New African (Black) Children on a North Carolina Chain Gang, first decade of the 1900's.
"Their lives were always in peril. A year or two on the Western North Carolina Railroad was akin to a death sentence..." Note the youth of these prisoners. Some are not even teenagers...
"The South's Shocking Hidden History: Thousands of Blacks Forced Into Slavery Until WW2"
by Douglas A. Blackmon from "The Washington Monthly" [http://www.alternet.org/civil-liberties/souths-shocking-hidden-history-thousands-blacks-forced-slavery-until-ww2]:
On
July 31, 1903, a letter addressed to President Theodore Roosevelt
arrived at the White House. It had been mailed from the town of
Bainbridge, Georgia, the prosperous seat of a cotton county perched on
the Florida state line.
The sender was a barely literate African
American woman named Carrie Kinsey. With little punctuation and few
capital letters, she penned the bare facts of the abduction of her
fourteen-year-old brother, James Robinson, who a year earlier had been
sold into involuntary servitude.
Kinsey had already asked for help
from the powerful white people in her world. She knew where her brother
had been taken—a vast plantation not far away called Kinderlou. There,
hundreds of black men and boys were held in chains and forced to labor
in the fields or in one of several factories owned by the McRee family,
one of the wealthiest and most powerful in Georgia. No white official in
this corner of the state would take an interest in the abduction and
enslavement of a black teenager.
Confronted with a world of
indifferent white people, Mrs. Kinsey did the only remaining thing she
could think of. Newspapers across the country had recently reported on a
speech by Roosevelt promising a “square deal” for black Americans. Mrs.
Kinsey decided that her only remaining hope was to beg the president of
the United States to help her brother.
“Mr. Prassident,” she
wrote. “They wont let me have him.… He hase not don nothing for them to
have him in chanes so I rite to you for your help.”
Considered
more than a century later, her letter courses with desperation and
submerged outrage. Yet when received at the White House, it was slipped
into a small rectangular folder and forwarded to the Department of
Justice. There, it was tagged with a reference number, 12007, and filed
away. Teddy Roosevelt never saw it. No action was taken. Her words lie
still at the National Archives just outside Washington, D.C.
As
dumbfounding as the story told by the Carrie Kinsey letter is, far more
remarkable is what surrounds that letter at the National Archives. In
the same box that holds her grief-stricken missive are at least half a
dozen other pieces of correspondence recounting other stories of
kidnapping, perversion of the courts, or human trafficking—as horrifying
as, or worse than, Carrie Kinsey’s tale. It is the same in the next box
on the shelf. And the one before. And the ones on either side of those.
And the next and the next. And on and on. Thousands and thousands of
plaintive letters and grimly bureaucratic responses—altogether at least
30,000 pages of original material—chronicle cases of forced labor and
involuntary servitude in the South decades after the end of the Civil
War.
“i have a little girl that has been kidnapped from me … and i
cant get her out,” wrote Reverend L. R. Farmer, pastor of a black
Baptist church in Morganton, North Carolina. “i want ask you is it law
for people to whip (col) people and keep them and not allow them to
leave without a pass.”
A farmer near Pine Apple, Alabama, named J.
R. Adams, writing of terrible abuses by the dominant landowning family
in the county, was one of the astonishingly few white southerners who
also complained to the Department of Justice. “They have held negroes …
for years,” Adams wrote. “It is a very rare thing that a negro escapes.”
A
similar body of material rests in the files of the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored People, the one institution that
undertook any sustained effort to address at least the most terrible
cases. Dwarfing everything at those repositories are the still largely
unexamined collections of local records in courthouses across the South.
In dank basements, abandoned buildings, and local archives, seemingly
endless numbers of files contain hundreds of thousands of handwritten
entries documenting in monotonous granularity the details of an immense,
metastasizing horror that stretched well into the twentieth century.
By
the first years after 1900, tens of thousands of African American men
and boys, along with a smaller number of women, had been sold by
southern state governments. An exponentially larger number, of whom
surviving records are painfully incomplete, had been forced into labor
through county and local courts, backwoods justices of the peace, and
outright kidnapping and trafficking. The total number of those
re-enslaved in the seventy-five years between the end of the Civil War
and the beginning of World War II can’t be precisely determined, but
based on the records that do survive, we can safely say it happened to
hundreds of thousands. How many more African Americans circumscribed
their lives in dramatic ways, or abandoned all to flee the South
entirely, to avoid that fate or mob violence? It is impossible to know.
Millions. Generations.
This is not an easy story for Americans to
receive, much less accept. The idea that not just civil rights but basic
freedom itself was denied to an enormous population of African
Americans until the middle of the twentieth century fits nowhere in the
triumphalist, steady-progress, greatest-generations accounts we prefer
for our national narrative. That the thrilling events depicted in Steven
Spielberg’s recent film Lincoln—the heroic, frenzied campaign by
Abraham Lincoln leading to passage of the Thirteenth Amendment
abolishing slavery—were in fact later trumped not just by discrimination
and segregation but by the resurrection of a full-blown derivative of
slavery itself.
This story of re-enslavement is irrefutably true,
however. Indeed, even as Spielberg’s film conveys the euphoria felt by
African Americans and all opposed to slavery upon passage of the
amendment in 1865, it also unintentionally foreshadows the demise of
that brighter future. On the night of the amendment’s passage in the
film, the African American housekeeper and, as presented in the film,
secret lover of the abolitionist Congressman Thaddeus Stevens, played by
the actress S. Epatha Merkerson, reads the amendment aloud. First, the
sweeping banishment of slavery. And then, an often overlooked but
powerful prepositional phrase: “except as a punishment for crime.”
It
began with Reconstruction. Faced with empty government coffers, a
paralyzing intellectual inability to contemplate equitable labor
arrangements with former chattel, profound resentment against the
emancipated freedmen, and a desperate economic need to force black
workers back into the fields, white landowners and government officials
began using the South’s criminal courts to compel African Americans back
into slavery.
In the first years after the Civil War, even as
former slaves optimistically swarmed into new schools and lined up at
courthouses at every whisper of a hope of economic independence, the
Southern states began enacting an array of interlocking laws that would
make all African Americans criminals, regardless of their conduct, and
thereby making it legal to force them into chain gangs, labor camps, and
other forms of involuntarily servitude. By the end of 1865, every
Southern state except Arkansas and Tennessee had passed laws outlawing
vagrancy and defining it so vaguely that virtually any freed slave not
under the protection of a white man could be arrested for the crime. An
1865 Mississippi statute required black workers to enter into labor
contracts with white farmers by January 1 of every year or risk arrest.
Four other states legislated that African Americans could not legally be
hired for work without a discharge paper from their previous
employer—effectively preventing them from leaving the plantation of the
white man they worked for.
After the return of nearly complete
white political control in 1877, the passage of those laws accelerated.
Some, particularly those that explicitly said they applied only to
African Americans, were struck down in court appeals or through federal
interventions, but new statutes embracing the same strictures on black
life quickly replaced them. Most of the new laws were written as if they
applied to everyone, but in reality they were overwhelmingly enforced
only against African Americans.
In the 1880s, Alabama, North
Carolina, and Florida passed laws making it a crime for a black man to
change employers without permission. It was a crime for a black man to
speak loudly in the company of a white woman, a crime to have a gun in
his pocket, and a crime to sell the proceeds of his farm to anyone other
than the man he rented land from. It was a crime to walk beside a
railroad line, a crime to fail to yield a sidewalk to white people, a
crime to sit among whites on a train, and it was most certainly a crime
to engage in sexual relations with—or, God forbid, to show true love and
affection for—a white girl.
And that’s how it happened. Within a
few years of the passage of these laws, tens of thousands of black men
and boys, and a smaller number of black women, were being arrested and
sold into forced labor camps by state officials, local judges, and
sheriffs. During this time, some actual criminals were sold into
slavery, and a small percentage of them were white. But the vast
majority were black men accused of trivial or trumped-up crimes.
Compelling evidence indicates that huge numbers had in fact committed no
offense whatsoever. As the system grew, countless white farmers and
businessmen jostled to “lease” as many black “criminals” as they could.
Soon, huge numbers of other African Americans were simply being
kidnapped and sold into slavery.
The forced labor camps they found
themselves in were islands of squalor and brutality. Thousands died of
disease, malnourishment, and abuse. Mortality rates in some years
exceeded 40 percent. At the same time, this new slavery trade generated
millions of dollars for state and local governments—for many years it
was the single largest source of income for the state of Alabama. As
these laws and practices expanded across the South, they became the
primary means to terrorize African Americans, and to coerce them into
going along with other exploitative labor arrangements, like
sharecropping, that are more familiar to twenty-first-century Americans.
This
was the terrifying trap into which Carrie Kinsey’s young brother had
been drawn. After a trip through the counties near Kinsey’s home, W. E.
B. Du Bois, who was then teaching at Atlanta’s Morehouse College,
described in 1905 one such convict farm. “It is a depressing place—bare,
unshaded, with no charm of past association, only a memory of forced
human toil—now, then, and before the war,” he wrote. He described black
farmworkers who never saw wages because charges for rent and food always
exceeded any compensation. “A dismal place it still remains, with rows
of ugly huts filled with surly ignorant tenants,” Du Bois wrote. “And
now and then it blazes forth in veiled but hot anger.”
Du Bois
could easily have been describing Kinderlou, where Kinsey’s brother was
taken. Encompassing 22,000 acres, it was an enterprise that dwarfed any
antebellum definition of the word “plantation.” Owned by state
Representative Edward McRee and his brothers, Kinderlou was an
unparalleled center of economic and political power in Georgia. By 1900,
the siblings had inherited the enterprise from their father, a noted
Confederate officer named George McRee. Each lived in a lavish mansion
within a square mile of the center of the plantation, basking in the
subtropical warmth of the Gulf Coast.
Between them, an empire
bustled with enslaved laborers. Consuming the bulk of an entire county,
Kinderlou included thousands of acres of lushly fertile sandy loam, and
thousands more of dense pine and hardwood. On a private spur of the
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad thrust into the center of the plantation,
dozens of boxcars waited at all times for the hundreds of thousands of
bushels of tomatoes, watermelons, cantaloupes, corn, tobacco, and
cotton. The McRees owned their own cotton gins, compresses to make
bales, and warehouses to store enormous quantities of lint. A
five-horsepower steam engine ground the plantation’s sugarcane to make
syrup. Five eighty-foot-long barns were built to cure tobacco, and a
factory produced thousands of pallets, wooden crates, and baskets for
shipping produce. Deep in the forests, McRee turpentine camps collected
rosin for their naval stores distillery.
Initially, the McRees
hired only free black labor, but beginning in the 1890s they routinely
leased a hundred or more convicts from the state of Georgia to perform
the grueling work of clearing land, removing stumps, ditching fields,
and constructing roads. Other prisoners hoed, plowed, and weeded the
crops. Over the course of fifteen years, thousands of men and women were
forced to Kinderlou and held in stockades under the watch of armed
guards. After the turn of the century, the brothers began to arrange for
even more forced laborers through the sheriffs of nearby counties in
Georgia and Florida—fueling what eventually grew into a sprawling
traffic in humans.
A black worker in 1904 described to a
journalist how he arrived at the farm at age ten as a free laborer. A
few years later, he attempted to leave to work at another plantation.
Before sundown on the day of his departure, one of the McRees and “some
kind of law officer” tracked him down. The new employer apologized to
the McRees for hiring the young worker, saying he would never have done
so if he had known “this nigger was bound out to you.”
“So I was
carried back to the Captain’s,” the man said later. “That night he made
me strip off my clothing down to my waist, had me tied to a tree in his
backyard, ordered his foreman to gave me thirty lashes with a buggy whip
across my bare back, and stood by until it was done.”
When his
labor contract finally expired after a decade, the man was told he could
leave Kinderlou, so long as he could pay his accumulated debt at the
plantation commissary—$165, the rough equivalent of two years’ labor for
a free farmer. Unable to do so, of course, he was compelled to sign a
contract promising to work on the farm until the debt was paid, but now
as a convict.
He and other “prison laborers” slept each night in
the same clothes they wore in the fields, on rotting mattresses infested
with pests. Many were chained to their beds. Food was crude and
minimal. The disobedient were tied to a log lying on their backs, while a
guard spanked their bare feet with a plank of wood. After a slave was
untied, if he could not return to work on his blistered feet, he was
strapped to the log again, this time facedown, and lashed with a leather
whip. Women prisoners were held across a barrel and whipped on their
bare bottoms.
In the summer of 1903, the assistant U.S. attorney
in Macon, Georgia, began a brief investigation into Kinderlou’s army of
black laborers held against their will. He discovered that the brothers
had arrangements with sheriffs and other officers in at least six other
Georgia counties. These law enforcement officials would seize blacks on
the grounds that they were “committing crimes,” often specious and
sometimes altogether made up, and then sell them to the McRees and other
businessmen, without ever going through the regular processes of the
criminal courts. When the McRees learned of the investigation, they
hastily freed the workers being held involuntarily. At least forty fled
immediately.
James Robinson, the brother of Carrie Kinsey, may
have been one of them, though federal officials never connected her
allegations to the Kinderlou investigation. Even if Kinsey’s brother’s
case had been investigated, her letter misspelled the name of the
plantation.
In November 1903, a grand jury indicted the McRee
brothers on thirteen specific counts of holding African American men and
women illegally. Many of those enslaved had never been charged or tried
in any fashion. Several public officials were indicted for conspiring
to buy and sell blacks arrested on trivial or fabricated charges and
then turning them over to the McRees. Sheriff Thomas J. McClellan,
resorting to an audacious legal defense employed repeatedly in the
handful of slavery cases brought by federal officials in the early
twentieth century, argued that since no federal law specifically made
slavery a crime, he could not be guilty of violating it. In effect, he
claimed slavery was not illegal in the United States.
A member of
the U.S. Congress submitted a legal brief in support of the sheriff, and
prominent state officials sat at the defendants’ table during a hearing
on a challenge to their charges. Across Georgia, operators of lumber
camps, where thousands of other men were being held under similarly
dubious circumstances, watched the proceedings closely. Appearing with
his brothers before a Savannah courtroom, Edward McRee assured the judge
that while his family had held many African Americans in the four
decades since slavery’s abolition, they had never intended to enslave
anyone or break the law. “Though we are probably technically guilty we
did not know it,” he told the court. “This custom has been [in]
existence ever since the war.… We never knew that we were doing anything
wrong.”
The judge, hoping to avoid inflaming the anger of local
whites, dispensed symbolic punishments. The McRees were allowed to plead
guilty and pay a token fine of $1,000. In the wake of that trial and
other failed prosecutions in the first years of the century, the U.S.
Department of Justice turned a blind eye to such practices for the next
forty years. Only the advent of World War II, a declining need for
low-skill laborers, and a new era of federal prosecution would finally
bring a true end to American slavery.
More than 100 years after
Carrie wrote her letter, I received an unexpected call from a man who
identified himself as Bernard Kinsey. He believed he was one of Carrie’s
cousins.
Her letter had haunted me through years of research for
the book I wrote on re-enslavement. What those few lines conveyed—the
seizure of a teenage boy and his sale to a powerful businessman, the
abject refusal of authorities to assist her, the brutalization of
thousands of other blacks on the same plantation, the heroism of Carrie
in seeking the aid of President Roosevelt, and, finally, the futility of
her letter—captured the entire epic tragedy of black life in the rural
South in the time between the Civil War and World War II. Even to this
day, I find myself turning back to her story, resifting census records
and cemetery records, looking for the fate of her brother. Did he
escape? Did he die at Kinderlou? The answer still eludes me.
Bernard
Kinsey represented the counter story. He told me that the Kinsey family
fled to Florida not long after the McRee trial of 1903. Bernard’s
father opened one grocery store. Then more. Bernard graduated from
Florida A&M University in 1967, and a few years later he became one
of the first black employees of Xerox Corp. Twenty years later, he
retired as a senior executive, one of more than 10,000 African Americans
at the company. He then became a major civic leader in Los Angeles, a
successful entrepreneur and philanthropist, and one of the leading
collectors of African American art and artifacts in the U.S.
Here
was the valiance of African Americans who persevered against
immeasurable odds. Here was the miracle that American society survived
its sweeping betrayal of its own values, its collective dishonoring and
debasement of Lincoln’s achievement, the euphoric crowds of 1865 and all
those who had died in the Civil War. Ultimately, it is only in a full
revelation of all three narratives—of Lincoln and the Thirteenth
Amendment, of re-enslavement and the failure of American character, and
of the slow ongoing resurrection of our values through the struggle of
citizens such as Bernard Kinsey—that we can begin to understand the
progress we have made, and the progress we have yet to achieve.
A
few weeks after the publication of my book, the
great-great-granddaughter of a white industrialist and enslaver of
thousands in Atlanta wrote me to describe her pain at discovering a
personal connection to these events—and the importance of not looking
away from them. “We did not know of any of this before,” she wrote. “But
I believe that the ghosts of slavery and racism and the terrorism
inflicted within our own country must not be hidden away but brought out
into the open.… Without the whole truth, we live only in illusions.”
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