Slavery By Another Name
by Devon
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Slavery By Another Name: The Convict Lease System
After the Civil War, the 13th, 14th, and
15th Constitutional amendments were passed which aided newly freed
slaves in being equally treated under the law, or so the story goes. The fact
of the matter is that slavery was- and still is- completely legal in the United
States, but it took on a much different form. The institution of slavery
changed as instead of having the direct enslavement of blacks with an entire
apparatus that had to be created to keep slaves in their condition, elements of
the state apparatus were used to enslave blacks, namely the legal and prison
systems. Yet, the enslavement itself was changed as black convicts were no
longer slaves to individual masters, but rather they were enslaved to the
companies which they were leased out to. To create this system there not only
had to be the involvement of the Southern judicial system and individual
Northern and Southern elites, but also the involvement of the corporation and
reinstitution of slavery within a corporate context.
The 13th Amendment
To attain a full understanding of the convict lease system,
there must first be a reexamination of the 13th amendment. It has
been stated in history books and in classrooms across America that this
amendment ended slavery, yet this is quite false. The 13th Amendment
states “neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime
whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist
within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.” [1]
(emphasis added) Thus, slavery is completely and totally legal if it is part
(or the whole) of a punishment for someone who was convicted of a crime.
When debating the 13th amendment, many in Congress
were not thinking of slaves, but rather white labor, with Senator Henry Wilson
saying “The same influences that go to keep down and crush down the rights of
the poor black man bear down and oppress the poor white laboring man.” [2]
Senator Richard Yates of Illinois was much blunter, stating that he had “never
had the negro on the brain” [3] when discussing the amendment. Such notions are
in the absurd! Wilson is correct to an extent when he argues that both slave
and white labor are oppressed by the same system; both are oppressed in that
they are being manipulated and played off one another by the elite of both the
North and South. Still, Wilson ignores the fact that white labor was very much less
oppressed than black slave labor as white laborers were seen as human being,
deserving of dignity and respect, rather than treated worse than animals. White
laborers were free to do as they pleased, not having to worry about ensuring
that they consistently had papers on their person as to prove their freedom.
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The passing of the 13th amendment should be examined
within the context of an economic competition between black slave labor and
free white labor. The South’s economy was built around slave labor and the
ability to have the slaves produce more than they were ‘worth,’ seeing as how
slaves were viewed as not just general property but a long-term economic
investment which helped the Southern plantation elite. Yet, due to the
existence of slavery, white labor suffered as not only did they lose out on the
income they were making when slavery was first introduced as well as the potential
future income, but also white labor was unable to make advances within the
South as slave provided a source of labor that was less expensive in the
long-term.
Senator Henry Williams illustrates these points and other
problems that white labor had with slavery. He stated that
slavery was evil because it destroyed much of the richest land
in the South; it
degraded labor and the meaning of labor for poor white working men in the
South; it robbed the South of culture by degrading the efforts of laborers; and
it allowed southern aristocrats to further insult northern white workers by
demeaning their laboring efforts as crabbed and mean. It was
the association between labor and slavery in the minds of southern aristocrats
that demeaned the efforts of industrious northern laborers. Thus, slavery pulled white workers
down in two ways: one, by direct competition with slave labor in the South, and
two, by associating all the industrious efforts of workers with those of the
degraded slaves. [4] (emphasis added)
Thus, the only way for white labor to triumph in their struggle
for rights such as a fair wage and regular working hours was for the abolition
of slavery. White labor had a direct interest in the nullification of slavery.
Yet, there was a difference of opinion in the minds of Southern elites who
wanted to continue slavery, but on different terms.
Southern Elites
Before discussing the Southern elites, one must first examine it
within the context of the Southern economy after the Civil War. It was utterly
in shambles, one could make quite the argument that it had been decimated and
demolished in virtually every conceivable way. The entire economy of the South
was built upon the institution of slavery and agriculture. With the end of the
Civil War, not only was the Southern economy damaged by the freeing of black
slaves, but also the land was deeply scarred and hurt, thus creating an
immediate economic problem. However, among all of this there was an opportunity
reorient and reconstruct the economy around a new labor source as cheap labor
would be needed to rebuild the region.
The social order must be examined as well. While the slaves were
now free and able to do as they pleased, there was still a deeply embedded
racism within the minds of Southern whites. Just because blacks had fought in
the Civil War did not suddenly mean that the perception of blacks had changed;
rather to the Southern elites, they still viewed blacks as inferior and only
good for labor, longing to perpetuate the slave system but within a new
industrial framework seeing as how the agricultural framework had been
destroyed. This new system was to be found in the convict leasing.
The leasing out of state convicts to private hands has its basis
in the minds of such people as John T. Milner of Alabama. Milner was no
ordinary man, rather he was a Southern elite who “was in the vanguard of that
new theory of industrial forced labor,” writing in 1859 that “black labor
marshaled into the regimented productivity of factory settings would be the key
to the economic development of Alabama and the South.” [5] Milner’s idea of
using regimented black labor can be seen in his involvement of a project for
the Blue River, a railroad company, in Alabama. In 1859 he issued a plan for
the laying of rail in Montgomery, “presenting statistical evidence to
demonstrate the potential economic benefit to Montgomery of securing connections
with Decatur,” a city north of Montgomery. He argued that the Blue River could
build its own track in nearby Jones Valley with the use of slave labor. Yet, in
Milner’s mind, this slave labor had to be managed by whites. He stated “A negro who can set a saw, or run
a grist mill, or work in a blacksmith shop, can do work as cheaply in a rolling
mill, even now, as white men do at the North, provided he has an overseer, a
southern man, who knows how to manage negroes." [6]
(emphasis added)
After the end of the Civil War, Milner’s plan changed, but he
was convinced that “the future of blacks in America rested on how whites chose to manage them.”
[7] To this end, in the 1870s, he moved with purpose to acquire the black
convict labor that Alabama’s prisons were offering up. He took these convicts
and put them to work in coal mines, treating them barbarically.
Records of Milner’s various mines and slave farms in southern
Alabama owned by one of his business partners- a cousin to an investor in the
Bibb Steam Mill- tell
the stories of black women stripped naked and whipped, of hundreds of men
starved, changed, and beaten, of workers perpetually lice-ridden and barely
clothed. [8] (emphasis added)
Black Americans, many of them former slaves, were essentially
re-enslaved but within the context of a corporate structure with an alliance
between the state and the corporation. Yet, the judicial system was greatly
involved in allowing this to occur, from the laws passed to sheriffs selling of
convicts to companies.
The Judicial System
In order to allow for the convict lease system to exist and for
blacks to be reduced to their former state as a labor source, it required that
the law limit the rights of blacks and criminalize black life to the point that
blacks could be imprisoned on the most frivolous of offenses. Such laws took
the form of Black Codes.
To understand the creation of Black Codes, it is necessary to
understand the social order that motivated elites to push for such legislation.
North Carolina is a prime example. After the war, the elite would have
preferred the system to revert back to the status quo that existed under the
slave system, yet this was not possible due to the liberation of blacks and
free whites caused by the destruction of the slave system. This problem was
greatly exacerbated by the fact that “in suppressing the war to dissolve the
Union the whites were deprived of arms while many Negroes had easily obtained
them,” thus “A general feeling of insecurity on the part of the whites” resulted.
[9] Armed blacks were a threat to elite interests as by being able to defend
and protect themselves; blacks would be able to ensure that they would not be
re-enslaved. Furthermore, it presented a problem to the overall white power
structure as having weapons would empower blacks to stand up for themselves and
assert their rights not only as Americans but also as human beings and such a
situation bought the memories and worries of a slave revolt back to the
forefront of the minds of elites.
To put blacks back ‘in their place,’ the elite pushed several
laws that were passed in the state legislature such as defining “a Negro as any
person of African descent, although one ancestor to the fourth generation might
be white.” [10] The fact that racial identity was dependent on the mother
rather than the father made the situation all the worse as blacks who had white
fathers, whether by marriage or by rape, were now considered to be black and
thus would be subject to the worst aspects of living within a white supremacist
society.
Another example of the law being used to punish blacks was those
laws concerning vagrancy. In North Carolina there was a problem concerning
labor as after the Civil War, blacks and whites were working on their own
fields, yet
Many others less energetic, white and black, were flooding the
towns and refusing work of any sort, for in the days of bondage, master and
slave had been taught that to labor with the hands was undignified:
consequently, freedom to many Negroes meant a deliverance from hard labor. [11]
These workers proved a problem to North Carolinian
industrialists and agriculturalists as few could afford to pay workers a wage
until the crop had been grown, not to mention that neither employee nor
employer were familiar with a wage system. A solution was found in creating
vagrancy laws. Of the workers who refused to do any labor, vagrancy laws were
passed that stated that a person who had no means of survival or refused to
work would be regarded a vagrant and sent to court, however, a payment could be
offered which would be conditional upon the good behavior of the vagrant for
one year and thus would allow the person to get off scot free. Yet if the
person was unable to make such a payment, they would be convicted a vagrant and
fined, imprisoned, or both. When concerning now freed slaves, the laws was much
harsher as many of them, once convicted, were apprenticed to their former
owners under a contract or being leased to a corporation. In the contract, the
owner was to feed, clothe, and instruct the freed slave in reading, writing,
and arithmetic and, upon the end of the apprenticeship, they were to be given
money, a new set of clothes, and a new Bible as payment for the work done.
However, such repayment rarely occurred or was enforced by the state
government.
Overall in the South, vagrancy laws were so vaguely defined that
any free black that was not under the protection of a white person could be
arrested. Such laws allowed for police to “round up idle blacks in times of labor
scarcity and also gave employers a coercive tool that might be used to keep
workers on the job.” [12]
With the judicial system having established a means to ensure a
continuous supply of cheap labor, the leasing could now begin.
Convict Leasing
The act of leasing out convicts isn’t anything new as in states
such as Alabama, where the government had no interest in caring for convicts;
prisoners were leased out to companies. While this may have helped prisons get
convicts off their hands, they made no extra revenue from it. After the Civil
War, such leasing began to pick up steam as corporations had access to almost
free labor.
Labor scarcity between states was a major problem and thus
concerted efforts were made by each state to keep black prison labor within
their borders. This was done be waging war on emigrant agents, people who
specialized in moving labor from where it was abundant to where it was scarce.
They had done this when slavery was still existent and it continued under the
newly freed slaves. Such agents were viewed as a threat to white farmers as by
moving black labor here and there, it threatened the establishment of a stable
labor source. Though in the early months emigrant agents were ignored, many
states established anti-emigrant agent laws due to their need to keep in black
labor. One example is in 1876 when Georgia, “Hard hit by black movement to the
West,” passed legislation that “levied an annual tax of $100 for each county in
which a recruiter sought labor. A year later she raised the amount to $500.”
[13]
Convict leasing, interestingly enough, resulted in power being
taken from the state level and given to those on the local level to the point
that sheriffs became quite powerful soon after the Civil War ended as “County
sheriffs and judges had dabbled with leasing black convicts out to local
famers, or to contractors under hire to repair roads and bridges, beginning
almost immediately after the Civil War.” [14] This economic empowerment of
sheriffs created an incentive for them to convict and lock up as many freedmen
as possible and keep a steady supply of labor. An entire economy eventually
formed around the convict lease system, including a speculative trade system in
convict contracts developed.
The witnesses and public officials who were owed portions of the
lease payments earned by convicts received paper receipts- usually called
scrips- from the county that could be redeemed only after the convict had
generated enough money to pay them off. Rather than wait for the full amount, holders
of scrips would sell their notes for cash to speculators at a lower than face
amount. In return, the buyers were to receive the full lease payments-
profiting handsomely from on those convicts who survived, losing money on the
short-lived. [15]
While there was much profit to be made in the convict lease
system, not everyone was happy with it, namely, white labor.
Labor’s Reaction to Convict Leasing
Just as how white labor was against slavery due to it
undermining their struggle for better working conditions, they were also
against the convict lease system for the very same reasons. Never did they stop
to consider the fact that both workers and freedmen were being manipulated by
the very same systems that governed them.
Labor’s anti-convict leasing sentiments were felt long before
the Civil War began. In 1823 in New York City, journey men cabinet makers
conducted a mass meeting to discuss prison-made good being introduced to the
market and how it threatened their trade. In that same year, also in New York
City, mechanics petitioned the state legislature to end the use of prison
labor. [16]
During the Civil War, labor unions were opposed to the use of
convict labor, arguing that it “tended to lower the wages of thousands of
laborers, and in some instances has virtually driven certain kinds of labor out
of the field” and that "the contractor is seeking cheap labor and cares
nothing for the welfare of the prisoner.” [17] However it should be noted that
unions were not opposed to all convict labor, as they stated that they were
fine with prisoners building a state prison. Thus, the labor unions didn’t
truly care about the brutal, inhumane treatment of convicts, but whether or not
the convicts were encroaching on their area of employment.
Yet this should not be examined as a separate battle between
free labor and convict labor, but rather a continuation of the struggle between
the two groups. Once again, the only way white labor’s goals could be achieved
was with the destruction of most of the convict lease system to protect their
own industries.
While the convict leasing may have been profitable for a select
few and a thorn in the side to many, eventually the system would have to end.
The End of Convict Leasing
Due to a mixture of the changes in economic and social
landscape, convict leasing would eventually die out. However, it is important
to first note that the economic and social justifications for such a system
reinforced each other as not only was it “an expedient by which Southern states
with depleted treasuries could avoid costly expenditures; it was also one of
the greatest single sources of personal wealth to some of the South's leading
businessmen and politicians.” [18] The Southern elites benefited greatly from
the system and thus put all their efforts into perpetuating the system for as
long as possible.
If one only looks on the surface at the abolition of convict
leasing, they may assume that its demise was due to the public indignation that
arose against the system yet this is not the case- far from it, rather it
involved a combination of race, politics, and economics depending on the state.
For example, in Louisiana, convict leasing was abolished due to it being “part
of a reform package which had as its purpose the complete triumph of white supremacy
in political affairs” whereas in Tennessee, its leaders decided that the
demands of fiscal responsibility dictated abolition when the expense of
maintaining the militia at convict stockades-a cost incurred by an armed
rebellion on the part of free miners who were displaced by convict gangs-proved
greater than the income from the leasing contract. [19]
In this system was embedded racism, politics, and economics, but
it was also just as much embedded in violence and brutality. Men and women were
beaten, bloodied, bruised, and valued only so long as they were able to do
labor. They were reduced to nothing more than human resources, human tools to
do the bidding of and enrich white industrialists and agriculturalists from the
North and the South. From the Civil War to World War Two, black Americans were
re-enslaved under a new system that was no better than the first.
Endnotes
1: Legal Information Institute, 13th Amendment of the US Constitution,
http://www.law.cornell.edu/constitution/amendmentxiii
2: Lea S. VanderVelde, “The Labor Vision of the Thirteenth
Amendment,” University
of Pennsylvania Law Review 138:2 (1989), pg 440
3: VanderVelde, pg 446
4: VanderVelde, pg 466
5: Douglas A. Blackmon, Slavery
by Another Name: The Re-enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to
World War 2 (New York, New York: Anchor Books, 2008) pg 51
6: W. David Lewis, “The Emergence of Birmingham as a Case Study
of Continuity between the Antebellum Planter Class and Industrialization in the
‘New South’,” Agricultural
History 68:2 (1994), pg 67
7: Blackmon, pg 51
8: Blackmon, pg 52
9: James B. Browning, “The North Carolina Black Code,” The Journal of Negro History
15:4 (1930) pg 462
10: Browning, pg 464
11: Browning, pg 466
12: William Cohen, “Negro Involuntary Servitude in the South,
1865-1940: A Preliminary Analysis,” The
Journal of Southern History 42:1 (1976) pg 34
13: Cohen, pg 39
14: Blackmon, pg 64
15: Blackmon, pg 65
16: Henry Theodore Jackson, “Prison Labor,” Journal of the American Institute
of Criminal Law and Criminology 18:2 (1927) pgs 244, 245
17: Theodore Jackson, pg 246
18: Matthew J. Mancini, “Race, Economics, and The Abandonment of
Convict Leasing,” The
Journal of Negro History 63:4 (1978) pg 339
19: Mancini, pg 340`*`*`*`*`*`*`*`*
My Thoughts:
This was rather revealing about a part of history that I was not familiar with, having grown up in the far West.
Even though the convict leasing of that style has been abolished. A form of that enslavement and leasing continues today. The overwhelming number of black American incarcerated for sometimes minor crimes is astounding. In come cases, these convicts are not leased and transferred to some company, but are leased out and perform their work within the prison. Even doing call center work which allows them access to customers credit card information.
There are programs to manufacture products in the prisons, some directly competing with private businesses, thus driving down the price in the market.
Now I do agree that convicts should learn a trade while confined so they have a greater rate of success in staying out of prison. But as we are learning, so many have been wrongly convicted in the first place.
It makes you wonder if the War on Drugs is part of the process to ensure enough cheap labor is available for in-prison contracts by corporations? Could this be an modification of the original model? On the surface it appears to be. But this time, the corporations don't care if the cheap labor is white, Hispanic or black, just as long as it's cheap.
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