Read Slavery by Another Name Online
Authors: Douglas A. Blackmon
before him were the only whites to reenslave a black man since the
Civil War. "In view of the fact that this is the rst crime of the kind
which ever has occurred in Georgia," Speer told the defendants,
"and because of the frank confession of the young men, sentence is
imposed, in order to convince the public that the purpose of the
court is to warn and deter others from like crime. During good
behavior, ne is suspended upon payment of $100 each." Given the
"problems of the times," Speer maintained harsh measures would be
counterproductive. "I deemed it for every reason best to deal very
leniently with the prisoners," Speer wrote to the at orney general.4
Reese was concerned that too many in the South viewed the new
slavery cases just as Judge Speer appeared to, as an anomaly. To
prove the broad scope of involuntary servitude in his jurisdiction,
Reese planned to aggressively broaden his investigation. Just two
Reese planned to aggressively broaden his investigation. Just two
days after Pace's guilty plea, the prosecutor sent federal marshals
back to Coosa County to arrest Laray Grogan, one of the Goodwater
watchguards who had been so busy in the town's trade in black
labor.
Grogan was accused of arresting an African American woman
named Emma Pearson on a bogus charge of vagrancy and then
sel ing her to Eliza Turner, the brother of Fletch Turner, who
managed the family's limestone quarry in Calcis. After arriving in
Montgomery, Grogan told a local reporter that he had done nothing
wrong and further that the peonage cases had made the blacks of
Coosa and Tal apoosa counties "unbearably impertinent." His bond
was immediately posted by two wealthy Goodwater businessmen,
and Grogan was released.
The same day, J. Wilburn Haralson was arrested in Columbus,
Georgia, where he worked in a cot on mil , and brought by a
Saturday morning train to Montgomery. Known as the Cosby
family's "a davit man," Haralson routinely wrote out and swore to
any ctitious charge George Cosby told him to lodge as a ruse for
seizing blacks. He was placed in the county jail to await trial on
five counts of peonage.5
Despite the continuing stream of new charges and the opening of
the Cosby trial a few days away, Reese worried that public support
for his campaign was wavering. Newspapers across the South were
growing more bel igerent in tone as Reese and a few other
prosecutors continued investigations. Alabama's most popular
political gure, Secretary of State J. Thomas He in, was also
growing louder in his denunciations of the cases.
Three days before the Cosby trial was set to begin, Reese
conducted a formal interview with the Montgomery Advertiser. He
said that while the charges against the Cosby men were technical y
termed peonage, the case was in fact about slavery—the overt
buying and sel ing of humans, and holding them in a condition of
coerced forced labor. "These indictments are for …kidnapping and
taking and carrying away any person with intent to place him in a
taking and carrying away any person with intent to place him in a
condition of slavery, and holding and returning him to a condition
of peonage," Reese said.
He also made it clear that the cases were aimed not just at
cleaning up an isolated nest of slavery hanging on in one area of
Alabama. The prosecution was an at ack on widespread practices of
involuntary servitude across the state. The Tal apoosa cases were
the high-pro le criminal thrust of the e ort, but just as important
was Judge Jones ruling that the Alabama contract labor law was
invalid. "The contract labor law which has just been declared
unconstitutional …was passed for the protection of landlords in the
cot on growing belt.
"It is a mat er of common knowledge that under this statute, the
laborer or renter has not been guilty of any criminal act in thus
leaving or abandoning the premises," Reese said. "He has simply
breached a contract which creates the relation of debtor and
creditor. Under this statute the creditor commands the debtor on
peril of hard labor not to work at his accustomed vocation for any
one else during the term of that contract." Reese blamed the nearly
unchecked and unaccountable power wielded by justices of the
peace in rural areas.6
The fol owing morning, the Cosbys appeared on the second oor of
the federal building accompanied by Dadevil e lawyer Thomas L.
Bulger, son of the Confederate hero at Get ysburg. But the rst train
from Tal apoosa County, packed with spectators and key witnesses,
had been delayed. Final y, at 1 P.M., the court convened with a
crowded gal ery of white spectators. White witnesses mil ed in the
corridor. For their safety, the African Americans who would testify,
explained Reese, would be produced only as they were cal ed to
the stand.
Reese announced to the gal ery that the government would rst
prosecute case No. 4218, in which the Cosbys, Pace, J. W. Haralson,
and James Kennedy were charged with conspiring to sel Pike
Swanson into labor on the Cosby farm. Swanson had testi ed
Swanson into labor on the Cosby farm. Swanson had testi ed
previously to the grand jury that he was held on the Cosby
plantation until just before the peonage investigation began. A
farmhand from Macon County, he said he went to the Cosby farm
the previous July and freely signed a contract to work for $2 a
month. But once Swanson began work, the Cosbys refused to pay
him. Instead, he was arrested, then arrested a second time, on bogus
a davits by Haralson accusing him of disorderly conduct and
ghting. Swanson was put through a sham trial by Kennedy, the
justice of the peace. Then Cosby pretended to pay Swanson's nes
in return for holding the worker at least fourteen more months.
Swanson testi ed he was never paid for any work on the Cosby
plantation and was held under guard seven days a week, and
locked in at night. Two weeks before the Cosbys were indicted, the
white men freed Swanson, who then ed to his home county. A
week before the trial, Burancas Cosby claimed never to have seen
Pike Swanson.
After Reese announced that Swanson's capture would be the rst
case, Judge Jones granted a one-day delay to give the defense
lawyers time to prepare. But early that afternoon, George Cosby
sent word that he and the other members of his family wished to
avoid the trial, as Pace had done. G. R. Sha er, of Dadevil e, one of
the men who made bond for the Cosbys, urged them to plead guilty
and had gathered scores of signatures in Tal-lapoosa County on a
petition asking for clemency.
At 5 P.M., Sha er cal ed the judge from his Adams Street home
back to court chambers, where they met with Cosby's lawyers.
Judge Jones refused to promise clemency. But in return for guilty
pleas from two of the men, Jones and Reese agreed to accept the
at orneys’ arguments that the statute of limitations had passed on
the crimes al eged against W. D. Cosby—the man who had been
ready to take morphine a few weeks earlier. His case was
dismissed.
With shafts of summer sun cut ing sharp diagonals through the
courtroom windows, George Cosby and his nephew Burancas stood
before the bench, heads bowed, eyes downcast. They quietly
before the bench, heads bowed, eyes downcast. They quietly
pleaded guilty to forty- ve counts of peonage and conspiracy to
hold blacks in slavery.
The two insisted they had no idea that their actions were against
the law. They vigorously protested al egations by the U.S. at orney
that they treated the forced laborers cruel y. They implored the
court to recognize the hardship on their families that would come
from imprisonment.
"The excuse that you did not know that you were violating the
laws of the United States can have no legal weight, since every man
is conclusively presumed to know the law," Judge Jones responded.
"It is not entitled to a particle of moral weight in these cases,
because you are bound to know that what you did was a violation
of the laws of God and of the State regardless of any law of the
United States. Helpless and defenseless people who are guilty of no
crime have been brought into court and by col usion with justices of
the peace, who prostituted the authority of God and of this State in
the administration of justice have been deprived of their liberty,
fined and forced to work and in some instances cruel y beaten.
"You have violated not only the laws of your country but that
great law of honor and justice, which bids the powerful and strong
not to oppress the down-trodden."7
Judge Jones sentenced each of the men to one year and a day in
the federal penitentiary in Atlanta.
Reese was jubilant. The swift guilty pleas seemed to prove both
the extent of involuntary servitude and the power of the federal
sword to stop it. The clear implication was that he was at the
beginning of a massive campaign to root out slavery once and for
al . The trial of Fletch Turner was next on the docket, and would be
fol owed by many more. Agents continued to probe Lowndes
County and other areas where evidence of even more widespread
slavery was rampant. Reese began advocating to the Department of
Justice that his assistant, Julius Sternfeld, be named a special
prosecutor solely to oversee the expanding investigation. "These
cases justify the contention of the government that peonage and
cases justify the contention of the government that peonage and
involuntary servitude has been practiced in Alabama in no smal
degree," he quickly wrote the at orney general. "These practices are
indulged in many other counties in the district and our e ort shal
be made in the direction of put ing an end to them."8
But more practical men than Reese could bet er see what the
future held. White leaders were ral ying across the South,
emboldened by men such as Secretary of State He in, who was
crisscrossing Alabama denouncing Reese's investigation and
castigating any white man who did not agree. At the same time,
black preachers and African Americans who had established some
sliver of nancial security grew fearful of the rising temperature
around them. They had learned through bloody experience the
dangers of chal enging the status quo of white domination, and also
that in the in exible rituals of southern racial interaction men such
as themselves were expected to prostrate themselves before whites
as proof that they too gave no credence to the inquiries demanded
by President Roosevelt and Judge Jones.
Shortly after the Cosby sentencing, Edward M. Adams, a Secret
Service agent stationed in Montgomery, wrote to Washington
headquarters in hopes of softening any disappointment that might
come if no jury convictions were won in any of the slavery cases.
He was particularly concerned that another agent assigned to the
cases not be tainted by any such failure. "He has secured evidence in
a number of cases that ought to bring convictions, yet, knowing
public sentiment as I do, I fear, unless compromise verdicts can be
secured, that no convictions wil result," Adams wrote. "The iniquity
of peonage wil always remain in this country in practice, to
eradicate it is an interminable work. The sentiment against the
in iction of punishment to o enders nds its strongest exponent in
Secretary of State He in, an orator of no mean ability, and he is
going about the state like a roaring lion. I merely write this, to say,
that whatever the result in the trial of the cases in this court, the
failure to convict and punish o enders, cannot be charged to our
service."
Adams included with his let er a newspaper clipping reporting
Adams included with his let er a newspaper clipping reporting
that petitions signed by hundreds of blacks in Tal apoosa and Coosa
counties had been presented to Judge Jones asking for clemency for
the Cosbys. "These cases have caused a bit er feeling between the
two races," the article said with profound understatement, "and that
the petitioners believe that the peonage system is broken up, and
further says that the Cosbys are good citizens of the community."9
• •
Indeed, whatever initial contrition white southerners expressed at