Sunday, September 27, 2009

American Slavery As it Is: "It is in the interest of the master to treat their slaves well"


In his book, "American Slavery as it is: Testimony of a thousand witnesses" William T. Weld, reserves the largest section of his book, to answer the myriad of false assurances given and demonstrated as to the necessity of kind treatment of slaves by southerners. His logic is impeccable, as well as his classical education, and knowledge of the bible, as well as well worn experience in dealing with all manner of debate retorts of those who were pro-slavery.
His answer to these questions, answered one by one in his book, are witty, smart, cutting and to the point. Not for the faint of heart, but also, nourishing to the didactic mind.

Mr. Weld answers the above question below:
So it is for the interest of the drunkard to quit his cups; for the glutton to curb his appetite; for the debauchee to bridle his lust; for the sluggard to be up betimes; for the spendthrift to be economical, and for all sinners to stop sinning. Even if it were for the interest of masters to treat their slaves well, he must be novice who thinks that a proof that the slaves are well treated. the whole history of man is a record of real interests sacrificed to present ratification. if all men's actions were consistent with their best interests, folly and sin would be words without meaning.
If the objector means that it is for the pecuniary interests of masters to treat their slaves well, and thence infers their good treatment, we reply that though the love of money is strong, yet appetite and lust, pride, anger, and revenge, the love of power and honor, are each an overmatch for it; and when either of them is roused by a sudden stimulant, the love of money is worsted in the grapple with it. look at the hourly lavish outlays of money to procure a momentary gratification for those passions and appetites,. as the desire for money is, in the main, merely a desire for the means of gratifying other desires, or rather for one of the means, it must be the servant and not the sovereign of those desires, to whose gratification its only use is to minister. but even if the love of money were the stronger human passion, who is simple enough to believe that it is all the time so powerfully excited, that no other passion or appetite can get the mastery over it? who does not know that gusts of rage, revenge, jealousy and lust drive it before them as a tempest tosses a feather?

...In respect to large classes of slaves, it is for the interest of their masters to treat them with barbarous inhumanity. (or to even hasten their death)

1. Old slaves. It would be the interest of the master to turn them out.
2. Worn out slaves. It would be economical for masters to starve or flog such to death.
3. The incurably diseased and maimed. In such cases it would be cheaper for masters to buy poison than medicine.
4. The blind, lunatics, and idiots. It would be for his interest to shorten their days.
5. The deaf and dumb, and persons greatly deformed. Many of them would be a burden, and few men carry burdens when they can throw them off.
6. Feeble infants. ...it would be for the interest of the masters, throughout that region, to have all the new-born children left to perish.
7. Incorrigible slaves. It is for the interest of the masters (at least they believe it to be) to put upon such slaves iron collars and chains, to brand and crop them; to disfigure, lacerate, starve and torture them--in a word, to inflict upon them such vengeance as shall strike terror into the other slaves.
8. Runaways. It is for the interest of the mater to make an example of him, by the greatest privations and inflictions.
9. Hired slaves. It is for the interest of those that hire such slaves, to get as much work out of them as they can.
10. Slaves under overseers whose wages are proportioned to the crop which they raise.

There are in addition, a number of conditions, which also reduce the pecuniary inducement to treat slaves "well"
1. the early market
2. changes in the market
3. high prices
4. untimely seasons
5. periodical pressure of certain kinds of labor
6. times of scarcity
7. the raising of crops for exportation

William Theodore Weld on 'American Slavery as it is' Page 129, Northern Visitors Testify that Slaves are not Cruelly Treated


In the following testimony, given in August of 1837, the Hon. Daniel M. Durell, of Dover, formerly Chief Justice of the Common Pleas for that state, and a member of Congress, was charging the abolitionist, in presence of several gentlemen of the bar, at their boarding house with exaggerations and misrepresentations of slave treatment at the south.

The following conversation occurred between the Judge mentioned above and N.P. Rogers, Esq. of Concord N.H.:

Judge: Oh, they misrepresent and lie about this treatment of niggers, ' he continued "I'm going through all the states I visited, I do not now remember a single instance of cruel treatment. Indeed, I remember of seeing but one nigger struck, during my whole journey. there was one instance. We were riding in the stage, pretty early one morning, and we met a black fellow, driving a span of horses, and a load (I think he said) of hay. The fellow turned out before we got to him, clean down into the ditch, as far as he could get. He knew you see, what to depend on, if he did not give the road. Our driver as we passed the fellow, fetched him a smart crack with this whip across the chops. He did not make any noise, though, I guess it hurt him some- he grinned. -Oh, no! These fellow exaggerate. The niggers, as a general thing, are kindly treated. There may be exceptions, but I saw nothing of it.' (By the way, the judge did not know there were any abolitionist present). 'What did you do to the driver, Judge' said I, 'for striking that man?' 'Do?" said he, 'I did nothing to him to be sure.' 'What did you say to him, sir?' said I, 'Nothing.' He replied: ' I said nothing to him.' 'What did the other passengers do?' said I. ' Nothing.' he replied: 'They said nothing to him.' 'What did the other passengers do?' said I. 'Nothing, sir' said the Judge. 'The fellow turned out the white of his eye, but he did not make any noise.' 'Did the driver say any thing, Judge, when he struck the man?' 'Nothing,' said the Judge, 'only he damned him and told him he'd learn him to keep out of the reach of his whip.' 'Sir' said I, 'If George Thompson had told this story, in the warmth of an anti-slavery speech, I should scarcely have credited it. I have attended many anti-slavery meetings, and I never heard an instance of such cold-blooded, wanton, insolent, diabolical cruelty as this: and, sir, if I live to attend another meeting, I shall related this, and give Judge Durell's name as the witness of it.' An infliction of the most insolent character, entirely unprovoked, on a perfect stranger, who had showed the utmost civility, in giving all the road and only could not get beyond the long reach of the drivers whip --and he a stage driver, a class generous next to the sailor, in the sober hour of morning--and borne in silence--and told to show that the colored man of the south was kindly treated-- all evincing, to an unutterable extent, that the temper of the south toward the slave is merciless, even to diabolism--and that the north regards him with, if possible, a more fiendish indifference still!"

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

The Fugitive Slave Law: Chapter 40 of 'Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl' by Harriet Jacobs


Few people today understand the real impact of slavery and the effect of reducing a people to the level of animals. Even less people are aware that in 1850, the United States Congress passed the fugitive slave law, which required that any slave that had escaped to freedom, was to be lawfully returned to his master. Anyone who assisted the slaves escape, was liable to a hefty fine and imprisonment. Anyone who did not assist in the capture of the slave, was also subject to fine and imprisonment.
Any Black person accused of being a fugitive slave, was legally barred from testifying on his own behalf. No evidence had to be offered, and the local law enforcement agencies, had to comply with the arrest and transport of the alleged slave to parts unknown.
Harriet Jacobs writes about the fugitive slave law an it's impacts in her book, 'Incidents in the life of a slave girl' in chapter 40. Excerpts are printed below:
XL.
THE FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW.
...On my return from Rochester, I called at the house of Mr. Bruce, to see Mary, the darling little babe that had thawed my heart, when it was freezing into a cheerless distrust of all my fellow-beings. She was growing a tall girl now, but I loved her always. Mr. Bruce had married again, and it was proposed that I should become nurse to a new infant. I had but one hesitation, and that was my feeling of insecurity in New York, now greatly increased by the passage of the Fugitive Slave Law [IMAGES related to the Fugitive Slave Law]. However, I resolved to try the experiment. I was again fortunate in my employer. The new Mrs. Bruce was an American, brought up under aristocratic influences, and still living in the midst of them; but if she had any prejudice against color, I was never made aware of it; and as for the system of slavery, she had a most hearty dislike of it. No sophistry of Southerners could blind her to its enormity. She was a person of excellent principles and a noble heart. To me, from that hour to the present, she has been a true and sympathizing friend. Blessings be with her and hers!

About the time that I reentered the Bruce family, an event occurred of disastrous import to the colored people. The slave Hamlin, the first fugitive that came under the new law, was given up by the bloodhounds of the north to the bloodhounds of the south. It was the beginning of a reign of terror to the colored population. The great city rushed on in its whirl of excitement, taking no note of the "short and simple annals of the poor." But while fashionables were listening to the thrilling voice of Jenny Lind in Metropolitan Hall, the thrilling voices of poor hunted colored people went up, in an agony of supplication, to the Lord, from Zion's church. Many families, who had lived in the city for twenty years, fled from it now. Many a poor washerwoman, who, by hard labor, had made herself a comfortable home, was obliged to sacrifice her furniture, bid a hurried farewell to friends, and seek her fortune among strangers in Canada. Many a wife discovered a secret she had never known before--that her husband was a fugitive, and must leave her to insure his own safety. Worse still, many a husband discovered that his wife had fled from slavery years ago, and as "the child follows the condition of its mother," the children of his love were liable to be seized and carried into slavery. Every where, in those humble homes, there was consternation and anguish. But what cared the legislators of the "dominant race" for the blood they were crushing out of trampled hearts?

When my brother William spent his last evening with me, before he went to California, we talked nearly all the time of the distress brought on our oppressed people by the passage of this iniquitous law; and never had I seen him manifest such bitterness of spirit, such stern hostility to our oppressors. He was himself free from the operation of the law; for he did not run from any Slaveholding State, being brought into the Free States by his master. But I was subject to it; and so were hundreds of intelligent and industrious people all around us. I seldom ventured into the streets; and when it was necessary to do an errand for Mrs. Bruce, or any of the family, I went as much as possible through back streets and by-ways. What a disgrace to a city calling itself free, that inhabitants, guiltless of offence, and seeking to perform their duties conscientiously, should be condemned to live in such incessant fear, and have nowhere to turn for protection! This state of things, of course, gave rise to many impromptu . vigilance committees. Every colored person, and every friend of their persecuted race, kept their eyes wide open. Every evening I examined the newspapers carefully, to see what Southerners had put up at the hotels. I did this for my own sake, thinking my young mistress and her husband might be among the list; I wished also to give information to others, if necessary; for if many were "running to and fro," I resolved that "knowledge should be increased."

This brings up one of my Southern reminiscences, which I will here briefly relate. I was somewhat acquainted with a slave named Luke, who belonged to a wealthy man in our vicinity. His master died, leaving a son and daughter heirs to his large fortune. In the division of the slaves, Luke was included in the son's portion. This young man became a prey to the vices growing out of the "patriarchal institution," and when he went to the north, to complete his education, he carried his vices with him. He was brought home, deprived of the use of his limbs, by excessive dissipation. Luke was appointed to wait upon his bed-ridden master, whose despotic habits were greatly increased by exasperation at his own helplessness. He kept a cowhide beside him, and, for the most trivial occurrence, he would order his attendant to bare his back, and kneel beside the couch, while he whipped him till his strength was exhausted. Some days he was not allowed to wear any thing but his shirt, in order to be in readiness to be flogged. A day seldom passed without his receiving more or less blows. If the slightest resistance was offered, the town constable was sent for to execute the punishment, and Luke learned from experience how much more the constable's strong arm was to be dreaded than the comparatively feeble one of his master. The arm of his tyrant grew weaker, and was finally palsied; and then the constable's services were in constant requisition. The fact that he was entirely dependent on Luke's care, and was obliged to be tended like an infant, instead of inspiring any gratitude or compassion towards his poor slave, seemed only to increase his irritability and cruelty. As he lay there on his bed, a mere degraded wreck of manhood, he took into his head the strangest freaks of despotism; and if Luke hesitated to submit to his orders, the constable was immediately sent for. Some of these freaks were of a nature too filthy to be repeated. When I fled from the house of bondage, I left poor Luke still chained to the bedside of this cruel and disgusting wretch.

One day, when I had been requested to do an errand for Mrs. Bruce, I was hurrying through back streets, as usual, when I saw a young man approaching, whose face was familiar to me. As he came nearer, I recognized Luke... ...and I went up to him and greeted him cordially. At first, he did not know me; but when I mentioned my name, he remembered all about me. I told him of the Fugitive Slave Law, and asked him if he did not know that New York was a city of kidnappers.

He replied, "De risk ain't so bad for me, as 'tis fur you. 'Cause I runned away from de speculator, and you runned away from de massa. Dem speculators vont spen dar money to come here fur a runaway, if dey ain't sartin sure to put dar hans right on him. An I tell you I's tuk good car 'bout dat. I had too hard times down dar, to let 'em ketch dis nigger."

...All that winter I lived in a state of anxiety. When I took the children out to breathe the air, I closely observed the countenances of all I met. I dreaded the approach of summer, when snakes and slaveholders make their appearance. I was, in fact, a slave in New York, as subject to slave laws as I had been in a Slave State. Strange incongruity in a State called free!

Spring returned, and I received warning from the south that Dr. Flint knew of my return to my old place, and was making preparations to have me caught...

...I immediately informed Mrs. Bruce of my danger, and she took prompt measures for my safety. My place as nurse could not be supplied immediately, and this generous, sympathizing lady proposed that I should carry her baby away... ...But how few mothers would have consented to have one of their own babes become a fugitive, for the sake of a poor, hunted nurse, on whom the legislators of the country had let loose the bloodhounds! When I spoke of the sacrifice she was making, in depriving herself of her dear baby, she replied, "It is better for you to have baby with you, Linda; for if they get on your track, they will be obliged to bring the child to me; and then, if there is a possibility of saving you, you shall be saved."

This lady had a very wealthy relative, a benevolent gentleman in many respects, but aristocratic and pro-slavery. He remonstrated with her for harboring a fugitive slave; told her she was violating the laws of her country; and asked her if she was aware of the penalty. She replied, "I am very well aware of it. It is imprisonment and one thousand dollars fine. Shame on my country that it is so! I am ready to incur the penalty. I will go to the state's prison, rather than have any poor victim torn from my house, to be carried back to slavery."

The noble heart! The brave heart! The tears are in my eyes while I write of her. May the God of the helpless reward her for her sympathy with my persecuted people!

I was sent into New England, where I was sheltered by the wife of a senator, whom I shall always hold in grateful remembrance. This honorable gentleman would not have voted for the Fugitive Slave Law, as did the senator in "Uncle Tom's Cabin;" on the contrary, he was strongly opposed to it; but he was enough under its influence to be afraid of having me remain in his house many hours. So I was sent into the country, where I remained a month with the baby. When it was supposed that Dr. Flint's emissaries had lost track of me, and given up the pursuit for the present, I returned to New York.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Absolutely Brilliant Slavery Website: NOT for the novice.



The photo is of U.S. Senator Charles Sumner, being attacked in the Senate, by a pro-slavery advocate Rep. Preston Brooks of South Carolina in reaction to his speech, "The Crime Against Kansas: The Apologies for the Crime; The True Remedy". The injuries Sumner sustained in the attacked disabled him from duty from May 1856 - December 1859.


The photo and explanation are both from an absolutely brilliant website I came across with more slavery related links, sites and information than most humans would be able to get through in a lifetime. The Website is called: medicolegal.tripod.com/slaveryillegal.htm#millionskilled. [Click Link Below]

Slavery was Illegal

CLICK HERE for the "Daddy" site, that also has more information than you can shake your brain to.

But this site contains much more information on Slavery than legal citation. There are links to books, fiction and non. As well as personal letters of abolitionist, arguments, important events, quotations, and a vast synthesis of information and cross-sections of various individuals in the struggle, their influences, references and works. Of course, for all of this, there is a bibliography with even more links.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Tales of Horror: More Testimony of Slave Torture/Punishment


The great myth, was that the 300 year culture of racial sadism could be altered with the stroke of a pen. The ending of the civil war, was in theory, the dawn of a new age in race relations. Suddenly, slave owners, whose only concern was bringing in the largest crop, the greatest profits, were supposed to instantly embrace their black brothers and sisters as one of their own. Recognition of the "law" was supposed to pacify the notions of racial superiority. How? when God's law had been ignored in order to allow slavery in the first place?

Southerners were hardened to the cries, groans and lacerated backs of slaves. Families raped, torn apart and sold as animals. living quarters worse than hog pens. clothing, if it was given, of the coarsest kind. Flogged, beaten and whipped, for breaking dishes, not looking submissive enough, or answering too "curt".

One doctor, visiting the plantation of an acquaintance, witnessed an older, trusted house servant spoon a little too much molasses into the bowl of the slave master's son. For this offense, the master shot out of his seat and began to beat the woman viciously with his fists, elbows and hands. after a few dozen blows, the beaten slave naturally, instinctively raised a single arm in defense. This set the master's temper aflame anew, and he ordered another slave to hold her hands behind her back, while he beat her for several minutes until his hands hurt too much to continue. He paused to catch his breath, took off one of his shoes and commenced to beat her repeatedly in her face, ears, head and mouth with the heel of his shoe until he was too tired to continue. The blood flowed freely from her nose, eyes, face and mouth. By the doctor's testimony, the old slave's face was horribly swollen, torn and distorted, such that she was hardly recognized as human. Her ears were as swollen as large as a man's hand. And for the final stroke of indignation, when she hobbled out of the room dizzy from the blows, she had to say, "thank you massa." All of this occured within the full view of the slave master's young son, who seemingly took no notice of the violence.

For the vast majority of slaves, there was no respite from work, the elements, nakedness, sexual assault, the masters lash, or the slave hunters should they choose/or be forced to escape. Slaves hunters, who made their living on returning blacks to their suffereing, shot and killed with no more regard than the smoting of creatures that crawl into the rotten bowels of felled trees.

"Reconstruction" indeed! Post-confederate southern states "reconstructed" new constitutions between 1890–1908 with provisions that effectively disenfranchised most blacks legalizing many of the most outrageous "Black Codes". Between secret societies, poll taxes and terrorism, Blacks in the south effectively lost the vote. A condition which persisted until the landmark 1965 civil rights act, which has needed to be re-upped every few years, the last time in July of 2006, due to rampant disenfranchisement.

GOD BLESS THE ABOLITIONIST, The Quakers and the converted slaveowners who were forced by their consciences to rail and and focefully advocate for the overthrow of the system of slavery and then continued the fight to include women's rights and suffrage!!! Anthony Benezet, William Wilberforce, Rev. George B. Cheever, Rev. Beriah Green, Harriet B. Stowe, Rev. John G. Fee, Rev. Stephen S. Foster, Deacon James Birney, Rev. William W. Patton, Rev. Parker Pillsbury,Mary Birkett Card, Susan B. Anthony, The Grimke Sisters, Mary Louis Child, Frederick Douglass, William Garrison, Benjamin Frnaklin, John Quincy Adams, all politicians, activists, writers, artists and everyone else, from the most lowly to the most high, past present and future, that acknowledges the evil wrongs of slavery!

The idea, that an entire culture, could be altered over night, was as naive a dream, as could be imagined. with the death or Lincoln, five days after the end of the civil war, the resolve, the will, the persistence of the north, was abandoned to the southern drunkard, Andrew Johnson, who was rewarded with a vice-presidency for being the only southern representative, who voted against cessation of the south and did not abandon his seat.

Politically, reconstruction took the form of President Johnson swiftly granting pardons to all the slave holders and plantation owners for the price of a loyalty oath. Blacks who had been granted 40 acres, were told that their land, their crops, their homes and the seeds they had sown, were no longer their property, and if they wanted to stay on the land, they would have to sign labor contracts with their previous masters. Many wondered why the civil war had been fought, or indeed if it had truly been "won".

and all the while, the vast majority of northerners never truly believed that slavery was anything other than a paternalistic system of care for the benefit of slaves. And for the rest, that knew and believed in the horrors of slavery, (and this group includes Lincoln, who felt that Blacks should be sent back to Africa), the idea that slavery was morally wrong, was not synonymous with notions of Black equality, or the idea that they should mix freely in our cities, and societies and be in full, equal competition with Whites.

A culture persists, intergenerationally. Ideas are passed from father to son. History, is whispered by mothers to daughters. memories, persist. legends endure. Myths as it were, are unassailable. This simple fact can be observed in vestiges of slavery that remain to this day. Only recently, did South Carolina exchange the confederate flag that flew at the State Capitol, for the "American" flag. It can be seen in the fact that Mississippi burned, a mere few years before man landed on the moon. Between 1882 and 1968 3,437 Blacks were Lynched. After the Berlin came down, in the 80's, Donald Byrd, a Black man, was tied and dragged behind a pick-up truck until he had been reduced to a torso, with a severe case of road rash down to the bone.

From the poisonous brew of slavery, which had been allowed to stew, unfettered and encouraged in the United States from 1619 until 1865, must be added the multi-generational sufferings of slaves, the moral degradation of their master's and the full hypocrisy of the Citizenry of the United States under the Bill of Rights, Constitution and Declaration of Independence. With all of this, It can be easily seen, how the Million lives of good White men that were lost in the Civil War, and the failure of Andrew Johnson and the United States Congress, quickly sprouted into the South's great "Lost Cause". A myth to rival Camelot, of a time of Great Mansions, simpler times, huge profits and everyone knowing their station in life.


I present to you 12 more stories, from 'American Slavery as it is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses'

1. Shoes filled with blood
"A negro was tied up, and flogged until the blood ran down and filled his shoes, so that when he raised either foot and set it down again, the blood would run over their tops. I could not look on any longer, but turned away in horror, the whipping was continued to the number of 500 lashes, so I understood; a quart of spirits of turpentine was then applied to his lacerated body. The same negro came down to my boat, to get some apples, and was so weak from his wounds and loss of blood, that he cold not get up the bank, but fell to the ground. The crime for which the Negro was whipped was that of telling the other Negroes, that the overseer had lain with his wife."

2. Collar around leg, causing putrefaction
"...Several men were attempting to detach from his ankle an iron which had been bent around it... The iron was a piece of a flat bar of the ordinary size from he forge hammer, and bent around the ankle, the ends meeting, and forcing a hoop of about the same diameter of the leg. There was one or more strings attached to the iron and extending up around his neck, evidently so to suspend it as to prevent its galling by the weight when at work, yet it had galled till the leg had swollen out beyond the iron and inflamed and separated, so that the leg for a considerable distance above and below the iron, was a mass of putrefaction, the most loathsome of any wound I had ever witnessed on any living creature. The slave lay on his back on the floor with his leg on an anvil which also sat also on the floor one man had a chisel used for splitting iron and another struck it with a sledge hammer to drive between the ends of the hoop and separate it so that it might b taken off. Mr. Lyman said that the man swung the sledge over his shoulders as if splitting iron, and struck many blows before he succeeded in parting the ends of the iron at all. The bar was so large and stubborn at length they spread it as far as they could without driving the chisel so low as to ruin the leg. The slave a man of twenty five years perhaps whose countenance was the index of a mind ill adapted to the degradations of slavery, never uttered a word or a groan in all the process, but the copious flow of sweat from every pore, the dreadful contractions and distortions of every muscle in his body showed clearly the great amount of his sufferings, and all this while such was the diseased state of the limb, that at every blow, the bloody corrupted matter gushed out in all directions several feet in such profusion as literally to cover a large area around the anvil. After various other fruitless attempts to spread the iron, they concluded it was necessary to weaken by filing before it could be got of, which he left them attempting to do"

3. Congress pauses for the slaves heading to market
"Mr. Giddings, member of Congress from Ohio, in his speech in the House of Representatives Feb. 13, 1839, made the following statement: "On the beautiful Avenue in front of the Capitol, members of Congress, during their session, have been compelled to turn aside from their path to permit a coffle of slaves males and females chained to each other by their necks to pass on their way to this national slave market."


4. Whipped until he smoked
"When asked by Mr. C. If he did not fear his salves would run away if he whipped them so much, he replied, they know too well what they must suffer if they are taken, and then said, 'I’ll tell you how I treat my runway niggers. I had a big nigger that ran away the second time; as soon as I got trek of his, I took three good fellows and went in pursuit, and found him in the night, some miles distant, in a corn house; we took him and chained him hand and foot, and carted him home. The next morning we tied him to a tree and whipped him until there was not a sound place on his back. I then tied his ankles and hoisted him up to a limb feet up and head down, we then whipped him until the damned nigger smoked so that I thought he would take fire and burn up. We then took him down, and to make sure hat the should not run away, the third time. I ran my knife in the back of the ankles and cut off the large cords, and then I gave to have put some lead into the wounds, but I forgot it."

5. Driven on foot hundreds of miles, naked, in the bare sun to the deep south, from state to state
" The sun was shining out very hot and in turning the angle of the road we encountered the following group: first a little cart drawn by one horse, in which five or six half naked black children were tumbled like pigs together. The cart had no covering, they seemed to have been broiled to sleep. Behind the cart marched three black women, with head, neck and breasts uncovered, and without shoes or stockings: next came three men, bare headed and chained together with an ox chain. Last of all came a white man on horseback, carrying his pistols on his belt and who as we passed him had the impudence to look us in the face without blushing. At a house where we stopped a little further on, we learned that he had bought these miserable beings in Maryland and was marching them in this manner to one of the more southern states. Shame on the state of Maryland! And I say shame on the state of Virginia, and every state through which this wretched cavalcade was permitted to pass. I do say that when they the slaveholders permit such flagrant and indecent outrages upon humanity as that I have descried, when they sanction a villain in thus marching half naked women and men, loaded with chains without being charged with any crime, but that of being black, from one section of the United States to another, hundreds of miles in the face of day, they disgrace themselves, and the country to which they belong. -James K. Paulding, esq., Secretary of the United States Navy 1817"

6. Child's hand plunged into boiling water, for a trifling offense
"I have not attempted to harrow your feelings with series of cruelty. I will however mention one of two among the main incidents than came under my observation as family physician. I was one day dressing a blister and the mistress of the house sent a little black girl into the kitchen to bring me some warm water. She probably mistook her message for she returned with a bowl full of boiling water, which her misses no sooner perceived, than she thrust her hand into it, and held it there until it was half cooked"

7. Whipped near death, hot tongs applied to body and neck until dead
" A young woman, who was generally very badly treated, receiving a more severe whipping then usual, and so, ran away. Ina few days she came back and was sent ion the field to work. At this time the garment next her skin was stiff like a scab, from the running of the sores made by the whipping. Towards night, she told her master that she was sick, and wished to go to the house. She went and as soon as she reached it, lay down on the floor exhausted. The mistress asked her what the matter was? She made no reply. She asked again; but received no answer. "I’ll see" she said, "if I can't make you speak' so taking the tongs she heated them red hot and put them upon the bottoms of her feet; then upon her legs and body, and finally in a rage took hold of her throat. This had the desired effect. The poor girl faintly whispered, "oh misses, don't. I am most gone" and expired."

8. Cats tied to back and whipped to compel a slave to work
" Mr. Brubeecker, who had a number of slaves among whom was one who would frequently avoid labor by hiding himself, for which he should get severe floggings without the desired effect, so that at last Mr. Brubeecker Would tie large cats on his naked body and whip them to make them tear his back, in order to break him of this habit of hiding"

9. Black Angels ascend to freedom and near to Heaven
" I almost daily see the poor heart broken slave making his way to the land of freedom. A short time since, I saw a noble pious distressed spirit crushed slave, a member of he Baptist church escaping from professed Christian blood hounds to a land where he could enjoy that of which he had been robbed during forty years. His prayers would have made us all feel. I saw a baptised sister of about the same age, her children had been torn from her, her head was covered with fresh wounds while her upper lip had scarcely ceased to bleed in consequence of a blow with the poker, which knocked out her teeth, she too, was going to a land of freedom. Only a very few days since, I saw a girl of about eighteen, with a child as white as myself, aged ten months; a Christian master was raising the child as well his own perhaps to sell to a southern market. She had heard of the intention and at midnight took her only treasure and traveled twenty miles on foot through a land of strangers. She found friends.

10. Laid in the field half frozen to die
"A slave boy ran away in cold weather and during his concealment had his legs frozen, he returned or was retaken, after some time the flesh decayed and sloughed, of course was offensive. He was carried out to a field and left here without bed or shelter deserted to die. His only companions were the house dogs, which he called to him. After several days and nights spent in suffering and exposure, he was visited by Dr.'s Meithei and Mitchell in the field of their own accord, having heard by report of his lamentable condition. They remonstrated with the master; brought the boys to the house, amputated both legs and he finally recovered."

11. Whipped until delivered of a dead infant, then died
" An honorable friend, who stands high in the seat of this nation was present at the burial of a female slave in Mississippi, who had been whipped to death at the sake by her master, because she was gone longer of an errand to the neighboring town than her master through necessary. Under the lash she protested that she was ill, and was obliged to rest in the fields. To complete the climax of horror, she was delivered of a dead infant while undergoing the punishment."

12. Dismembered with an axe and burned in a locked room of slaves. perpetrator's wife in fear of her life. He takes his own life
"In the county of Livingston Ky. near the mouth of Cumberland river, lived Liburn Lewis a sister's son of the celebrated Jefferson. he was the wealthy owner of a considerable gang of Negroes whom he drove constantly, fed sparingly and lashed severely, the consequence was, that they would run away. Among the rest was an ill thrived boy of about seventeen, who having just returned from a skulking spell, was sent to the spring for water, and in returning let fall an elegant pitcher, it was dashed to shivers upon the rocks. this was made the occasion for reckoning with him. it was night, and the slaves were all at home. The master had them all collected in the most roomy negro house and a rousing fire put on. when the door was secured, that none might escape, either through fear of him or sympathy with George, he opened to them the design of the interview, namely that they might be effectually advised to stay at home and obey his orders. All things now in train, he called up George , who approached his master with unreserved submission. He bound him with cords, and by the assistance of Isham Lewis, his youngest brother, laid him on a broad bench, the meat block. He then proceeded to hack off George at the ankles. It was with the broad axe! In vain did the unhappy victim scream and roar! for he was completely in his master's power; not a hand among so many durst interfere: casting the feet into the fire, he lectured them at some length.-- he next chopped him off below the knees! George roaring out and praying his master to begin at the other end! He admonished them again, throwing the legs into the fire--then, above the knees, tossing the joints into the fire--the next stroke severed the thighs from the body; those were also committed to the flames--and so it may be said of the arms, head, and trunk, until all was in the fire! He threatened any of them with similar punishment who should in future disobey, run away, or disclose the proceedings of that evening. Nothing now remained but to consume the flesh and bones; and for this purpose the fire was brightly stirred until two hours after midnight; when a coarse and heavy back-wall composed of rock and clay, covered the fire and the remains of George. It was the Sabbath--this put an end to the amusements of the evening. The Negroes were now permitted to disperse, with charges to keep this matter among themselves and never whisper it in the neighborhood under the penalty of a like punishment.
"When he returned home and retired, his wife exclaimed 'Why, Mr. Lewis, where have you been, and what were you doing?' She had heard a strange pounding and dreadful screams and had smelled something like fresh meat burning. The answer he returned was that he had never enjoyed himself at a ball so well as he had enjoyed himself that night.
"Next morning he ordered the hands to rebuilt the back wall and he himself superintended the work, throwing the pieces of flesh that still remained with the bones behind as it went up. Thus hoping to conceal the mater, but it could not be hid, much as the Negroes seemed to hazard, they did whisper the horrid deed. The neighbors came, and in the presence tore down the wall; and finding the remains of the boy, they apprehended Lewis and his brother, and testified against them. They were committed to jail that they might answer at the coming court for this shocking outrage; but finding security for the appearance at court, they were admitted to bail!... Mrs. Lewis (his wife)... found, under her bolster, a keen butcher knife! The appalling discovery forced from her the confession that she considered her life in jeopardy. Messrs. Rice and Philips, whose wives were her sisters, went to see her and to bring her away if she wished it. Mrs. Lewis received them with all the expressions of Virginia hospitality... she said, "Thank you kind brother, I am indeed afraid for my life-- We need not interrupt the story to tell how much surprised he affected to be with this strange procedure of his brothers-in-law and with this declaration of his wife. But all his professions of fondness for her, to the contrary notwithstanding, they rode off with her before his eyes. He followed and overtook and went with them to her father's; but she was locked up from him, with her own consent, and he returned home.
Now he saw that his character was gone, his respectable friends believed that he had massacred George; but, worst of all, he saw that they considered the life of the harmless Letitia (his wife) was in danger from his perfidious hands... the proud Virginian sunk under the accumulated load of public odium. He proposed to his brother Isham, who had been his accomplice in the George affair, that they should finish the play of life with a still deeper tragedy. The plan was that they should shoot one another.... but forgetting, perhaps , in the perturbation of the moment that they gun was cocked, when he touched the trigger... the gun fired, and he fell and died in a few minutes and was with George in the eternal world, where the slave is free from his master.

"

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Harriet Jacobs - 'Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl'


Harriet Jacobs wrote one of the most read Slave Narratives of all-time, as she recollects her childhood, coming of age and escape from the licentious condition she found herself in.

Much like Frederick Douglas, she hardly knew that she was a slave for the first seven years of her life. Her Grandmother was freed later in life, having been purchased at auction for $50 by the sister of her mistress master. She was freed by the will of her mistress, but her son in law, declared her estate insolvent and stated that in this condition, she could not be freed, but would rather have to be sold. The grandmother may have been able to purchase her own freedom, except that the money she had earned late night by baking and selling her well-known crackers, pastries and other treats were loaned to her mistress master. having died "insolvent" she was denied her rightful payment.

In truth Harriet's grandmother was raising the money to purchase the freedom of one or more of her children, which was her dream.

Harriet suffered many cruel blows of life, soon after she found out that she was a slave. Her mother and father died. At the time her father died, he was laying in state a mere mile from where she was held in bondage, but she was denied the opportunity to visit his body, for there was a party she needed to prepare for in her slave master's house.

Although Harriet was kept from the field, she suffered equal indignities, if not privations as a slave. In her account, she narrates how she could read and write. Her father, mother and grandmother were dignified and principled as well as god fearing, all of which were blessings indeed, yet, in terms of their bondage, made them very acutely aware of their servile and unjustifiable positions against the will of God and the morality of man.

As many slaves remark, slavery does as much to harm the slaveholder as the slave. The slavemaster, with their principles corrupted, no check on their powers and being surrounded by cruelty, often are debased and perverted monstrosities beyond the devils own creation.

Harriet recounts time and again, how god-fearing, pious, and charitible members of the southern society beat, cuff, whip, stomp and kill their slaves for the slightest and most meager of insults.

Harriet recounts how in one household, the mistress would stand by the door, if the food was not served to her liking, or it were late, and then she would go around in the kitchen spitting in all of the pots and pans and plates of food, so that the slaves could not partake of any leftovers.

Her husband, flattering himself an epicure, would force the cook to eat every last morsel of the food made, as he crammed it down her throat nearly chocking her, and stuffing her to a near bursting point, if he did not find the food to his liking.
Her narrative recounts dozens of horrendous scenes, where slaves are beaten until their backs a a solid clot of blood, or they are strung up just above the ground for hours, or days. or shot, dismembered, and the like.

But the real difference between Harriet's narrative and most others is that it is written by a woman, and she uncovers the rancid underbelly of miscengation. As she tells it, there is nary a slave owner who does not father multiple children from his slaves. Often, the mother and child are soon sold either when the babe is still nursing, or when the child gets older and it is obvious that the father is white. As she tells it, many slaveowners see this as a way to fulfill two foul purposes. they can both increase their "stocks" and satisfy their lustful urges. In almost all cases, their wives know of the conduct of their husbands, but they can hardly stop it. Instead of feeling pity for the slave, the slave woman is beaten and sexually abused by the master, and an object of jealousy, scorn and hatred by the mistress. the legitimate children of such a union invariably find out or figure out what has occured, either by seeing the light complexioned children, or hearing their parents bickering and quarreling. In such a way, the entire household of the slaveholder is corrupt, unhappy, bereft and hellish.

Harriet told of one case, where the legitimate daughter of the slaveowner, picked the most foul, brutish and incorrigible slave on the entire plantation to sire her own child as a way to get back at her father. Her father, upon seeing the dark complexion of the child sent for the slave to be killed, but his daughter, anticipating his reaction, had made out free papers for the slave and provided him with money to make his way north.

If not for the upbringing, strong will and almost incorruptible nature of Harriet Jacobs, the sting and power of her narrative would hardly come through, but from such a perch, she exactingly details the faults, flaws and horrors as well as consequences of the slave system, while condemning the free north, for not interfering, or doing more to end such a vile system.

Much of the story involves her struggles with her master, who despite the presence and objections of his wife, continued to attempt to corrupt and coerce Harriet into an illicit sexual relationship. He had previously had 11 children by slave women, and each of the women, after 1 or 2 children, had been sent, with his offspring to be sold at auction.

In was in this desperate situation, that Harriet soon fell to the advances of another white man, had a child and then, in her foul predicament, steeled herself for her escape to freedom.

harriet jacobs spent seven years in a space above her grandmothers house, between the roof and cieling, no more than 3 feet high at it's highest point, and 9 feet long by 7 feet wide, for more than 7 years, through freezing winters, tortuously hot summers, driving rains, and all manner of inclement weather. the shingles were loose, such that she had very little shelter. yet, it could not be risked that the shingles be replaced for fear of discovery.

a few years into her hiding, the father of her children, a white lawyer, contrived with a slave trader to buy Harriet's children and brother. Her master was desperate for money, having made several trips to new york looking for Harriet and other expenses. later, he tried to condition the trader to not sell the children or brother within 1000 miles of town. the slave trader said that he was too late. the trader, although engaged in the traffic of humans, did this without even so much as a tariff, for he comprehended the sitation and needfulness of the arrangement.

yet, there was a loophole. harriet and her chldren were the legal property of Mr. flynt's daughter, so he stated that the trade was not legal, seeng as the actual owner had no ability to consent to the arrangement. This was the same excuse given to harriet when she had begged to be sold out of his clutches.

in truth rarely in fact or fiction was there a more evil, jealous or persecuting would be lover, than dr. flynt.
later, the father of harriet's children was elected to congress, and her daughter sent north with his new wife's sister. harriet's freed brother also moved north. so at this point, her brother, uncle, grandmother and daughter were all free. all that remained was for harriet and her son to attain freedom.

it was seven years before an opportunity presented itself for her escape. SEVEN YEARS. In this day and age, society reels when they hear about abducted children being held for weeks, or months, by some depraved, sick, twisted, sadistic monster. Such as the condition of every slave in the south. Regardless of circumstance, they were held for the bidding, as animals, for the "wealth" and "pleasure" of others. What type of wealth is this? what type of pleasure is this? And to think of what type of societal condition needs to be in effect, for a woman to hold herself in bondage, in a tight space, in face of all the elements, not speaking to her own children, who dwell in the same house, for seven years? America's Most Wanted, had nothing on slaves. Harriet emerged from her harrowing ordeal with a body was crippled and damaged from so many years, and such horrible treatment. but she steeled herself for her quest to freedom, vowing to have her son brought to her.

Similar to frederick douglas who paid his master for his freedom after he escaped from slavery. harriet jacobs, though offered payment by her grandmother refused on moral grounds to pay anyone for her rightful freedom until after the fugitive slave law took effect, and rendered her forever, within the confines of the United States, the property of her mistress. Her mistress grew and married, and her and her husband came to New York, seeking Harriet and the money that could be made on her if she were sold. They accepted $300 for free papers on Harriet's behalf, thinking better to have the low payment in hand, than nothing to show for their efforts. In this day and age, where "morality" and "ethics" for many come only at the cost of convenience, one may wonder why a slave would runaway and then pay their master for freedom, yet, after the fugitive slave law of 1850 such was the level of paranoia and fear for all runaway slaves. Regardless of how far north they got. ironically, boston in those times was seen as the best place for a slave, as seen in the case of anthony burns, the citizenry were willing to raise arms against the government itself to protect the liberty of a black man or woman, whether born naturally free, or escaped bondsmen.

fear of whites, if the queen of england had lived in harriet's situation, and still had her education and intelligence and humane feelings, i doubt this narrative would have, or indeed could have diverted by a single word. as opposed to slave narratives of those who have toiled as dogs in the dirt, her experience picks up on the myriad various ways and trifling indignities, heaped one upon the other, along with threats of death and physical desstruction and indignities, as well as horrid contortions of personality and uncontrolled anger and sadism focused upon bondsmen and women, by christian masters and mistresses. yes, i say, "christian" in hypocrisy. another wonderful aspect of slave narratives is to hear of the god fearing sadistic masters, which exemplify more deeply and resonantly the qualities of true christianity. the truth of black religion is that god is closer, more full, more at home in the bosom of the slave/martyr, than anyone who stands by idly as slavery, discrimination, and evil infests their community it is truly amazing how horrid and immoral the slaveholder becomes. such lies, deception, selfishness, unfeeling hipocrisy. and all the whie slaves are continually accused of ingratitude, ignorance, laziness, stupidity, immorality, deception and unthankfulness.

yet, having been a slave, harriet is not content to be simply "free", she demands her rights, time and time again with dignity. had she been born in the U.S. in 1990, she would be no less accepting of even the slightest indignation based upon race. her poise and firmness is a beauty to behold, an inspiration and on the verge of spirituality. harldy is she "free" having made her way to new york. she is constantly under threat due to the fugitive slave law. and all the white, "dr. flynt" continually, in childish manipulations and lies and false promises in his letters to continually attempt to lure harriet back into slavey with promise of "freedom" love, tears and kind treatment. always, their motivation for her return is not pecuniary, rather out of love and tender affections...

in chapter 37 she contrast the condition of poor whites with slaves and does a beautiful job of explicating the power of freedom, ending her exposition by saying, that although the condition of the peasant was a thousand times better than the condition of slaves, she would not dare to describe the condition of the peasant in the same rosy manner that southern slaveholders describe the conditions of their slaves. throughout this tale the absurdity of one person owning another is increasingly bizarre and absurd. how this system was allowed to take root and persist and become the very backbone of this nation for 250 years is one of the great mysteries and most expositionary horrors of the depth and pit of man.

and on top of all of this, there is the other bright gem of this narrative, which is the power of her words, which have stood the test of time, as well as the power and determination of ms. jacobs and skill of her pen in exhibiting her words as a mighty stroke against the system of slavery. she writes to inteligent moral beings, not caring to justify her position, her perspective or her actions. knowing full well, the abilities and capacity of man to understand the most basic of human feeling and understanding. she is incredibly respectful of her readers, as are all slave narratives. such feeling and understanding of the most noble qualities of humanity can always be found within authors of the subjugated race.

Monday, September 7, 2009

Tricky Hersh is the Hungry Ghost, but Neither have to be You...


The Hungry Ghost is the idea of the part of you that is never satiated. Whether ridiculous, or subtle, any state of unwarranted unrest or feeling of incompleteness which can be satiated by acquisition, is an aspect of the Hungry Ghost.

Tricky Hersh is the same concept. When you do something you know you shouldn't do, you justify it by tricking yourself that you really need to do it, it doesn't make much difference, you'll only do it once, this will be the last time, you're only doing it, 'cause you don't care, it's really in a way good for you, everyone else is doing it, you deserve it, you haven't thought about it that deeply, it was someone else's idea, it's to keep others from being upset, no one will notice, you won't get caught, you're a bad person anyway, you don't care, to not do it would be punishing, or extreme, you'll be at peace after you do it..... get the idea?

But the tricky thing about Tricky, is that once you do that thing that you shoudn't/didn't need/said you wouldn't/was foolish, Tricky instantly changes his stance, whether sooner or later, and then becomes the voice within you most vehement in their condemnation of your actions. You then become stupid, careless, uncaring, foolish, worthless, silly, a waste, deserving of all your faults, flaws, and ill luck, fat, stupid, lazy, dumb, shameless, immoral, unethical, unjust, irreverant.... get the idea?

It's a see-saw, while your higher nature, neither wants the thing, nor feels any differently about you after having done it.

forgiveness is ever at hand, as well as love. (In fact, I have a slogan, "Love your Shame" for there are many things we all feel shame and regret for that we have done and said in this life. Usually when we think of these things, it's with a feeling of shock and shame. I say, "love your shame" for if we are ashamed, we can not live fully. We feel less than. It's not the same as saying we have forgiveness of those we trespass. But it's a way out from feeling forever shameful, less than, and bad.) Essentially, equanimity is the voice, the road, the path that one should reside, recede, run to, to protect oneself from Tricky Hersh, aka the Hungry Ghost.

I call it Tricky Hersh, because first he/she tricks you, and then is harsh.

In reality, both parts are lower parts of yourself that you must claim, rather than discredit or distance yourself from. As you train the mind, you make it so that your voice, is at all times, the one of your own equanimity, or your own buddha nature. In this way, you integrate your foibles, and rise above them, step by step, to the path of righteousness. This is what is refered to, when it is said that to eat when one is hungry, sleep when one is tired, and to simply deal with life, from a place of simplicity and honesty, is the quickest path to peace. what is not meant, is that one should give in to Tricky Hersh.

Sunday, September 6, 2009

The Opening 7 Chapters of 'Bleak House' by Charles Dickens


I have to admit that although I've seen a million versions of "A Christmas Carol" I've never read a book by Charles Dickens.
His stories though, at least on film, are very compelling. So I figured, being still alive, it would be good for my literary sensibility to read one of his novels.

Also, to be truthful, there were two other reasons I wanted to read a Dickens novel. 1. My name used to be Dickens... from birth (well, at least slightly after, not longer than a year or so) until 18. 2. Charles Dickens engaged in activism and elucidation of many morbid conditions in his writing, such as orphans, legal manipulations, classism, child work/exploitation, debtors prisons, etc. Dickens was sensitive to issues control by social policy, due to his forced employment at age 12 due to his father being sent to debtors prison, and his work in the courts which allowed him a keen perspective on the failings of Parliament as well as the Chancery system of law. This lead to his becoming a contributing writer to the periodical "True Sun" and his eventually founding his own 24 page periodical on social issues that reached a circulation of 60,000. Dickens early involvement as a periodical writer and the serialization of his works is the manner in which his first several novels were written as well as the avenue for his becoming the most popular writer in England.

As far as my personal interest in Dickens, it was based primarily in Charles Dickens abhorrence with the American system of slavery. In "American Notes" Dickens recounts his travels in America and he voices clearly his disgust for the chattel slavery system and the blunting effect of humanity it has upon it's proponents. Dickens refers to slavery as, "...that most hideous blot and foul disgrace - Slavery."

Dickens' comments severally upon his feelings in "American Notes" on his feelings upon viewing areas in the south where slavery was the condition:

...in this district, as in all others where slavery sits brooding... there is an air of ruin and decay abroad, which is inseparable from the system. The barns and outhouses are mouldering away; the sheds are patched and half roofless; the log cabins... are squalid in the last degree. There is no look of decent comfort anywhere... the negro children rolling on the ground before the cabin doors, with dogs and pigs; the biped beasts of burden slinking past: gloom and dejection are upon them all.
All men who know that there are laws against instructing slaves, of which the pains and penalties greatly exceed in their amount the fines imposed on those who maim and torture them... the darkness - not of skin, but mind - which meets the stranger's eye at every turn; the brutalizing and blotting out of all fairer characters traced by Nature's hand; immeasurably outdo his worst belief. That travelled creation of the great satirist's brain... was scarcely more repelled and daunted by the sight, than those who look upon some of these faces for the first time must surely be.


For the full text of, "American Notes" by Charles Dickens, go to: www.dickens-literature.com/American_Notes/

Which brings me to Bleak House...
Dickens draws very full characters. They are "full" yet, they all lack a certain habitation of soul and purpose. They are more objects of the circumstances of condition, unable to rise above it (at least in this novel), and thus, perfectly suited to serve as pawns for Dickens' silk-lace commentary though drama. I became well acquainted (or as well as you can in 7 chapters) with Esther, Ms. Jellybee, the Lawyer, Kenge, Richard, Ada and Mr. Jarndyce.

The opening in particular, is beautiful, with the mud, the people, the fog, the odd and full descriptions of the court. it's sweeping, and was reminiscent of the flights of Thomas Wolfe (the one who wrote "Of Time and the River"). I especially liked the preface, where Dickens states that cases such as Jarndice vs. Jarndice, are not uncommon in the age. But, after the initial flurry, things settle down into the lint catch of common everyday occurrences and a snails pace of action.

There's a motherless child, who is told that she and her mother are each other's disgrace, to mean that the mother got pregnant in an socially inappropriate fashion, and that as the daughter grew, the mother's transgressions would forever stain her. That was a nice touch, because in many cases, the circumstances of ones birth, or the arrangement between the parents, contains elements which are unspeakable to the children for many, many years.

But after this, the story moves to just... i don't know, it's vague, mysterious, yet nothing really happens, but you are pulled along, incriminated at every chapter and a bit more tantalized to solve the mystery. So for me the question was, was I willing to pay the price i.e., read several hundred pages of this book, to find out? The simple answer was "no". I would really like to see a movie of Bleak House. Of the several hundred pages of a Dickens novel, although there is much filler, if you stripped it away to a movie, there is more than enough parts from which to chose to make a gripping movie. I get it.

The novel has an air of genteel serialization, in that it seems to go nowhere, other than the present description, conversation, or interaction. It almost plays like an antebellum romance except it wasn't antebellum, nor romantic... but what I mean, is, it's a story where a piece of teacake, could be the center of the action for many a page. The feeling I got was of being on a long bridge between landmasses, that stretched into the distance with no destination.

If you like beautiful writing, and subtlety and a lot (I mean, a hell of a lot) of filler, then this is probably something for you.

Dickens has wonderful sensibilities, patience, and love of words and observation. He's poetic at times, and like to play upon quirks of personality and alliterative "prose-etry" at times.

I called a friend after the first 5 chapters to get his assessment. He concurred with my feelings/descriptions, and he quickly gave me permission to stop reading. I went on an additional 2 chapters. if i was on a cross country trip, I could read it, but I wouldn't really want to. It's not bad at all. It's quite good. Just not my cup of tea.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Benjamin Franklin, Founding father, former indentured servant, slave owner and abolitionist.


A classic forefather
Benjamin Franklin was an Abolitionist, but that's not the whole story. As a politician, a businessman and international representative, his position on, and relationship with slavery was, shall we say, a sign of the times. Franklin's fortune was amassed, and comfort provided for in large part, due to slavery. His newspaper advertised runaway slaves, slaves for sale and also indentured servants. Franklin himself owned several slaves.

In fact, One ran away when he went to England, (and was later found under the care of an Englishwoman who was gentrifying him). Franklin was unable to do anything other than accept that he had lost his slave, seeing as England, though firmly entrenched in the slave trade, had passed a law that any slave was instantly free, upon setting foot on British soil.

Franklin also owned a husband and wife and child. The husband he freed prior to leaving to France. the rest of his slaves were freed upon his return to America from France for the final time.

"Sensitive" to the issue of slavery and labor
Franklin, in his early career avoided being pinned down as to his personal views on slavery. He certainly understood the importance of slavery, monetarily, to the emerging young nation, but having been an indentured servant himself, who used a loophole and trick to escape his bondage, he also was, according to historians, "sensitive" to the issue of slavery.

Later in life, Franklin fully revealed his position. He advocated for abolitionism. He wrote several papers, one, (his last) was a parody of Muslim slavery (written in the "voice" of Muslim), which in actuality used all the arguments that southern planters used to justify slavery. Franklin died 25 days after the letter was written, and the letter was in fact written from his death bed.

Abolitionist and Educator
Yet, Franklin's position was no death-bed conversion. A full 6 years earlier, Franklin, upon embarking upon a serious friendship with the famous Abolitionist, Anthony Benezet, he was named President of the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the abolition of slavery. Franklin's turn from Slave-owner to Abolitionist was nothing new. Many Abolitionist in the years leading up to the civil war, were themselves, like Franklin, former slave owners, much in the same way, and for the same reason that many meat eaters, become vegetarians.

Credit must also be given to Franklin in his last year, for backing a 1790 petition for abolition sent to the United States Government, by the New York and Pennsylvania Quakers. Franklin also, unlike *Abraham Lincoln, advocated for the education and integration of freed Blacks into mainstream society. Franklin was thoroughly convinced that the problems associated with slavery, such as lack of education, lack of training and lack of practicable, free enterprise experience and general "ignorance" was wholly due to their oppression and situation and lack of opportunity, and not some fault in innate intelligence. Indeed, Franklin was mightily impressed, if not taken aback altogether, with the rapacity of educational progress attained by free blacks and their children, once they found opportunities to educate themselves.

*Abraham Lincoln, though against slavery on moral grounds, did not think that Blacks were the equal of whites, nor did he feel that it was practicable, due to their lacking intelligence and lowly condition, to integrate with mainstream society

As far back as 1760, Franklin's ideas on education of Free Blacks and the importance of education was exemplified, through his membership with the Bray Associates. The Bray Associates were a society started by a "legacy" from Dr. Bray to set up schools for negro Children in the colonies. (The famous Samuel Johnson, was also a member). This association set up schools in Boston, Philadelphia, New York and other locations.

Franklin's place in history
It is generally acknowledged that all of the forefathers were slave owners at one time or another and also profited personally politically, and professionally from slavery, and it's fruits. yet, Franklin however, repented and converted thereby turning his efforts towards the cause of abolition and integration. To his dying day Franklin focused his efforts on serving as one of the forefathers in what he knew would be an effort to Black freedom that could not possibly be concluded in his lifetime.

[What follows is a sample of writing in Franklin's own hand, advocating abolition]


JUNE 20, 1772: THE SOMMERSETT CASE AND THE SLAVE TRADE:
BY BENJAMIN FRANKLIN

The Sommersett Case and the Slave Trade

It is said that some generous humane persons subscribed to the expence of obtaining liberty by law for Somerset the Negro. -- It is to be wished that the same humanity may extend itself among numbers; if not to the procuring liberty for those that remain in our Colonies, at least to obtain a law for abolishing the African commerce in Slaves, and declaring the children of present Slaves free after they become of age.

By a late computation made in America, it appears that there are now eight hundred and fifty thousand Negroes in the English Islands and Colonies; and that the yearly importation is about one hundred thousand, of which number about one third perish by the gaol distemper on the passage, and in the sickness called the seasoning before they are set to labour. The remnant makes up the deficiencies continually occurring among the main body of those unhappy people, through the distempers occasioned by excessive labour, bad nourishment, uncomfortable accommodation, and broken spirits. Can sweetening our tea, &c. with sugar, be a circumstance of such absolute necessity? Can the petty pleasure thence arising to the taste, compensate for so much misery produced among our fellow creatures, and such a constant butchery of the human species by this pestilential detestable traffic in the bodies and souls of men? -- Pharisaical Britain! to pride thyself in setting free a single Slave that happens to land on thy coasts, while thy Merchants in all thy ports are encouraged by thy laws to continue a commerce whereby so many hundreds of thousands are dragged into a slavery that can scarce be said to end with their lives, since it is entailed on their posterity!

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

From: 'American Slavery As It Is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses'


by Theodore Dwight Weld
May 4, 1839

this account was written by the Rev. Horace Moulton, a brickmaker
who lived in Savannah, Georgia for several years:

"II THE FOOD OF THE SLAVES.

"It was a general custom, wherever I have been
for masters to give each of his slaves, male
and female, one peck of corn per week for their
food. This at fifty cents per bushel, which was
all that it was worth when i was there, would
amount to twelve and a half cents per week for
board per head."
"It cost me upon an average, when at the south,
one dollar per day for board. The price of four-
teen bushels of corn per week. This would make
my board equal in amount to the board of forty-six
slaves! This is all that good or bad masters al-
low their slaves round about Savannah on the
plantations. One peck of gourd-seed corn is to
be measured out to each slaves once very week.
One man with whom I labored, however, being
desirous to get all the work out of his hands
he could, before I left, (about fifty in number)
bought for them every week, or twice a week, a
beef's head from market. With this, they made a
soup in a large iron kettle, around which the
hands came at meal time and dipping out the
soup, would mix it with their Hommony, and eat it
as though it were a feast."