Read Slavery by Another Name Online
Authors: Douglas A. Blackmon
fifty years earlier.
Beyond the confines of the family's strained domesticity, lit le else
was evolving in the way that Henry and Mary and mil ions of other
black southerners, had imagined at the dawn of freedom.
As Green grew into school age and then adolescence, the family
increasingly felt the repercussions of two convulsive crescendos
building toward a climax early in the next century. First was the
progressively more overt e ort to obliterate al manner of black
independence and civic participation in the South—the e ective
reversal of the guarantees of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and
reversal of the guarantees of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and
Fifteenth amendments. Then came a fevered movement to fol ow
the great American territorial expansions of the nineteenth century
with an era of unprecedented government-engineered social and
economic uplift almost whol y reserved for whites. The two
campaigns arrived like successive storms on a shore—the rst
violent wave smashing any creation of man, the second scouring
what had been, scat ering the remains, and saturating the soil with
salt.
The totality of the destruction to be wrought on American blacks
was underscored by a remarkable and lit le acknowledged facet of
southern life in the nal two decades of the 1800s. African
Americans, by the most critical economic measures, were not
signi cantly disadvantaged in comparison to the great mass of poor
whites that surrounded them in the South. Of 4.4 mil ion black
southerners, poverty was abject and daunting. But mil ions of white
southerners shared the same plight. And while more than half of
southern blacks—about 2.5 mil ion—could not read, there were 1.3
mil ion whites among their neighbors who also were il iterate.
The prolonged economic inferiority and social subjugation of
African Americans that was to be ubiquitous in much of the next
century was not a conclusion preordained by the traditions of
antebel um slavery.
Indeed, optimism and an expansive sense of opportunity
pervaded black life in the years surrounding Green Cot enham's
birth in 1886. African Americans stil felt strongly that they were on
the cusp of authentic integration into mainstream American life.
Inspired by the moral force of the Civil War victory and the
pronouncements of evangelical uplift, self-reliance, and personal
improvement o ered by an army of black pastors and statesmen of
abolition such as Frederick Douglass, and soon Booker T
Washington, black Americans were poised to assimilate ful y into
American society. Already, African Americans were seeing concrete
dividends from the black public schools established during
dividends from the black public schools established during
Reconstruction.
The chal enges of freedom's aftermath remained surmountable,
and the United States, just beginning to emerge as a truly modern
nation, was embarking upon an unparal eled period of strategic
social uplift. Blacks and poor whites alike were ready to exploit the
opportunities of what would become a fty-year campaign by
federal and state governments to dramatical y elevate the horizons
of tens of mil ions of Americans living in crude frontier towns,
urban tenements, and the isolation of remote rural farms.
By World War I , mil ions of white southerners had been raised
from profound poverty, il iteracy, and ignorance to at least modest
middle-class status. Free public schools, consistent medical care,
passable roads, clean tap water, electricity, even the concept of
regular hourly wage work—al stil rarities across the South and
much of the rest of the nation at the dusk of the nineteenth century
—were promulgated upon mil ions of the most dispossessed of
Americans with a speed and e cacy that in hindsight made the
Great Society initiatives of the 1960s appear timid and indolent.
Even as southern whites rampaged violently and blacks su ered a
grinding series of legal and political reverses, African American
men continued to save meager funds to buy farms, mules, and
plows. Black land ownership surged. New communities were
established. Additional schools were opened against extraordinary
odds. Most African Americans were resigned to the reality that
whites would hold a dominant position in southern society, but
found it incomprehensible that they and their descendants might be
relegated again to a permanent, inferior social and legal position.
Many, probably a majority, were reconciled to the likelihood of
second-class citizenship. But, as argued by Booker T. Washington,
they saw this status as a way station to ful participation in society
—a time to build economical y and overcome the most obvious
vestiges of slavery. Tens of thousands of blacks continued to
exercise their vote, and a not insigni cant number of white leaders
stil accepted, even if reluctantly, that the equal citizenship of
former slaves could not be constitutional y revoked. The legal
former slaves could not be constitutional y revoked. The legal
construct of separate-but-equal segregated government services—
which would de ne the long era of Jim Crow in the twentieth
century—had not yet been clearly established. Even the practice of
identifying in government records every citizen as either "Negro" or
"White"—a nearly obsessive American compulsion by early in the
next century—in many areas had not yet become routine.
But the succeeding years would come as if the masses of
povertystricken whites and blacks were twin siblings of a parent
indulgent to one and venomous to the other. A new national white
consensus began to coalesce against African Americans with
shocking force and speed. The general white public, the national
leadership of the Republican Party, and the federal government on
every level were arriving at the conclusion that African Americans
did not merit citizenship and that their freedom was not valuable
enough to justify the con icts they engendered among whites. A
growing body of whites across the nation concluded that blacks
were not worth the cost of imposing a racial morality that few in
any region genuinely shared. As early as 1876, President Ulysses S.
Grant, commander of the Union army of liberation, conceded to
members of his cabinet that the Fifteenth Amendment, giving freed
slaves the right to vote, had been a mistake: "It had done the Negro
no good, and had been a hindrance to the South, and by no means a
political advantage to the North."1 "The long controversy over the
black man seems to have reached a nality," wrote the Chicago
Tribune, approvingly. Added The Nation: "The Negro wil
disappear from the eld of national politics. Henceforth, the nation,
as a nation, wil have nothing more to do with him."2 That the
parent had once sacri ced enormously to rescue the less favored
child only made its abandonment deeply more bit er.
By the end of the 1940s, when Green Cot enham might have been
easing toward a workman's retirement, it was only his white peers
who approached old age as the rst American generation with
social y guaranteed security. Emerging among the children and
grandchildren of those whites was a level of modest wealth,
educational at ainment, and personal achievement unimaginable to
educational at ainment, and personal achievement unimaginable to
anyone in the South of 1886. For the rst time in U.S. history, a
geographical y broad and stable national middle class had evolved
—an anchor of sustained wealth and shared values that would
sculpt American life through the end of the twentieth century. But it
would be defined in white-only terms.
The South was in the midst of an economic and cultural convulsion,
one that should have o ered an opening for a radical rede nition
of the roles of blacks and whites in American life. A terrible
depression in the 1870s had nal y eased as the South began to
emerge from economic ruin. In the disputed presidential election of
1876, white southern political leaders leveraged the electoral
col ege system to rob the winner of a huge majority of the popular
vote, Samuel J. Tilden, of the White House. In return, the Congress
and the administration of the fraudulent new Republican president,
Rutherford B. Hayes, final y removed the last Union troops from the
South and ended a decade of federal occupation of the region.3 An
era of southern economic revitalization appeared to be at hand. In
1886, Henry Grady the dynamic young editor of the Atlanta
Constitution, famously declared the creation of a "New South"—one
in which industrialism would replace agriculture and in which the
con icts of region and race that had paralyzed the nation for more
than twenty-five years were at an end.
In some places, the economic evolution was truly
phantasmagoric. In 1880, large portions of Alabama remained as
sparsely populated as the newest western territories of the United
States. Most of the state averaged fewer than twenty residents per
square mile. A decade later, nearly al of Alabama was as thickly
populated as most states to the east.
Birmingham il ustrated the tectonic forces at work in U.S. society
more than any other place. The booming city erupted out of
abandoned forest in the 1870s and suddenly became a national
center for the making of iron and steel. As coal production in
Alabama surged from 10,000 tons in the early 1870s to 400,000
Alabama surged from 10,000 tons in the early 1870s to 400,000
tons in 1881, the city built thousands of new homes, laid streets,
instal ed the infrastructure of a major capital, and opened schools,
churches, and col eges. Je erson County, center of the boom, nearly
quadrupled from fewer than 25,000 residents in 1880 to nearly
90,000 ten years later. By 1900, the number approached 150,000.4
The entire U.S. economy was surging with industrial fervor,
generating a ravenous appetite for Alabama's coal and iron ore.
Wal Street nanciers joined with the South's new generation of
industrialists, men such as Col. James W Sloss, James
DeBardeleben, and Truman Aldrich, to aggressively exploit the
deposits of iron ore and apparently limitless seams of coal that
riddled the Appalachian foothil s of northern Alabama. In 1878,
Sloss— one of the original lessors of Alabama prisoners sixteen
years earlier— DeBardeleben, and Aldrich formed the Prat Coal
and Coke Co., and took over what would become the underground
behemoth known as Prat Mines.
Recognizing the vast potential of the mineral deposits, the
Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad Co. soon moved its center of
operations from Nashvil e to the coal elds of Alabama. The coming
economic boom, unprecedented in the South, would require
thousands of men, working deep in the earth, in a never-stopping
excavation.
In 1886, Sloss sold his massive Birmingham furnace complex to a
group of New York-backed investors. A year later, with additional
nancial backing from the North, the new owners formed a
corporation that would come to be known as Sloss-She eld Iron
and Steel Company. The corporation quickly purchased the
territory and mining operation at Coalburg owned by John Milner.
Production boomed. The crude mines and simple furnaces of Bibb
County now paled in the glow of this industrial revolution. The old
shafts and digs were being abandoned. The work they represented
to families such as the black Cot inghams melted away. Word
spread that soon there would be no work except in the new city
spread that soon there would be no work except in the new city
exploding less than fty miles away— Birmingham. The family's
center was slipping too. Sometime in the 1880s the old slave
Scipio, the man who had carved a world from the wilderness, had
fathered and grandfathered so many in slavery but de antly never
forgot en his African roots, died at Brierfield.
The furnaces near Six Mile, where Scipio, Henry, and their clan
had sustained a measure of economic independence, ceased
operations. Only the families of grandson Henry and his much
younger half-brother Elbert remained in the community. Most of the