Plantation Slavery
The warm climate, boundless fields of fertile soil, long growing
seasons,
and numerous waterways provided favorable conditions for farming
plantations in
the South (Foster). The richness of the South depended on the
productivity of
the plantations (Katz 3-5). With the invention of the cotton
gin, expansion of
the country occurred. This called for the spread of slavery
(Foster). Slaves,
owned by one in four families, were controlled from birth
to death by their
white owners. Black men, women, and children toiled in the
fields and houses
under horrible conditions (Katz 3-5). The slave system
attempted to destroy
black family structure and take away human dignity
(Starobin 101). Slaves led a
hard life on the Southern plantations. Most
slaves were brought from Africa,
either kidnapped or sold by their tribes to
slave catchers for violating a
tribal command. Some were even traded for
tobacco, sugar, and other useful
products (Cowan and Maguire 5:18). Those not
killed or lucky enough to escape
the slave-catching raids were chained
together (Foster). The slaves had no
understanding of what was happening to
them. They were from different tribes and
of different speaking languages.
Most captured blacks had never seen the white
skinned foreigners who came on
long, strange boats to journey them across the
ocean. They would never see
their families or native lands again. These
unfortunate people were shackled
and crammed tightly into the holds of ships for
weeks. Some refused to eat
and others committed suicide by jumping overboard
(Foster). When the ships
reached American ports, slaves were unloaded into pens
to be sold at auctions
to the highest bidder. One high-priced slave compared
auction prices with
another, saying, "You wouldn’t fetch ‘bout fifty
dollas, but I’m wuth a
thousand" (qtd. in Foster). At the auctions,
potential buyers would examine
the captives’ muscles and teeth. Men’s and
women’s bodies were exposed to
look for lash marks. No marks on a body meant
that he or she was an obedient
person. The slaves were required to dance or jump
around to prove their
limberness. Young, fair-skinned muttaloes, barely clothed
and ready to be
sold to brothel owners, were kept in private rooms (Foster). It
was
profitable to teach the slaves skills so that during the crop off-season
they
could be hired out to work. Although they were not being paid, some
were
doing more skilled work than poor whites were. The better behaved slaves
were
allowed to be carpenters, masons, bricklayers, or iron workers. The
construction
of bridges, streets, canals, railroad lines, public buildings,
and private homes
was made possible by using slave labor (Cowan and Maguire
5:44). Slaves had no
rights. This was done to keep them from revolting
against their masters or
attaining too much power (Katz 3-5). They were not
allowed to communicate with
each other or have meetings of any sort. To leave
the plantation, a worker was
required to have a pass signed by the master and
overseer. Slaves could not own
property, although some masters authorized it.
Knives, guns, or any kind of
weapon was not allowed. Forced separation of
family members was a constant,
dreadful threat (Foster). "It was de saddes’
thing dat ever happen to me,"
one slave recalls of the sale of her sister,
whom she never saw again (qtd. in
Foster). Blacks received harsher
criminal sentencing than whites, regardless of
the crime (Cowan and Maguire
5:17). Marriage between slaves was not legally
recognized, but owners
encouraged it because a more stable environment was
created. Married couples
with children were less likely to attempt escape.
Unfortunately, there
usually was not a suitable mate choice among the slaves, so
most remained
single (Starobin 7). Rebel slaves would recruit Indians, poor
whites, and
anti-slavery persons to attack all white men, women, and children
(Starobin
123-26). These uprisings occurred with at least one major
revolt per generation
(Starobin 98). Most rebellions were led by skilled
artisans and industrial
workers. The slaves depended on midnight surprise
attacks and support from many
(Starobin 124). They would set fire to
buildings; while the whites were
extinguishing the flames, angry slaves would
assault them from behind (Starobin
123-26). Owners were forced to "sleep
with one eye open" in case the large
masses of slaves decided to uprise (qtd.
in Foster). On a much smaller scale,
slaves expressed their hate by refusing
their duties, performing slow and sloppy
work, stealing goods, fighting with
overseers, sabotaging machinery and tools,
and resisting the white culture
forced upon them (Starobin 98-99). Some
attempted to run away. They sought
refuge in mountains and swamps. Professional
slave catchers used bloodhound
dogs to track down runaways. Sometimes handbills
with the description of the
slave were printed and distributed through several
communities. In some
cases, after a few days or weeks in the wilderness, a slave
would give up
hope and return to his master. Very few runaways escaped to
freedom. Captured
slaves would be beaten, burned, or killed as an example to
other slaves
(Foster). Whipping was the most commonly used form of punishment
for
disorderly slaves (David et al. 63-68). Rewards were handed out to
the
fastest and most productive cotton pickers. One might receive extra food
rations
or a new set of clothing. Some earned assignment to tasks of choice.
Permission
to visit a neighboring plantation might be given or a trip to town
might be
planned. Some overseers gave out small amounts of money to buy
tobacco, jewelry,
or trinkets from peddlers (David et al. 69-70). Overwork
pay was another
favorable prize, but few slaveowners used this method
(Starobin 7). A slave was
considered lucky if he got to be a house servant.
House servants were considered
the "aristocrats of slavery" (qtd. in Ploski
and Williams 1438). They were
the best behaved and most submissive,
occasionally even the mixed offspring of
the master himself. The house
servants were raised in belief that they were
superior to other slaves in
status and importance (Starobin 63). Intimate
friendships often formed
between master and messenger (Ploski and Williams
1438). Young black boys
and girls were sometimes adopted into the family (Katz
4-5). House slaves
were allowed to practice trades such as tailoring and
masonry. Some were
permitted to study music and teach. Duties of the housekeeper
were managing
the house, caring for the children, and driving the buggy; they
basically
catered to the master’s requests (Ploski and Williams 1438). A
slaveowner
might enlist the help of his servant to spy on overseers and tattle
on other
slaves (Starobin 63). Most house slaves lived in the same house as the
master
(Ploski and Williams 1438). The majority of house servants were
women;
therefore, they were open and vulnerable to sexual abuse. They were
unsafe from
lusty masters and overseers, even fellow slave men, who ignored
state laws
against rape. Powerless women were forced into prostitution. The
slave woman
suffered most by the white "fiends who bear the shape of men."
(qtd. in
Foster). Fortunately this seldomly occurred (Foster). Sometimes
a willing
relationship between master and slave evolved (Ploski and Williams
1438). Field
hands met a much harsher fate. "Unrelieved horror and vicious
cruelty"
described the day-to-day life of a field hand (qtd. in Katz 3). They
were in
charge of sowing, reaping, and planting commercial crops like cotton
and tobacco
under the watchful eye of unmerciful overseers (Ploski and
Williams 1437). They
worked in all weather conditions from sunup to sundown
every day. Slaves were
rarely used to grow grains such as wheat, rye, and
barley because they were
considered unsuitable to handle it (Katz 4-5). Field
laborers cared for
equipment and kept gardens in shape (Ploski and Williams
1437). When the need
for soldiers arose during war, some blacks enlisted into
the militia, either
willingly or by force from the master (Cowan and Maguire
5: 17). Masters kept
food, clothing, and shelter at bare minimum to reduce
costs (Starobin 7). Often
workers were given a small shack with no windows, a
bare dirt floor, and a leaky
roof. Several families might live in one crowded
room. They were allowed corn or
rice, maybe a bucket a week, and rarely
received meat as a food staple. The
field slaves were very malnourished. The
slaves were given one set of clothing
to wear for years, and most did not
have shoes (Ploski and Williams 1439). As a
result of the poor living
conditions, disease and death rates were kept high (Starobin
7). Most
adult slaves were worked to death in eight to ten years (Ploski
and
Williams 1437). Slavery was a terrible institution. It took people’s
lives and
tore them apart. Many black people suffered for decades. Slaves
were exposed to
prejudice and inhuman treatment. They lived in unthinkable
conditions, stripped
of their dignity and rights as human beings. Slavery
changed the path of history
forever.
Bibliography
Cowan, Tom,
and Jack
Maguire. Timelines in American History. New York: Perigee Books,
1994. David,
Paul, et al. Reckoning with Slavery. New York: Oxford
University Press, 1976.
Foster, Stephen T. The Civil War Collection. New
York: New Viewpoints, 1974.
Katz, William Loren, ed. Slavery to Civil
War. Vol 2. New York: Franklin Watts,
1974. Ploski, Harry A., and James
Williams. Reference Library of Black America.
Vol 5. New York: Gale
Research, 1990. Starobin, Robert S., Blacks in Bondage.
New York: New
Viewpoints, 1974.