Read Slavery by Another Name Online
Authors: Douglas A. Blackmon
railroad cars, restrooms, restaurants, neighborhoods, and schools.
Al of this had been accomplished in a sudden, unfet ered grab by
white supremacists that was met outside the South with lit le more
than quiet assent. During the thirty years since Reconstruction—
despite its being a period of nearly continuous Republican control
of the White House—federal o cials raised only the faintest
concerns about white abuse of black laborers. Southern leaders
were astonished that such a protest had inexplicably arisen now.
For blacks it seemed that a true friend had miraculously come to
occupy the White House, that somehow the assurances of American
democracy might actual y ful l themselves. "The South … is in the
hands of unfriendly white men…It has been left to the Federal
Government, under that administration of President Roosevelt, to
expose this iniquity …and stretch out the long arm of the Nation to
expose this iniquity …and stretch out the long arm of the Nation to
punish and prevent it," wrote the black commentator Charles W
Chesnut . "The President has endeavored to stem the tide of
prejudice, which, sweeping up from the South, has sought to
overwhelm the Negro everywhere; and he has made it clear that he
regards himself as the representative of the people."3
This dramatic turn of events—so revolting to southern whites, so
euphoric to blacks—began with the assassination of President
Wil iam McKinley two years earlier in September 1901.
McKinley had represented more than any other American leader
at the turn of the twentieth century the experiences of those who
directly participated in the war between the North and the South
and came to see that struggle as a moral crusade against slavery and
for the preservation of the union. A young private when he
volunteered, McKinley rose steadily to the rank of major by the end
of the war on the basis of modest acts of heroism. He was the last
president who had served as an o cer in Abraham Lincoln's Grand
Army, and mil ions of aging Union veterans continued to greet him
af ectionately as Major McKinley.
But by the fal of 1901, the veterans he marched with through the
great bat les of the con ict had become a geriatric generation, their
luster increasingly pale against the new economic dramas playing
out between fabulously rich titans of manufacturing and production
such as John D. Rockefel er, Andrew Carnegie, and banker John
Pierpont Morgan and the masses of laborers and immigrants
streaming into the bulging metropolises of the North and Midwest.
Theodore Roosevelt came to serve as McKinley's vice president in
1900 almost accidental y. His place on McKinley's presidential
ticket was engineered by old-guard Republican leaders in New York
primarily to get Roosevelt, the state's unexpectedly popular new
governor, out of their way. Roosevelt was barely set led into
Washington when McKinley was shot by an anarchist while standing
on a receiving line for public visitors at an international exhibition
in Bu alo, New York. McKinley died eight days later, and Roosevelt
in Bu alo, New York. McKinley died eight days later, and Roosevelt
was sworn in as president on September 14, 1901.
Roosevelt, who had been a child when the Civil War was fought,
saw himself not as heir to McKinley's archaic nineteenth-century
political regimes and the contradictory outcomes of Reconstruction
and industrialization. Instead, he imagined his rise to the White
House as a catalyst for reconciling Americans to what Roosevelt
perceived as the great missed opportunities of the nation's political
and economic freedoms.
Roosevelt was also at least nominal y concerned about the chasm
between blacks and whites, and the gap between the conditions of
African Americans and the promises made to them at the end of
slavery. But none of this was to Roosevelt an intractable dilemma.
Just forty-two years old upon becoming president, the youngest yet
in U.S. history, he believed that Americans were a people of
seminal y good character, reasonable thinking, and, as a body, of
singular wisdom. Reminded of their fundamental principles, al
white Americans would see the necessity of fairness to freed slaves
and their descendants, Roosevelt thought—just as he was con dent
that the leaders of the new steel, coal, railroad, and banking trusts
ultimately could be relied on to balance pro ts against the needs of
al the nation's workers.
The United States was emerging as an authentic global power for
the rst time in its history. The country's economic and military
prowess outside the national borders was greater than at any time
since the declaration of the republic. The nation was in the midst of
an explosion of new economic production and wealth. In the South,
centers of industry were rising in Birmingham and Atlanta.
Industrial combinations such as Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad Co.
were moving to chal enge northern rivals like U.S. Steel and
Carnegie Steel. The landscape of the South remained de ned by the
abject poverty of mil ions of plebeian black and white farmers, but
there was a sense of psychic resurgence in the region. The actual
horrors and injuries of the Civil War were receding from col ective
memory. Nostalgia for the antebel um South and cal s for reunion
and reconciliation among veterans of the armies for both sides were
and reconciliation among veterans of the armies for both sides were
becoming national obsessions. The literature of Joel Chandler
Harris and scores of imitators—chock-ablock with white writers’
stylized depictions of "Negro" dialect and the most benevolent
images of slave masters and slaves imaginable—had supplanted the
canon of abolitionist novels and rsthand accounts of slaves that
dominated American book sales and lecture tours in the previous
generation.
The long-standing excuse for southern malevolence toward blacks
— that the region left prostrate by war, the ending of slavery, and
the ostensible agonies of Reconstruction couldn't help but abuse its
former slaves—struck Roosevelt and his breed of proactive
Americans as tired, dul , and simply wrong. The assertion by white
southerners of a de facto right to reverse the guarantees of voting
rights and citizenship to blacks seemed to Roosevelt so absurd that
it could only be truly supported by extremists. He reckoned— using
the same logic that compel ed him to chal enge the abuse of
immigrant and impoverished laborers in the factories and coal elds
closer to his home at Oyster Bay, New York—that a reasonable and
progressive northern man such as himself could surely safeguard the
fundamental needs of southern blacks while stil reassuring
southern whites that they had nothing to fear from al owing
authentic citizenship for al .
Roosevelt could hardly have been more wrong in his judgment of
the political and racial realities of the South. But in addition to his
instinctive, if ultimately naive, sympathy for African Americans,
Roosevelt had explicitly political motivations for befriending blacks
as wel . The new president was anything but a celebrated gure
within his own Republican Party. Viewed suspiciously by
Republican leaders in New York, he was despised by leaders of the
national party's archconservative big business faction, who in the
previous three decades had engineered the steady drift of
Republicans from radical abolitionist roots toward a new position
as the party of unrestrained commerce. Roosevelt needed a novel
strategy if he hoped to secure the nomination for the presidential
election in 1904.
election in 1904.
A key element of the strategy was to forge a political base among
southern Republicans, almost al of whom were black. Roosevelt
believed he could cement those loyalties without stirring white
hostilities by appointing "reasonable" white Democrats to many key
federal positions—such as judgeships. The plan relied on one of the
oddest curiosities of the American electoral circumstances at the
beginning of the twentieth century. While African Americans were
almost whol y barred from voting in general elections—having been
disenfranchised in every state in which black voters constituted
statistical y signi cant numbers—black delegations continued to be
accorded ful rights at the national conventions of the Republican
Party. The result was that while African American voters had lit le
practical impact upon national elections, given that they were
whol y unable to deliver any electoral votes from the southern
states where nearly al blacks resided, black Republicans
nonetheless remained an essential swing factor in selecting
presidential nominees for their party.
Theodore Roosevelt made this calculation long before gaining the
presidency, and intentional y cultivated cordial relations with
African American leaders he considered moderate. Chief among
them was Booker T. Washington, the erudite former slave who had
risen to become the nation's most prominent black leader and the
founder of the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. The two men grew
progressively more friendly during Roosevelt's months of service as
vice president. In early 1901, Roosevelt accepted an invitation to
speak at Tuskegee later that year, as part of a short tour of the
South that was to include a brief homage to the Georgia plantation
home in which his mother had been reared.
With the death of Frederick Douglass in 1895, Washington was by
far the best known and most in uential of black leaders in the
United States— emphasizing black self-improvement, industrial
education, and acquiescence to white political power. Washington's
gradualist message to African Americans was epitomized in a
speech on September 18, 1895, at the Cot on States and
International Exhibition in Atlanta, urging that blacks accommodate
International Exhibition in Atlanta, urging that blacks accommodate
white demands for subservience while building up their own
industrial skil s, farms, and basic education.
To thunderous applause from southern whites, Washington said
of the two races: "In al things purely social we can be as separate
as the ngers, yet one as the hand in al things essential to mutual
progress." The black educator, named a "commissioner" of the event,
urged African Americans across Alabama to use the exposition's
"Negro Building" as a showcase for black skil s in mining,
lumbering and farming, the very industries in which they remained
most oppressed across the South.45
This ideal of a class of political y and legal y passive but
industrious African Americans deeply appealed to white economic
leaders. Near the closing day of the fair in late December 1895,
when Washington returned to speak on "Colored Teachers Day," the
exposition program featured on its last page a drawing of the Negro
Building and a caption praising its black at endants for "at ractive
neatness." The exhibits were "evidence of the growing skil ,
advancing intel igence and promotive industry of the race."
Washington's Tuskegee Institute, located less than fty miles from
the farm of John Pace, in the town of Tuskegee, became celebrated
among white northern philanthropists. Washington spent much of
his time touring the country to raise funds for the school and
at empting to quietly manipulate government o cials and the
political process on racial issues.
Younger black intel ectuals such as Professor W E. B. DuBois in
Atlanta came to bit erly criticize Washington as too wil ing to
accept a secondary position for African Americans. But Roosevelt
perceived Washington's views as sensible, pragmatic, and clearly in
keeping with his own progressive, but eminently paternalistic,
beliefs. Washington's emphasis on personal self-reliance and moral
and religious rectitude as the keys to individual progress
corresponded to Roosevelt's vision for uplifting yeoman farmers,
immigrant laborers, ranch hands, and factory workers of whatever
race or region. Roosevelt was convinced that if the "common man,"
race or region. Roosevelt was convinced that if the "common man,"
whether black or white, fol owed these principles and that
government ensured that no unjust legal obstacles impeded him,
then the United States could achieve immeasurable progress. Al of
this could happen, Roosevelt insisted, without disrupting the