Read Slavery by Another Name Online
Authors: Douglas A. Blackmon
Praise for Douglas A. Blackmon's
S L A V E R Y
BY ANOTHER NAME
"Vividly and engagingly recalls the horror and sheer magnitude
of…neo- slavery and reminds us how long after emancipation
such practices per sisted…. Provides insights on how we might
regard the legacy of slavery, reparations, and perhaps even our
justice and correctional system, with echoes for our own time."
—The Boston Globe
"A terri c journalist and gifted writer, Blackmon is fearless in
going wher ever the research leads him."
—Atlanta Magazine
"Personalizing the larger story through individual experiences,
Blackmon's book opens the eyes and wrenches the gut."
—Rocky Mountain News
"For those who think the conversation about race or exploitation
in Amer ica is over, they should read Douglas Blackmon's
cautionary tale, Slavery by Another Name. It is at once
provocative and thought-provoking, sobering and heartrending."
—-Jay Winik, author of The Great Upheaval:
America and the Birth of the Modern World, 1788-1800
"A powerful and eye-opening account of a crucial but
unremembered chapter of American history. Blackmon's
magni cent research paints a devastating picture of the ugly and
outrageous practices that kept tens of thousands of Black
Americans enslaved until the onset of World War II. Slavery by
Another Name is a passionate, highly impressive and hugely
important book."
—David J. Garrow, author of
Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King Jr.
and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference
"Wall Street Journal Bureau Chief Blackmon gives a
groundbreaking and dis turbing account of a sordid chapter in
American history—the lease (essen tially the sale) of convicts to
‘commercial interests’ between the end of the nineteenth century
and well into the twentieth."
—Publishers Weekly
DOUGLAS A. BLACKMON
S L A V E R Y
BY ANOTHER NAME
Douglas A. Blackmon is the Atlanta Bureau Chief of the Wall Street Journal. He
has written extensively on race, the economy, and American society. Reared in
the Mississippi Delta, he lives in downtown Atlanta with his wife and children.
www.slaverybyanothername.com
To Michelle, Michael,
and Colette
Slavery:…that slow Poison, which is daily contaminating the
Minds & Morals of our People. Every Gentlemen here is born a petty
Tyrant. Practiced in Acts of Despotism & Cruelty, we become callous to
the Dictates of Humanity, & all the finer feelings of the Soul. Taught
to regard a part of our own Species in the most abject & contemptible
Degree below us, we lose that Idea of the dignity of Man which the
Hand of Nature had implanted in us, for great & useful purposes.
GEORGE MASON, JULY 1773
VIRGINIA CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION
CONTENTS
A Note on Language
Introduction: The Bricks We Stand On
I. THE WEDDING
Fruits of Freedom
I . AN INDUSTRIAL SLAVERY
"Niggers is cheap."
I I. SLAVERY’S INCREASE
"Day after day we looked Death in the face & was afraid to speak."
IV. GREEN COTTENHAM’S WORLD
"The negro dies faster."
PART TWO: HARVEST OF AN UNFINISHED WAR
V. THE SLAVE FARM OF JOHN PACE
"I don't owe you anything."
VI. SLAVERY IS NOT A CRIME
"We shal have to kil a thousand…
to get them back to their places."
VI . THE INDICTMENTS
"I was whipped nearly every day."
VI I. A SUMMER OF TRIALS, 1903
"The master treated the slave unmerciful y."
IX. A RIVER OF ANGER
The South Is "an armed camp."
X. THE DISAPPROBATION OF GOD
"It is a very rare thing that a negro escapes."
XI. SLAVERY AFFIRMED
"Cheap cot on depends on cheap niggers."
"Cheap cot on depends on cheap niggers."
XI . NEW SOUTH RISING
"This great corporation."
PART THREE: THE FINAL CHAPTER OF AMERICAN SLAVERY
XI I. THE ARREST OF GREEN COTTENHAM
A War of Atrocities
XIV. ANATOMY OF A SLAVE MINE
"Degraded to a plane lower than the brutes."
XV. EVERYWHERE WAS DEATH
"Negro Quietly Swung Up by an Armed Mob …Al is quiet."
XVI. ATLANTA, THE SOUTH’S FINEST CITY
"I wil murder you if you don't do that work."
XVI . FREEDOM
"In the United States one cannot sel himself."
Acknowledgments
Notes
Selected Bibliography
A NOTE ON
LANGUAGE
Periodically throughout this book, there are quotations from individuals who
used o ensive racial labels. I chose not to sanitize these historical statements
but to present the authentic language of the period, whenever documented
direct statements are available. I regret any o ense or hurt caused by these
crude idioms.
On March 30, 1908, Green Cottenham was arrested by the sheri of Shelby
County, Alabama, and charged with "vagrancy"1
Cottenham had committed no true crime. Vagrancy the o ense of a
person not being able to prove at a given moment that he or she is employed,
was a new and flimsy concoction dredged up from legal obscurity at the end of
the nineteenth century by the state legislatures of Alabama and other southern
states. It was capriciously enforced by local sheri s and constables,
adjudicated by mayors and notaries public, recorded haphazardly or not at all
in court records, and, most tellingly in a time of massive unemployment among
all southern men, was reserved almost exclusively for black men. Cottenham's
offense was blackness.
After three days behind bars, twenty-two-year-old Cottenham was found
guilty in a swift appearance before the county judge and immediately
sentenced to a thirty-day term of hard labor. Unable to pay the array of fees
assessed on every prisoner—fees to the sheri , the deputy, the court clerk, the
witnesses—Cottenham's sentence was extended to nearly a year of hard labor.
The next day, Cottenham, the youngest of nine children born to former
slaves in an adjoining county, was sold. Under a standing arrangement between
the county and a vast subsidiary of the industrial titan of the North—U.S. Steel
Corporation—the sheri turned the young man over to the company for the
duration of his sentence. In return, the subsidiary, Tennessee Coal, Iron &
Railroad Company, gave the county $12 a month to pay o Cottenham's ne