Slavery by Another Name

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by Douglas A. Blackmon


  at empting to break the rst contract he was coerced into. When

  that year of labor was nished Pat erson would be held for a third

  six-month period, Kennedy ruled, for "removing a boat from its

  moorings."

  "Note," Kennedy reminded jurors, lifting an index nger into the

  air. "In none of these cases that I have spoken about did I ever

  receive one cent of costs, nor was I paid in any other way by Mr.

  Pace or anybody else for trying these cases."21

  The testimony of the white men in the slavery ring was crisply

  consistent: al of the black men and women held to forced labor

  were properly convicted of crimes; they freely agreed to be leased

  as laborers; and they were never physical y abused. But outside the

  courtroom, the men at the center of the investigation hardly

  courtroom, the men at the center of the investigation hardly

  behaved as if they were innocent. They began a campaign of

  witness tampering and intimidation.

  Worried that he would be charged, Mayor White in Goodwater

  boarded a train in early May to Columbus, Georgia, to warn John

  G. Dun-bar, the marshal who had assisted in seizing so many black

  men, about the investigation. "White did not want to be indicted,"

  Dunbar later testified.22

  G. B. Walker, the lawyer who had helped bring at ention to the

  slaving operations and set free Caldwel and Pat erson, got an

  ominous let er from his cousin in Tal apoosa County. "Those people

  there were his fel ow townsmen and his friends, and asked me not

  to stir up anything," Walker recal ed the let er saying. "He said …for

  his sake not to do anything against these parties."23

  Mat Davis—the brother of John Davis—was seized from a train,

  locked in the Goodwater jail, and threatened by the brother of

  Robert Franklin. The white man warned Davis's father that he

  would "shoot you as sure as hel " if the older man interfered.

  Released several days later, Mat began hiding in the woods at

  night.24

  Despite the e orts to frighten the growing number of accusers,

  the accounts of kidnappings and violence were making an

  impression on the jury in Montgomery. Even Alabama newspaper

  editors, embarrassed by national reports about the investigation,

  excoriated the accused slave dealers. The ringleaders were growing

  nervous. Kennedy began to wonder if he should tel the truth.

  After giving testimony on May 15, Kennedy, George Cosby, and

  one of the other guards from Pace's farm shared a wagon for a wet

  ride back to Tal-lapoosa County. A steady drizzle pelted the men as

  the mule strained to drag the hack down a pit ed, red-mud road.

  Deep in the bush, the wagon broke down. The men were forced to

  walk through the cold springtime muck. Cosby was frantic at the

  delay. He said he needed "to be at home and get niggers out of the

  way so that no papers could be served on them from the United

  States court," Kennedy later testi ed. Cosby hired a horse at the rst

  States court," Kennedy later testi ed. Cosby hired a horse at the rst

  set lement the men reached and raced ahead. Kennedy and the

  guard trudged on in the rain, certain Cosby intended to murder

  witnesses.

  A week later, the three men nervously sat down to a meal

  together. Cosby had lost his nerve and kil ed no one. But suddenly

  he reached into his shirt pocket and pul ed out a package of

  morphine. Kennedy tried to wrestle it away from him. "It wil come

  to this," Cosby shouted. "I am going to be convicted, and before I

  wil be convicted I wil destroy myself. It is a heap bet er than to go

  to the penitentiary and disgrace my family"25

  At the same time, Pace and Turner hastily began freeing forced

  laborers on their farms and at the quarry. Some disappeared

  entirely, their fates unknown. Other blacks were warned by the

  white men—or through other black employees—not to cooperate

  with the federal investigation. Indeed, of the dozens of black

  workers being held against their wil when Kennedy conducted the

  1900 census, almost none could be located by federal agents three

  years later.

  On May 23, a few days after Kennedy wrestled the morphine

  away from Cosby, Secret Service Agent McAdams stepped o the

  rst morning train to arrive in Goodwater. McAdams walked in the

  bright sunlight to Robert Franklin's mercantile store, pushed open

  the glass-plated door, and informed the constable that the grand

  jury had handed up an indictment for holding black workers in

  peonage. Franklin, and ve others whom McAdams wouldn't

  identify, were named in the indictment. By nightfal , Franklin sat in

  a cel at the Montgomery County jail.

  Kennedy's anxiety was growing. He had participated in dozens of

  bogus trials, though he had never reaped the nancial rewards of

  Pace, Turner, and the Cosbys. He was certain the government—and

  perhaps his employers— would eventual y try to pin the slave trade

  on him. Kennedy told one of the Secret Service agents in Tal apoosa

  County he was wil ing to testify again— this time tel ing the truth.

  County he was wil ing to testify again— this time tel ing the truth.

  A week after Franklin's arrest, Kennedy went back to

  Montgomery and stunned the grand jury. He admit ed trying scores

  of black laborers to force them to work for Pace, Turner, and Cosby.

  He could recal at least thirty cases in which he didn't make any

  record of the proceedings or report a verdict to the county judge, as

  he was required to do by law. It was clear from Kennedy's

  testimony that the tra c in African Americans hadn't been limited

  to men. The white landowners sought out nearly half a dozen black

  women as wel , Kennedy said, with the clear implication that they

  were seized for sexual services. "There were many others, but I can't

  remember their names now," Kennedy said.

  He claimed to have initial y used his authority as a justice of the

  peace properly, but that eventual y the white landowners he

  worked for demanded that he convict any black laborer they

  desired. "They would send one there and have an a davit made,"

  Kennedy said. The black man would be arrested, ned, and sent to

  whichever farmer had arranged the arrest.

  "The agreement was there was no record to be kept," Kennedy

  testified. Nearly every case, he said, "was a trumped up af air."26

  Other white men, fearful of the mounting evidence, began

  breaking their silence about the truth of the slave farms. Wilburn

  Haralson, a young farmer living near the Pace plantation, testi ed

  that the Cosbys compel ed him to swear out false charges against

  several black men whose sentences to work for them were about to

  expire. "I was afraid not to do it, I was afraid of those folks,"

  Haralson testi ed. "I was afraid they would get me in some scrape,

  swear some lie on me, and get me into it, and I had a wife and

  children."

  A black woman named Mat ie Turner was held on the farm

  inde nitely, falsely accused of prostitution, Haralson swore. The

  implication was clear that Turner
was held for the sexual

  exploitation of the farm. He knew of at least one slave worker who

  had been murdered by a relative of the Cosbys. Haralson said few

  African Americans ever escaped. George and Burancas Cosby

  African Americans ever escaped. George and Burancas Cosby

  patrol ed their farms with guns and used special y trained

  bloodhounds to track any who tried to take ight. "They had nigger

  dogs," he said. "There were two dogs at George Cosby's and two

  dogs at Burancas Cosby's house."27

  On May 28, U.S. Deputy Marshal A. B. Colquit hauled Francis M.

  Pruit , the constable and livery stable keeper in Goodwater, to

  Montgomery to hear his indictment read aloud. A total of six

  indictments were handed up against Pruit and two justices of the

  peace, outlining for the rst time publicly how Pace's slaving

  network operated.28

  The indictment charged Pruit with "forcibly seizing the body of

  Ed Moody, a negro," in Coosa County and sel ing him on April 3,

  1903, to Pace, who had held him against his wil since then. At the

  courthouse on the day of his indictment, Pruit claimed he had

  never seen Moody and didn't know Pace. Appointed to his position

  as a constable by former Alabama governor Wil iam Jelks, Pruit

  stoutly defended his county, claiming that Coosa citizens are "as

  good as any in the State." The town of Goodwater was an

  "especial y law-abiding community," he added. Without qualms,

  Pruit told a newspaper reporter that as a constable he had

  "frequently" arrested African Americans who then were ned by a

  local magistrate and "paid out" by local white farmers. But he

  insisted this was entirely within the law. The Montgomery

  Advertiser reported that his claim had "an honest ring."

  The fol owing day, Pace returned to Montgomery. This time, he

  was accompanied from Dadevil e by U.S. marshal A. B. Colquit .

  The men arrived at Union Station at dusk and headed directly to

  the courtroom of Judge Jones. Pace was informed he had been

  named in eight indictments as the buyer of black men seized by

  local constables. Reese recounted key evidence gathered against

  Pace—maintaining that one Negro woman had been kil ed on his

  farm, that men and women had been forced to work nude for lack

  of clothing, and that the laborers were mercilessly beaten.

  of clothing, and that the laborers were mercilessly beaten.

  Pace brought with him to the courtroom a bond posted by

  Wil iam Gray, the Dadevil e banker who at Pace's direction had

  paid out the cash used to purchase most of the enslaved black

  workers.29 When the bond turned out to be insu cient, Jones

  al owed Pace to travel back home with the marshal in tow to make

  new arrangements to avoid jail. Pace expressed his appreciation

  and retired to a Montgomery hotel to await the next morning's train

  to Tal apoosa County.

  Outside the courthouse that night, Pace insisted to a newspaper

  reporter that he was innocent of any wrongdoing, even as he

  conceded without hesitation that he had purchased men from Coosa

  County o cials and worked them on his farm. He said the African

  Americans were put into the prison maintained on his property,

  where they and the convicts were watched over by hired guards and

  hound dogs trained to track men.

  He described buying John Davis from Robert Franklin for $70,

  but said Davis begged to be left at the farm. Pace said he explained

  to Davis that he would be held with the county convicts and treated

  the same. Davis readily agreed, and Pace drew up a contract under

  which he agreed to work sixteen months to pay of his fine.

  Pace was unapologetic, but denied that he had acquired or held a

  large number of black laborers. He had purchased no more than

  ve in the previous year, he said, al of them as favors to the black

  workers themselves. They were never treated brutal y, and it was

  "always understood," he said, that the men would be freed if

  relatives or friends reimbursed him for the costs of bailing out and

  holding the laborers.30

  Next to make the trip to Montgomery were George Cosby, his

  nephew Burancas, and James H. Todd, one of the strongmen used

  as an enforcer on the Pace farm. The men arrived in the state

  capital near daylight on June 10, having spent the night on a

  Western Railroad train stranded between Ope-lika and

  Montgomery. Accompanying them were Deputy Marshals Hiram

  Montgomery. Accompanying them were Deputy Marshals Hiram

  Gibson and A. B. Colquit , who had arrested them on Tuesday.

  The defendants wouldn't talk to reporters on the day of their

  court appearance. Todd had been an overseer for Pace for more

  than fteen years. Burancas Cosby, a twenty-three-year-old "wide in

  stock, build and ruddy face," worked for his uncle George. The

  younger Cosby claimed that at least two of the blacks named in the

  indictment were "unknown to him." By nightfal , al had returned to

  Dadevil e by train.

  As word of the arrests raced across Alabama and the rest of the

  country, an epic legal and political confrontation began to take

  shape. J. Thomas He in—the stirring white supremacist orator who

  proclaimed to the constitutional convention two years earlier that

  God put "negroes" on the earth to serve white men—was the

  Alabama secretary of state by 1903. Almost immediately, He in

  began circulating word that he would aid the indicted white men,

  perhaps even representing them in the courtroom. He would have

  none of the spineless apologia for new slavery that southern

  journalists and some politicians rst o ered. He embraced it as a

  return to the natural order of man.

  A few southerners stepped forward to genuinely condemn the

  new slavery system—but very few. One was Joseph C. Manning, the

  postmaster of Alexander City in Tal apoosa County. A ery

  populist, he had fought in the 1890s to hold on to a coalition of

  black and white voters in Alabama, and after the turn of the century

  railed against the growing national consensus that blacks should be

  excluded from al political activity—even within the Republican

  Party. "What has become of the ringing declaration of Abraham

  Lincoln that ‘The nation cannot endure half slave and half free,’ " he

  wrote to an Ohio newspaper.31 He denounced the de facto

  annulment of the Fifteenth Amendment and condemned Republican

  leaders for their crass wil ingness "to acquiesce in slavery for the

  south and stand for human liberty in the north."

  Later, Manning wrote to the New York Evening Post, lashing out

  at the abuses of blacks he had witnessed and the men in his county

  at the abuses of blacks he had witnessed and the men in his county

  al eged to have held slaves. "It is today under the law in Alabama, a

  crime for a farm laborer (black) to quit his employer. He may be

  denied his pay, he may be half fed, he may be beaten with a buggy

  trace but if he ‘fails to keep his contract’ then he is a criminal,"

  Manning insisted. "There are black belt planters who do starve,

  mistre
at, abuse and beat men, and force them to break their

  contract in order to get them arraigned before some demon in

  white skin, but with a heart as black as hel itself; and another year

  of servitude is at ached by a chain more gal ing than that of chat el

  slavery to the ankle of the black man. The case of Pat erson is only

  one in thousands, yes, in ten thousand….

  "The Mayor of this town of Goodwater …would be

  complimented in his own estimation no higher than to have it

  writ en that any negro is no more worthy of human sympathy or

  political consideration than is any mule, and of less kind treatment

  than a good dog," Manning continued. "Here is the truth about the

  South that some men of the North would ‘let alone.’ Here is the

  South that should be permit ed to adopt its own course in set ling

  the race problem!"32

  Goodwater Mayor Dave White red back in defense of his town,

  claiming that no black man or woman had ever been abused in his

  court. "Unjust punishment of negroes is absolutely repulsive to me

  and that no negro is imposed on when it is in my power to prevent

  it," he wrote.

  I defy any person to prove that any negro or white man has ever been

  convicted in my court that was not guilty or that didn't have a fair trial, or

  that received illegal or cruel punishment after they had been convicted.

  And I am certain that I can truthfully state no negro has ever been worked

  in slavery in the town of Goodwater since the day when slavery was

  abolished in the sixties. It is a fact that numerous negroes have been tried

  and convicted in Goodwater for stealing and have received a small ne

  and a light punishment, when a white man under the same circumstances

  would have been much more severely dealt with as a great allowance is

  always made for the negro owing to his standing in life.33

  Editors of the state's most prominent daily, the Montgomery

  Advertiser, were apoplectic that Manning, an Alabama native, had

  ut ered such heresy in the northern press. It cal ed Manning "rat le-

  brained" and, reaching back to an archaic term for any creature that

  turned against family doctrine and patriarchy, a "nest fouler."

  The newspaper labeled his description of widespread slavery an

  "outrageous exaggeration." The Advertiser also railed at Roosevelt's

  promise at Lincoln's tomb of a "square deal" for African Americans,

 

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