Sunday, January 13, 2013

7 Facts About Slavery You May Not Know



 

As a well-read scholar and student of antebellum history, in this blog I hope to present some realities about slavery during the antebellum period 1820-1860. There are several misconceptions about the eras of slavery that often are a product of anachronistic readings of the period or opinions that lack a total perspective.

Slavery was a complex institution. As a labor and social system there are several aspects of the institution that are not discussed in common conversation that may change the perception of the system and reveal certain truths if we are to look closer. The following are 7 facts about slavery that often overlooked and unknown amongst those who casually discuss the period:

1.   Slave Hiring was a common practice as southern cities began to industrialize.

a.    Plantations were not the only ways that slaveowners brought from their slaves. The price of slaves frequently fluctuated and slave-owners were most interested in finding ways to maximize their investment in human cargo. In industrial cities such as Richmond, Va., Charleston, SC., Augusta, GA., and Baltimore, it was common for entrepreneurs to hire slaves to work in their factories. Factory work presented opportunities for slaves to collect capital for themselves and it also worked for slaveowners as factory owners typically paid 10 % of the total value of the slave to “rent” or hire a slave for a period (pay $150 for a slave purchased for $1500). Some slaves returned to their plantations at the end of the workday and others stayed in housing quarters located on the factory premises. However, many slaves were given papers by their masters and employers to remain the in the cities. Within major southern cities also lived substantial populations of free blacks—many whom are born free, chose to remain in the south to work who have been manumitted or purchased their own freedom. In these cities there was a strong cultural exchange between free blacks and bondspersons, which is exemplified in places such as Congo Square in New Orleans. Predictably, this dynamic discomforted many whites, as southern municipalities began to enact a series of laws designed to limit the interaction with free black and slave populations.

2.   The institution of slavery, as a whole, was not always as profitable nor as productive as free-labor.
a.    One common misconception of the entire slave period was its profitability. While it’s actual profitability is still an area of contention amongst many scholars, our generalization of period only applies to a particular period of time. Slavery was only as profitable as the products that slavery produced-- namely cotton, sugar, and tobacco in the US. While markets change and the US progresses, however, the development of railroads became very important for commerce. The transportation industry and the production of iron and the ability to turn raw materials into consumer goods became how northern cities progressed economically. As the global world moved away from the plantation economy, the owning of slaves to work on plantations was not as practical. Some southern industrialists deduced that by integrating slave labor into industrial factories, owning the labor force would give them a competitive advantage in production. However, the use of slaves in industrial factories did not work out as enterpreneurs had planned it. Ties with slave-owners, the meticulous and costly maintenance of the slave labor workforce (financing their housing (many slaves had taken their family with them), clothing, etc.) was not competitively advantageous to northern factory workers, especially during a period where employers were relatively free from liability with respect to the welfare of workers. Employing free labor was altogether cheaper.

3.   Many slaves were able to negotiate conditions in their workplace and bargain with slave-hirers

a.    The slave system, for owners, was intended to be as non-confrontational as possible. Knowing the volatility of owning human cargo, slaveholders understood that the less conflict with respect to their slaves meant greater productivity and thus profit for them. In addition, slaves often served as business liaisons amongst the aristocracy. When slaves were hired for work off of the plantation, slaves were often able to negotiate conditions and incentives (of course, so long as the slaveholder thought it to be reasonable in his mind). Unsatisfied workers disrupted productivity, and because factory owners invest such as large sum to hire the slave, some were also willing to make sure slaves were accommodated in the process.

4.   Brutal treatment on plantations was often economically impractical, as selling the slave was better discipline.

a.    It is often implied that slaveholders beat slaves to make them become more effective workers. Harsh treatment on slave plantations was frequent. It was not a method used to make slaves work harder, however. Incentive for working harder had less to do with punishment than it did with reward, and this is something slaveholders recognized early. The separation of families was commonplace to teach slave communities lessons about servitude. Marks on a slave drove down his economic value on the slave trade market. Slave traders were careful to do what they can to cover up signs of brutal treatment on the slave market. Lacerations, whip marks, visible bruises were details on the body that slave speculators viewed carefully as it was believed they indicated behavioral patterns.

5.   Slavery disenfranchised a substantial portion of working class native whites, planting the seeds of hatred against white supremacists groups long before the reconstruction era.

a.    White supremacist groups were largely developed in the years after the civil war when white men galvanized resources to reverse gains made by blacks during reconstruction. However, much of the one-sided conflict happens years before the civil war. White laborers rioted frequently against black workers and employers of black labor. Occupying a social status that was dependent upon the feasibility of black labor at the time was frustrating for white workers. In addition to slaves, employing free blacks in the south was also attractive for entrepreneurs. While white workers were viewed as being “militant”, free black workers lacked the social status as full citizens to assemble labor unions or negotiate fairer labor conditions. Free black workers, unlike slaves and white workers, could be paid smaller wages and be free of tensioning ties with slaveholders. White workers struck in opposition to the employ of slave labor in industrial factories for fears that industrialists would replace their skills by teaching slaves how to perform tasks that were mostly designated for white workers.

6.   Slavery & and an unwillingness to relinquish southern tradition is the largest reason why the south remained undeveloped and lacked competitiveness with the industrializing world.

a.    Once those southern staples lose its demand and profitability, the exchange and purchase of black bodies themselves becomes a significant function of slavery, particularly in the US, where the domestic slave trade turns New Orleans into the southern economic capital. To identify an analogy, it would be more useful to consider slaves as a form of technology (as problematic as that sounds). Newer and more effective forms of technology are constantly invented but in America, there are certain consumer markets that will always exist because they become markers of status. As the country drew closer to the civil war, the owning of black bodies became indicative of the place in which one occupied in society. The ownership of black bodies became a fulfillment for whiteness. Many working class-whites spent their entire lives in pursuit of becoming a planter, even to the extent that some gamble their future livelihood on the investment of slaves. Southern culture surrounded the ownership of black bodies to the extent that it crippled their economies and prevented them from investing more effectively to the production of transportation goods. 

7.   Slaves—politically, culturally and physically-- held a capital with wealthy whites that many working class whites lacked during the period.

a.    One awkward reality of slavery is relative distance and proximity slaves had to white elites. Slaves were the subjects of white supremacy but also an extension of white supremacy. White racial identity in the south could not exist without the presence of blacks. Slaves are protected as extensions of white privilege and their societal value is also derived from white supremacy (which might explain how we currently view our own status). On average, approximately ten percent of the population are planters (those owning ten or more slaves). While it is clear that slaves occupied little-to-none political clout with their slaveholding counterparts, they occupied a social status that was often elevated over non-slaveholding whites, and it was a status about which slaves themselves were aware. It is this very protection as extensions of whiteness that prevents white workers from successfully galvanizing support to defeat the use of slave labor in factories. Once blacks are no longer extensions of white supremacy in the years after the civil war, it leaves them exposed to the tensions and animosities white workers had been building toward blacks for decades, arguably centuries. Non-slaveholding whites are often powerless to the power-structure during the same period. Nominal favors are dealt to socially dependent white workers in exchange for votes and support. Also, southern municipalities are mostly indifferent to the demands of white workers.

We must place several things in perspective with regards to slavery. One of which is that the system itself drastically changed the psychological spirit of Africans that eventually emerge to become African Americans. Bondspersons find ways to make the most out of the situation in which they are found. One prevalent pro-slavery argument during this period is the quality of life advantage Blacks in the south had over Blacks in the north. What is problematic about that position is that it assumes that the quality of life is reduced to the material conditions that surround them. Enslaved blacks—no matter their relative “freedom” or opportunities afforded to them as being extensions of the white power-structure—are still left with the unending reality that their bodies do not belong to them. As normal-- even as comparatively advantageous—their lives may or may have not been, we must respect how destructive it is to the human psyche to be owned by another. More disturbingly and fascinatingly, we must respect how destructive it is to ACCEPT that one’s body is owned by another.
As I have stated already, there is evidence that suggest that enslaved blacks endured equal or better material conditions than many of their white, free, slave-less counterparts. In some contexts, their labor was often preferred over some of their white counterparts in areas where they both were skilled. In other contexts, the skilled white labor force had been forced to train slaves to perform certain skills. This is where my intellectual interests take off, as I am fascinated in finding out the reasons why white workers choose to antagonize blacks for the destruction of their plight and not the power structures, that, often, publicly insult white workers.

          As it pertains to reparations, we also must consider the vast majority of white workers that are disenfranchised as a product of having a national social and economic body that is based on the trading of black souls and the employ of owned labor.

          Furthermore, when reparative justice pundits demand restitution for slavery, it is mostly along the context of being reimbursed for the labor performed during the era. That is where the argument loses its gearth. Demanding to be recompensed for labor lends itself to the problematic conclusion aforementioned regarding material conditions and quality of life. I am inclined to believe that if are to discuss reparations, the discourse should exclusively be held to restitution for the psychological trauma endured. By then, though, we have lost by demanding compensation for unfathomable human suffering. Who has suffered more: African Americans that are continually discriminated upon and are acutely aware of such discrimination and can use that awareness as capital and leverage in a self-professed democratic and fair nation? Or poor working class and impoverished whites that have no idea that they are economically and socially excluded by design, and consider the only way to address their plight is to disrupt another’s? I am inclined to be sympathetic. Most black people are not.