Read Slavery by Another Name Online
Authors: Douglas A. Blackmon
the graveyard, with his wife, siblings, and kin fanning out to each
side. One body length away, just within arm's reach, lay in death a
long row of the slaves he had governed for most of a century in
life.2
Old Scip, once Elisha's most reliable slave, was not easing gently
toward his natural end. Freedom had taken tangible form for the
former slaves of the Cot ingham farm. Old Elisha's former slaves
separated into three groups. The rst, beginning with young Albert
Cot ingham, abandoned Bibb County and the place of their
enslavement as quickly as it had become clearly established that
they were in fact free to go wherever they wished.
Three other black families—each of them led by one from the
generation of middle-aged slaves who had spent the longest spans
of their lives as Cot ingham slaves—chose to remain close by the
old master, likely stil residing in the slave quarters a short distance
from Elisha's big house and later in simple tenant cabins erected to
replace them. The elder Green Cot inham , a partly white slave
now forty years old, along with his wife, Eme-line, and their baby
boy, Caesar, remained on the farm. Likely Green's mulat o line
boy, Caesar, remained on the farm. Likely Green's mulat o line
connected him directly to the white Cot inghams, but no record
survives to indicate whether that was so. Another slave father to
remain on the place was Je Cot ingham, forty-eight, who
continued to spel his name as his former master did, and who was
raising in his home an eight-year-old boy named Jonathon, who
was also partly white.3 Also staying behind was Milt, another of the
older crew of slaves.
On the other side of the big house, away from the slave cabins,
lived the youngest of Elisha's sons to reach adulthood, Harvey, also
forty years old, with his wife, Zelphia, and seven children. Slightly
farther down the wagon road, J. W. Starr's widow, Hannah,
remained in the preacher's house, though her son Lucius had
become the master of the household. Next door to them, a Starr
daughter and her family farmed on another portion of the dead
reverend's land.
A few miles away, beyond Cot ingham Loop, at the edge of the
Six Mile set lement around which the lives of al the Cot inghams
had come to orbit, Scip and the third group of former slaves set led
themselves in a life overshadowed by their former enslavement but
clearly distinct from the control ed lives they had formerly led.
At the center of those former slaves remained Scipio, stil
defiantly insistent that his birth as an African and the African origins
of his mother and father be ful y recorded whenever the census
taker or another government o cial inquired as to his provenance.
He took the name Cot inham.
Six Mile had the vague makings of a real town, with a smal
school and a weekly newspaper that boasted of a cluster of homes,
two stores, and a sawmil . On one boundary of the set lement lived
George Cot inham, now forty- ve, and next door lived Henry,
twenty-two years old, and Mary, with the lit le girl Cooney George
and Henry, as father and son, farmed rented property, probably
owned by the white Fancher family nearby.
Two houses away, Scip was ensconced with Charity, his junior by
thirty-eight years, and the ve children they had under the age of
thirty-eight years, and the ve children they had under the age of
fourteen. The e ort by General Gorgas to rebuild the Brier eld
furnaces had col apsed, and the weary Confederate industrialist
turned over the operation to another ex-rebel o cer turned
entrepreneur.
Scipio worked under his supervision at the Bibb furnace where
he had spent so much of the wartime years, stil laboring at the task
Elisha had sent him to learn in the e ort to save the Confederacy.
He traveled daily to the furnaces, several miles away, usual y in the
company of four much younger black men who boarded in a smal
house near the dry goods store in Six Mile. Sometimes, Scip would
spend the night near the furnace in rented lodgings with two of the
men, Toney Bates, twenty-two, and Alex Smith, nineteen.4
The free lives of Scip, George, and Henry were hardly easy. But
for the rst time they were truly autonomous of Elisha Cot ingham
and his kin. How long such black men in the post-emancipation
South could remain so would become the de ning characteristic of
their lives.
As slaves, men such as Scipio and Henry were taught that their
master was a palpable extension of the power of God—their
designated lord in a supremely ordained hierarchy. In the era of
emancipation, that role—now stripped of its religiosity and pared
to its most elemental dimensions of power and force—was handed
to the sherif .
This was a new capacity for local law enforcement o cers, and
the smal circles of elected o cials who also played a part in the
South's criminal and civil justice systems. Prior to the Civil War, al
of government in the region, at every level, was unimaginably
sparse by modern standards. In Alabama, an elected board of
county commissioners oversaw local tax col ections and
disbursements, primarily for repairs to bridges, maintenance of the
courthouse, and operation of a simple jail. The sheri , also chosen
by the people, usual y spent far more time serving civil warrants
and foreclosing property for unpaid debts than in the enforcement
and foreclosing property for unpaid debts than in the enforcement
of criminal statutes. The arbiter of most minor legal disputes and
al eged crimes would be a justice of the peace, normal y a local
man appointed by the governor to represent law and government
in each "beat" in the state. In an era of exceedingly di cult
transportation, beats were tiny areas of jurisdiction, often limited to
one smal quadrant of a county. One rural Alabama county elected
thirty justices of the peace in 1877.5 But within those boundaries,
the justice of the peace—more often than not the proprietor of a
country store or a large farm—held tremendous authority, including
the power to convict defendants of crimes that carried potential
sentences of years of confinement.
In most southern states, county sheri s and their deputies
received no regular salaries. Instead, the law enforcement o cers,
justices of the peace, certain court o cials, and any witnesses who
testi ed against a defendant were compensated primarily from
speci c fees charged to those who voluntarily or involuntarily came
into the court system. A long schedule of approved fees designated
the cost of each o cial act those o cials might undertake: 50 cents
for serving a warrant in a lawsuit over a bad debt; $1 for making an
arrest on an indictment; 35 cents for a clerk who certi ed a court
document. Payment was enforced at the resolution of every court
proceeding, with the accumulated fees lumped into whatever other
penalty was ordered by a judge. After the advent of widespread
convict leasing, the fees—which usual y amounted to far more than
the actual nes imposed on defendants—were paid o from the
payments made by the company that acquired the prisoner.
Before the war and immediately afterward, the cases brought
before the county judge and his fel ow commissioners in most rural
southern counties were drearily routine, and rare. In the great
majority of cases in Bibb County and similar places, the penalty for
guilt was a ne of $1, regardless of the o ense. The point of the
prosecution and conviction was not so much to mete out justice
from the government but to establish de nitively that an o ense
had been commit ed and compel the guilty party and the victim to
resolve their di erences. If a drunken man injured a neighboring
resolve their di erences. If a drunken man injured a neighboring
farmer's cow, then the court's role was to ensure that the drunk paid
for the loss. Incarceration was an expensive and impractical
outcome in a society where cash rarely changed hands.
Already, the practice had become established of one man acting
as "surety" for the ne imposed on another. Traditional y, this
meant the father, brothers, or neighbors of a man convicted of a
crime coming into court to pay his nes and assure the court of his
future good conduct. In many cases, the surety would actual y be
the victim of the crime, agreeing to resolve a dispute in return for a
contract with the accused to work as payment for the damages he
had done.
The county was interested in neither rehabilitation nor long-term
punishment , particularly in an era when every man was needed to
sta the farms and enterprises of the county. With the exception of
those men who clearly merited the noose, most miscreants could be
rendered harmless if they simply stayed at whatever lonely place on
a muddy road they had appeared from. Those guilty of serious
felony crimes were the business of the state, anyway—tried and
sentenced by state circuit court judges and incarcerated however
and wherever the state saw t. The local sheri was a referee in the
world of misdemeanors, cal ing fouls and separating fighters.
Where sheri s exercised their greatest power was in the
enforcement of debts. In Shelby County, where Green Cot enham
would ultimately be arrested three decades later, Amos M. El iot
owned a store on a backcoun-try road, and by the 1870s had
become a stalwart citizen of his corner of the county. Merchants
such as he were as much bankers as retailers. Nearly every purchase
was made on credit to be repaid when a farmer's crop was sold at
the end of a season. More often than not, the store owner would be
the buyer of the crop as wel , meaning that the man who had
plowed the elds and picked the cot on or corn might never
actual y see hard currency. His debts, payments, and pro t or loss
were recorded only in the ledgers of the store. This was even more
were recorded only in the ledgers of the store. This was even more
so the case for a black man.
El iot was also justice of the peace—the most visible presence of
government authority in the crude world of country life,
empowered to perform marriages, formalize contracts between
parties, and otherwise represent law and order. In the late 1870s,
El iot 's docket was l ed with cases involving disputes over
amounts ranging from $5.85 to $7.45. A judgment— ordering
payment to a particular party or a term of forced labor in lieu of
one—often triggered a busy trade in bet ing on the future of the
convicted man. Judgments were treated like securities, and were
resold at discounts based on the likelihood, or not, of the losing
party being able to pay them.
In every case, the sheri and El iot , as the presiding justice of the
peace in his beat of the county, received a portion of the set lement
as a fee. Many times, El iot himself agreed to pay a defendant's
judgment and then take a mortgage in the same amount on the
man's property. In nearly every one of the 225 cases he heard
between 1878 and 1880, El iot ordered that "al of the defendants
[sic] personal property is therefore liable to the satisfaction of this
judgment."6
In July 1882, El iot ordered Harman Davis to pay a $30.88
judgment on a three-year-old debt. El iot paid the amount himself,
and Davis signed a mortgage to repay the money to him with
interest. The consequences of losing a case over a $5 debt could be
catastrophic. Alf Barret was sued for $5 on September 6, 1879, and
then failed to appear at the trial El iot convened. El iot declared
the man to be in default and ordered that he pay the plainti
$5.07, 60 cents each to the sheri and himself, and 50 cents each to
three witnesses. Two months later, to clear the obligations, the
sheri seized every article of property to which Barret could lay
claim, "one lounge, 1 Round Table, 1 Lamp, 1 looking Glass, 4
Picture frames & Pictures, 3 chairs, 2 Wash Tubs, Wash Stand, Bowl
& Pitcher, 1 Lantern, & 3 Sad Irons."
The jeopardy at ached to minor violations of the law would soon
The jeopardy at ached to minor violations of the law would soon
become much more serious than to be stripped of every possession.
The South's judicial tradition of using the criminal courts to set le
civil debts, and of treating a man's labor as a currency with which