Slavery by Another Name

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by Douglas A. Blackmon


  degree," he quickly wrote the at orney general. "These practices are

  indulged in many other counties in the district and our e ort shal

  be made in the direction of put ing an end to them."8

  But more practical men than Reese could bet er see what the

  future held. White leaders were ral ying across the South,

  emboldened by men such as Secretary of State He in, who was

  crisscrossing Alabama denouncing Reese's investigation and

  castigating any white man who did not agree. At the same time,

  black preachers and African Americans who had established some

  sliver of nancial security grew fearful of the rising temperature

  around them. They had learned through bloody experience the

  dangers of chal enging the status quo of white domination, and also

  that in the in exible rituals of southern racial interaction men such

  as themselves were expected to prostrate themselves before whites

  as proof that they too gave no credence to the inquiries demanded

  by President Roosevelt and Judge Jones.

  Shortly after the Cosby sentencing, Edward M. Adams, a Secret

  Service agent stationed in Montgomery, wrote to Washington

  headquarters in hopes of softening any disappointment that might

  come if no jury convictions were won in any of the slavery cases.

  He was particularly concerned that another agent assigned to the

  cases not be tainted by any such failure. "He has secured evidence in

  a number of cases that ought to bring convictions, yet, knowing

  public sentiment as I do, I fear, unless compromise verdicts can be

  secured, that no convictions wil result," Adams wrote. "The iniquity

  of peonage wil always remain in this country in practice, to

  eradicate it is an interminable work. The sentiment against the

  in iction of punishment to o enders nds its strongest exponent in

  Secretary of State He in, an orator of no mean ability, and he is

  going about the state like a roaring lion. I merely write this, to say,

  that whatever the result in the trial of the cases in this court, the

  failure to convict and punish o enders, cannot be charged to our

  service."

  Adams included with his let er a newspaper clipping reporting

  Adams included with his let er a newspaper clipping reporting

  that petitions signed by hundreds of blacks in Tal apoosa and Coosa

  counties had been presented to Judge Jones asking for clemency for

  the Cosbys. "These cases have caused a bit er feeling between the

  two races," the article said with profound understatement, "and that

  the petitioners believe that the peonage system is broken up, and

  further says that the Cosbys are good citizens of the community."9

  • •

  Indeed, whatever initial contrition white southerners expressed at

  the rst revelations of slavery was evaporating as it became clear

  that Judge Jones and Reese had no plans to stop after a few

  symbolic guilty pleas. Facing the dock of the courtroom, Fletch

  Turner and his son, Al en, were ready to embrace the most brazen

  defense of the new slavery yet of ered.

  On July 4, at orneys for the father and son led demurrers,

  chal enging the peonage charges against them. Their fundamental

  objection was constructed upon a startling argument. The Turners’

  lawyers conceded that their clients indeed had engaged in a form of

  slavery, but that involuntary servitude wasn't peonage and therefore

  wasn't il egal.

  "Unlawful y and knowingly holding a person forcibly and against

  his wil and requiring such person to labor for the holder to work

  out a debt claimed by the holder to be due him …does not

  constitute holding such person to a condition of peonage under the

  laws of the United States," they wrote.10

  Moreover, the Turners’ lawyers argued that no system of peonage

  existed in Alabama at al , making the statute forbidding it

  irrelevant, and charges based on the law impossible. They added

  that since peonage was de ned as forced labor in repayment of a

  debt, the Turners couldn't be convicted of peonage if, as the

  government contended, the debts owed to them by black workers

  were bogus.

  Ignoring the claims of extreme abuse and homicide commit ed on

  the Turner farm, the at orneys argued that the men's behavior might

  the Turner farm, the at orneys argued that the men's behavior might

  constitute a form of slavery but that no federal statute made slavery

  a crime. Cases of slavery would have to be brought in a state court

  by local o cials under Alabama's law against false imprisonment,

  the lawyers argued. No acknowledgment was made that in a local

  court, the prosecutor would be a white man elected in al -white

  elections, the jury guaranteed to be al -white, the judges likely

  involved in the slaving conspiracy, the buyers of men almost

  certainly prominent local gures, black at orneys barred from

  appearing, and black witnesses treated as unreliable by nature. In

  the four decades since emancipation, no one could recal any such

  criminal charges ever being brought in a southern court. No one

  imagined that ever changing.

  Astonishingly, the lawyers were on some level correct. The Civil

  Rights Act of 1866, passed in the wake of the war to formalize the

  ending of slavery, simply declared al persons born in the United

  States to be ful - edged citizens with the right to vote regardless of

  race or previous "condition of slavery or involuntary servitude." But

  it did not clearly state that the holding of slaves was a crime, and

  the disparate treatment of former slaves was made only a

  misdemeanor, carrying a maximum penalty of one year in jail.

  Later statutes in the 1870s made segregated accommodations,

  schools, and anti-black-voting measures il egal, but actual y

  weakened the minimum penalty for violations. In 1883, the U.S.

  Supreme Court declared even those laws unconstitutional, ruling

  that the Thirteenth and Fourteenth amendments—approved in 1868

  to abolish slavery and establish black citizenship—didn't authorize

  Congress to pass such enforcement laws. Fol owing the growing

  national sentiment that race mat ers be left alone, Congress did

  nothing to l the vacuum—leaving a constitutional limbo in which

  slavery as a legal concept was prohibited by the Constitution, but

  no statute made an act of enslavement explicitly il egal.

  It didn't mat er to the Turners’ lawyers that lit le of their defense

  claims matched their earlier sworn statements when rst questioned

  by a federal agent and a special U.S. commissioner two months

  earlier. Turner had sco ed at the suggestion that his past handling

  earlier. Turner had sco ed at the suggestion that his past handling

  of black laborers was legal y or moral y suspect. He o ered

  elaborate explanations for why he imprisoned a series of blacks the

  federal o cer identi ed. In the case of Joe Strickland, the white

  farmer conceded that the laborer didn't appear anywhere in the

  records of the local courts but was nonetheless a criminal prisoner.

  He claimed Strickland's records were in a di erent jurisdiction, and

/>   that the Goodwater deputy sheri , Grogan, brought two black men

  to the Tal apoosa County jail in July 1901 and asked Turner if he

  wished to "buy" one of them out of jail. Turner claimed he entered

  into a formal labor contract with the worker, who had been tried

  for "riding a train," and that the local probate judge said it was

  unnecessary for the court to authorize the arrangement.11

  "If you behave yourself," Turner claimed to have told Strickland,

  "I wil let you o in ve months." Turner demurred that he "had just

  commenced in the convict business" and didn't understand the ins

  and outs of the rules. In kindness, he had paid a doctor, Turner

  claimed, to treat Strickland's syphilis—and then kept him at work

  an extra six months simply to cover the costs. By the time of the

  trial, Strickland was working in the coal mines near Birmingham,

  he added.

  On July 7, Glennie Helms became the rst victim of the

  Tal apoosa cases to testify publicly. Moving to the witness chair just

  after 5 P.M., Helms sat calmly and con dently before the courtroom

  l ed with white spectators. Neatly dressed and his head cleanly

  shaven, Helms said he was eighteen at the time of his capture and

  was at empting to travel from Calcis—where he had worked for a

  week in the lime quarry owned by Turner's family— back to his

  home in Columbus, Georgia. As Helms and two companions passed

  on foot through Goodwater on April 15, 1902, they were seized by

  the town marshal, charged with vagrancy, immediately convicted by

  the mayor, and then sold at the Dadevil e depot to Fletcher

  Turner.12 Turner was apparently unaware that the three had been

  working for his family's quarry and put them to work digging

  ditches on his farm.

  ditches on his farm.

  Under questioning from Reese, Helms told the twelve white

  jurors how he was brutal y beaten on his arrival at Turner's farm.

  Reese, regal in a high, sti ened col ar and checkered cravat, asked

  whether either of the Turners or their employees whipped him

  again during the four months he was held on the farm. Helms

  testi ed he was beaten nearly every day by Turner's son, Al en, or

  another armed guard. After about a month of work, he escaped—

  only to be captured by the sheri of another county and returned to

  the farm. As punishment for eeing, he said Al en Turner whipped

  him severely with a thick stick.

  The cross-examination that fol owed must have been one of the

  most extraordinary encounters ever in a southern courtroom. In the

  witness chair sat an eighteen-year-old black boy in the simple at ire

  of an indigent farmhand, largely il iterate and almost certainly the

  child of parents born in antebel um slavery. Standing before him—

  chal enging his account of re-enslavement—was the aristocratic

  form of U.S. representative Ariosto Appling Wiley, prominent

  congressman and one of the city's most notable at orneys.

  Unfazed by the disjuncture of the scene, Helms hewed to his story

  —as unswervingly as a skil ed plow hand cut ing neat furrows

  across a eld. Unable to budge the verisimilitude of the young

  man's descriptions of his capture and beatings, Representative Wiley

  obsessed on what he cal ed contradictory details in the testimony.

  Was the buggy in which Helms and the others were transported to

  the farm owned by a livery stable or someone else? he hammered.

  Final y, the lawyer portrayed Helms as a "shiftless negro" enjoying

  his moment in the spotlight at the expense of the federal

  government.

  "Who's been taking care of you since you came here?" Wiley

  asked sharply.

  "Captain Dickey," replied Helms, referring to the Secret Service

  agent who had guarded the black witnesses housed in a

  boardinghouse since May.

  Night was fal ing, and the court recessed for the evening. Outside

  Night was fal ing, and the court recessed for the evening. Outside

  the federal building, Fletcher Turner, soaked from the heat of the

  courtroom, fumed to local reporters about published al egations

  that his son had brutal y kil ed a black woman named Cornelia

  Hammock.13 He insisted that the woman died of disease and

  of ered to have her body exhumed to prove it.

  The next day, a series of witnesses cal ed by the government

  corroborated Helms's account. Dave Johnson, one of the other

  blacks captured with him in Goodwater, the night watchman John

  G. Dunbar, town mayor Dave White, and others con rmed how the

  three African Americans were seized and sold.

  The Turner defense aggressively at acked each witness. After the

  testimony of the white at orney who bought Helms's freedom after

  nding him being worked naked at the Turner sawmil , Colonel

  Wiley launched a withering cross-examination—insinuating that the

  lawyer, L. E. White, was so friendly to Helms's family and other

  black workers that he couldn't be trusted. Wiley didn't use the

  speci c words, but his message to the jury was that White was a

  "nigger lover"—a man operating outside the racial rituals of the

  South. The questions became so sharp that Judge Jones recessed the

  proceedings and reprimanded Wiley for the calumnies against

  White. "The witness must not be sneered at or insulted," Jones said.

  The strategy was designed not to prove that Helms hadn't been

  captured and sold—since the Turners admit ed those facts—but to

  mock the black witnesses and discredit any white men who

  corroborated them. It was a time-proven and honored southern

  lawyerly ruse. In the rare instance that a black man or woman

  received a day in court, at orneys simply ridiculed the very idea of a

  black man being treated respectful y and anyone who appeared

  wil ing to do so. Triggering an almost tribal form of group

  solidarity, the tactic usual y triggered juries of white men to gu aw

  at the comedy of a black man under oath. If the jury concluded that

  the government's case was built on the testimony of worthless

  African Americans and unreliable whites, Colonel Wiley was

  con dent of an acquit al. He knew Alabama was tired of the

  peonage cases. And he wanted to remind the jurors that to do

  peonage cases. And he wanted to remind the jurors that to do

  otherwise would subject them to their own ridicule as "lovers" of

  blacks.

  On the trial's third day, the defense presented a stream of

  witnesses testifying to the Turners’ excel ent character and care of

  black convicts they leased from local governments. For weeks

  leading up to the trial, court observers and journalists speculated

  that Secretary of State J. Thomas Hef-lin, Alabama's most

  amboyant white supremacist, might represent the Turners in court

  in a show of support for the men.

  Just before noon, as the defense prepared to close its case, He in

  was cal ed as a witness. In previous weeks, there had been no

  indication that the men knew each other. But taking the stand,

  He in swore that he had known Fletcher Turner for "several years"

  and that Turner had always been a man of good
character. The

  message to the jury—that the white orthodoxy of the South was

  behind the defendants, not the opponents of slavery—was clear.

  The next morning, the gal ery was jammed with observers,

  including a large crowd of African Americans. As eight hours of

  closing arguments by four separate at orneys ground through the

  day, the sti ing courtroom became a throng of perspiring men,

  aflut er with dozens of handheld fans.

  The nal defense argument was explicit—whatever the facts of

  the case, every white man must acquit Fletcher Turner as a message

  to the rest of the United States. "Forever put at rest the agitated

  minds of our Northern friends, and brand the newspaper criticisms

  and caricatures which have appeared in the northern journals as a

  falsi cation and a slander upon the fair name of Alabama," fumed

  at orney Bulger. "I have great faith in the sons and grandsons of the

  heroes of forty years ago, who fol owed Lee and Jackson for four

  long years through blood and re, even from Sumter's bat ered

  wal s to the famous apple tree, who went to the bat le elds of

  Virginia and poured out their blood like water in defense of our

  Southern homes."14

  Colonel Wiley fol owed with an unrepentant message that while

  Colonel Wiley fol owed with an unrepentant message that while

  "good negroes" deserved the care of the courts and the a ection of

  white southerners, other blacks did not. "Shiftless vagabonds" take

  the money of farms and violate contracts, just as Glennie Helms had

  done, Wiley said. "If they were to be protected in this sort of thing

  the farmers of this country would be ruined," he concluded.

  After a two-hour break to cool the courtroom, Reese returned

  with the government's nal argument. Lacing his closing with

  references to the Bible and a passage in Exodus denouncing those

  who tra c in slaves, he scored members of the gal ery who sneered

  when blacks were referred to in court as "American citizens." Reese

  argued that Turner deserved no mercy. "He bought the negroes just

  like one of you would buy a horse or a cow," Reese told the jury.

  "Can this man come here and ask you for mercy after that?"

  After 5 P.M., Judge Jones began an emotional two-hour charge to

  the jury. O ering a detailed history of the peonage statute and the

  laws of labor in the United States, he reviewed the evidence

 

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