largest commercial enterprise in

  the South, and a half century later the largest subsidiary of U.S.

  Steel, and the company that would acquire Scip's grandson Green

  Cot enham four decades later.

  To the enterprising industrialists who would reshape the southern

  economy in the half century after the Civil War, the new concepts

  of industrialized black labor had taken rm hold. Long before the

  end of chat el slavery, Milner was in the vanguard of that new

  theory of industrial forced labor. In 1859, he wrote that black labor

  marshaled into the regimented productivity of factory set ings

  would be the key to the economic development of Alabama and

  the South. Milner believed that white people "would always look

  upon and treat the negro as an inferior being." Nonetheless—indeed

  for that very reason—blacks would serve a highly useful purpose as

  the clever mules of an industrial age, "provided he has an overseer

  —a Southern man, who knows how to manage negroes."42 Milner's

  intuition that the future of blacks in America rested on how whites

  chose to manage them, whether in slavery or out of it, would

  resonate through the next half century of national discourse about

  the proper role of the descendants of Africa in American life.

  Milner was no mere theorist. He was a dogged executor of his

  vision. It was men like Milner who would seize the opportunity

  presented by convict leasing to reclaim slavery from the destruction

  of the Civil War. As Alabama began sel ing its black prisoners in

  large numbers in the 1870s, he scrambled to acquire al that were

  available—plunging them by the hundreds into a hel ish coal

  operation cal ed the Eureka mines, and later il egal y sel ing

  hundreds of these new slaves in the 1880s, along with another coal

  hundreds of these new slaves in the 1880s, along with another coal

  mine, to the Georgia Pacific Railroad Co.

  In every set ing that Milner employed convict slaves in the late

  nineteenth century, he and his business associates subjected the

  workers to almost animalistic mistreatment—a revivi cation of the

  most atrocious aspects of antebel um bondage. Records of Milner's

  various mines and slave farms in southern Alabama owned by one

  of his business partners—a cousin to an investor in the Bibb Steam

  Mil —tel the stories of black women stripped naked and whipped,

  of hundreds of men starved, chained, and beaten, of workers

  perpetual y lice-ridden and barely clothed.

  Milner took center stage in Alabama's new industrialization,

  urging southerners to "go to work…eradicating the diseases that are

  destroying us." Part of that eradication would be to successful y re-

  regiment freed slaves. "I am clearly of the opinion, from my own

  observation, that negro labor can be made exceedingly pro table in

  rol ing mil s," Milner had writ en of steel production in 1859. "I

  have long since learned that negro slave labor is more reliable and

  cheaper for any business connected with the construction of a

  railroad than white."43

  Milner and others had seen his theory of the black slave as an

  e ective industrial forced worker vividly ful l ed during the war.

  The system emerging with the end of Reconstruction would mimic

  it repeatedly. African Americans driven by the right men, in the

  correct ways, could be the engines of far more complex enterprises

  than the old bourbon-soaked planters would ever have believed

  possible. Black laborers might not quite be men, the industrialists

  reasoned, but they recognized that African Americans were far more

  than apes. The renting of slaves, as much as anything, had taught

  them that masses of black laborers brought under temporary control

  of a commercial enterprise could be powerful y leveraged in

  commerce.

  The at itudes among southern whites that a resubjugation of

  African Americans was an acceptable—even essential—element of

  solving the "Negro question" couldn't have been more explicit. The

  solving the "Negro question" couldn't have been more explicit. The

  desire of white farmers to recapture their former slaves through

  new civil laws was transparent. In the immediate wake of

  emancipation, the Alabama legislature swiftly passed a measure

  under which the orphans of freed slaves, or the children of blacks

  deemed inadequate parents, were to be "apprenticed" to their

  former masters. The South Carolina planter Henry Wil iam Ravenel

  wrote in September 1865: "There must… be stringent laws to

  control the negroes, & require them to ful l their contracts of

  labour on the farms."44

  With the southern economy in ruins, state o cials limited to the

  barest resources, and county governments with even fewer, the

  concept of reintro-ducing the forced labor of blacks as a means of

  funding government services was viewed by whites as an inherently

  practical method of eliminating the cost of building prisons and

  returning blacks to their appropriate position in society. Forcing

  convicts to work as part of punishment for an ostensible crime was

  clearly legal too; the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution,

  adopted in 1865 to formal y abolish slavery, speci cal y permit ed

  involuntary servitude as a punishment for "duly convicted"

  criminals.

  Beginning in the late 1860s, and accelerating after the return of

  white political control in 1877, every southern state enacted an

  array of interlocking laws essential y intended to criminalize black

  life. Many such laws were struck down in court appeals or through

  federal interventions, but new statutes embracing the same strictures

  on black life quickly appeared to replace them. Few laws

  speci cal y enunciated their applicability only to blacks, but it was

  widely understood that these provisions would rarely if ever be

  enforced on whites. Every southern state except Arkansas and

  Tennessee had passed laws by the end of 1865 outlawing vagrancy

  and so vaguely de ning it that virtual y any freed slave not under

  the protection of a white man could be arrested for the crime. An

  1865 Mississippi statute required African American workers to

  1865 Mississippi statute required African Amer
ican workers to

  enter into labor contracts with white farmers by January 1 of every

  year or risk arrest. Four other states legislated that African

  Americans could not legal y be hired for work without a discharge

  paper from their previous employer—e ectively preventing them

  from leaving the plantation of the white man they worked for. In

  the 1880s, Alabama, North Carolina, and Florida enacted laws

  making it a criminal act for a black man to change employers

  without permission.

  In nearly al cases, the potential penalty awaiting black men, and

  a smal number of women, snared by those laws was the prospect

  of being sold into forced labor. Many states in the South and the

  North at empted to place their prisoners in private hands during

  the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. The state of Alabama

  was long predisposed to the idea, rather than taking on the cost of

  housing and feeding prisoners itself. It experimented with turning

  over convicts to private "wardens" during the 1840s and 1850s but

  was ultimately unsatis ed with the results. The state saved some

  expense but gathered no revenue. Moreover, the physical abuse that

  came to be almost synonymous with privatized incarceration always

  was eventual y unacceptable in an era when virtual y every convict

  was white. The punishment of slaves for misdeeds rested with their

  owners.

  Hardly a year after the end of the war, in 1866, Alabama

  governor Robert M. Pat on, in return for the total sum of $5, leased

  for six years his state's 374 state prisoners to a company cal ing

  itself "Smith and McMil en." The transaction was in fact a sham, as

  the partnership was actual y control ed by the Alabama and

  Chat anooga Railroad. Governor Pat-ton became president of the

  railroad three years later.45 Such duplicity would be endemic to

  convict leasing. For the next eighty years, in every southern state,

  the questions of who control ed the fates of black prisoners, which

  few black men and women among armies of defendants had

  commit ed true crimes, and who was receiving the financial benefits

  of their re-enslavement would almost always never be answered.

  Later in 1866, Texas leased 250 convicts to two railroads at the

  Later in 1866, Texas leased 250 convicts to two railroads at the

  rate of $12.50 a month.46 In May 1868, four months after Henry

 

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