Read Slavery by Another Name Online
Authors: Douglas A. Blackmon
countryside that blacks would soon have land. At one point the
fol owing year, in 1868, during a period of intense speculation
among freed slaves that land was soon to be provided to them,
many blacks purchased boundary markers to be prepared for the
marking of of their forty-acre tracts.10
Forty miles to the west of the Cot ingham farm, in Greene
County, hundreds of former slaves led suit against white
landowners in 1868 demanding that the former slave masters be
compel ed to pay wages earned during the prior season's work.
Whites responded by burning down the courthouse, and with it al
1,800 lawsuits filed by the freedmen.11
Despite Bibb County's remote location, far from any of the most
famous military campaigns, the Civil War had not been a distant
event. In the early months of ghting, Alabama industrialists
realized that the market for iron su cient for armaments would
become lucrative in the South. In 1860 only Tredegar Iron Works, a
vast industrial enterprise in Richmond, Virginia, driven by more
than 450 slaves and nearly as many free laborers, could produce
bat le-ready cannon for the South. The Confederate government,
almost from the moment of its creation, set out to spur additional
capacity to make arms, particularly in Alabama, where a nascent
iron and coal industry was already emerging and lit le ghting was
likely to occur. During the war, a dozen or more new iron furnaces
were put into blast in Alabama;12 by 1864, the state was pumping
out four times more iron than any other southern state.
Across Alabama, individual property holders—slaveholders
speci cal y— were aggressively encouraged to at empt primitive
industrial e orts to support the Confederate war e ort. The rebel
government o ered generous inducements to entrepreneurs and
large slave owners to devote their resources to the South's industrial
needs. With much of the major plantation areas of Mississippi
under constant federal harassment, thousands of slaves there were
without work. Slave owners wil ing to transport their black workers
to the new mining regions of Alabama and dig coal could avoid
conscription into the southern armies.
After seeing their homes and stockpiles of cot on burned, W H.
and Lewis Thompson, brothers from Hinds County, Mississippi, and
the owners of large numbers of slaves, moved to Bibb County
midway through the war to mine the Cahaba coal elds for the
Confederacy. They opened the Lower Thompson mine, and later
another relative and his slaves arrived to dig another mine. The coal
was hauled eleven miles to Ashby and then shipped to Selma. The
mining was crude, using picks and hand-pul ed carts. The slaves
drained water from the shafts by carrying buckets up to the
surface.13
surface.
A neighbor of the Cot inghams, local farmer Oliver Frost,
regularly took his slaves to a cave on Six Mile Creek to mine
saltpeter—a critical ingredient for gunpowder—for the Confederate
army, often remaining there for weeks at a time. The Fancher
family, on a farm three miles north of the crossroads community
cal ed Six Mile, regularly hauled limestone from a quarry on their
property to a Bibb County furnace during the war.14
The centerpiece of the Alabama military enterprises was a
massive and heavily forti ed arsenal, naval foundry, ironworks, and
gunpowder mil located in the city of Selma. To produce its
weapons and metal plating for use on ironclad ships critical to the
Confederacy's limited naval operations, the Selma works relied on
enormous amounts of coal and iron ore mined and forged in nearby
Shelby and Bibb counties.15 Alabama iron was particularly wel
suited to use in the revolutionary new development of fortifying
bat le ships with steel plates. Iron forged at Alabama's Cane Creek
Furnace, in Calhoun County, had been utilized for a portion of the
armor used to convert the hul of the captured USS Merrimac into
the CSS Virginia, the southern entrant in the famous March 8, 1862,
bat le of ironclads.16 The Confederacy was hungry for as much of
the material as it could get.
Of particular strategic value were ironworks established by local
investors in 1862 in the vil age of Brier eld. Nine miles from the
Cot ing-ham place, the Brier eld Iron Works produced the plates
that adorned the Confederate vessel CSS Tennessee, which during
the bat le of Mobile Bay on August 5, 1864, withstood the barrage
of seventeen Union vessels without a single shot penetrating her
hul .17 Bibb County iron quickly became a coveted material.
As the war escalated, maintaining production required an ever
increasing number of slaves. Agents from major factories, Brier eld
Iron, and the Shelby Iron Works, scoured the countryside to buy or
lease African Americans. Foundries routinely commissioned labor
agents to prowl across the southern states in search of available
slaves. In 1863, the Confederate government purchased the
slaves. In 1863, the Confederate government purchased the
Brier eld operation for $600,000, so that it could directly control
its output. The purchase encompassed "its property of al kinds
whatsoever," including thousands of acres of land and a catalogue of
dozens of wagons, wheelbarrows, coal sleds, axes, and blacksmith
tools. On the list of livestock were seventy mules, forty-one oxen,
and nine black men: "John Anderson, aged about 35, Dennis, about
38, George, about 30, Charles, about 47, Perry, about 40, Curry
about 17, Mat hew, about 35, Mose, about 18, and Esquire, about
30 years."18
The Confederate government began construction of a second
furnace at the site shortly after acquiring the property. Al of its
output went to the Selma Arsenal, fty miles by railroad to the
south, where the iron was used for armor and for naval guns,
including the state-of-the-art eleven-inch Brooke ri ed cannon, with
a capacity of ring a 230-pound shel more than two thousand
yards.19
By the standards of the antebel um South, the Brier eld Iron
Works was a spectacle of industrial wonder. The adjacent vil age
held church in a schoolhouse surrounded by the tenements and
smal housing for three hundred workers. Two massive brick blast
furnaces, each forty feet high, belched a thick brew of smoke and
gases at the top and a torrent of lique ed iron at the base. Nearby
was a rol ing mil where the molten iron was formed into crude
one-hundred-pound "pigs" for shipment to Selma, and loaded onto
a railroad line extended into the factory yard. One hundred yards
away sat a kiln for ring limestone, ten tons of which was fed each
day into the furnaces. Beyond the kiln was a quarry for the endless
task of repairing the stone furnaces, a sawmil , and then seven
thousand acres of forest from which fuel for the constantly burning
fires was cut.20
The nine slaves owned by the ironworks were an anomaly. Few
industrial enterprises wanted to actual y purchase slaves. They were
too expensive at acquisition, and too costly and di cult to
maintain. Too unpredictable as to when they might become
maintain. Too unpredictable as to when they might become
uncooperative, or die. Far preferable to the slave-era industrialist
was to lease the slave chat el owned by other men.
In 1864, however, few such workers could be found anymore.
Instead, the Confederate o cer commanding the Brier eld iron
production operation, Maj. Wil iam Richardson Hunt, rented two
hundred slaves to perform the grueling tasks necessary to continue
equipping the rebel army.21 Late in the war, as the need for the
area's coal and iron capacity grew dire, the Confederate government
began to forcibly impress the slaves held by whites in the county. A
son of Rev. Starr's—a doctor and also a resident of the Cot ingham
Loop—became the government's agent for seizing slaves.22 There is
no surviving record of which black men were pressed into service.
But by war's end, Scipio Cot ingham, the sixty-three-year-old slave
who had shared the farm longest with master Elisha, had come to
identify himself as a foundry man. Almost certainly, he had been
among those rented to the Brier eld furnace and compel ed to help
arm the troops fighting to preserve his enslavement.
As the war years progressed, ever larger numbers of local men from
near the Cot ingham farm left for bat le duty. Two of Elisha's sons
fought for the Confederacy. Moses and James, both husbands and
fathers, each saw gruesome action, personal injury, and capture by
the Union. Elisha's grandson Oliver, too young to ght with the
troops, joined the Home Guard, the ragtag platoons of old men and
teenagers whose job was to patrol the roads for deserters, eeing
slaves, and Union scouts.
In the beginning, large crowds gathered at the stores in the
crossroads set lement of Six Mile to send them o , and groups of
women worked together to sew the uniforms they wore. Soldiers on
the move through the area were a regular sight, crossing the Cahaba
on the ferry near the mouth of Cot ingham Creek, and traversing the
main road from there toward the rail towns to the east.23
Confederate soldiers camped often on the Cot ingham farm,
stretching out in the big eld near the river, foraging from the
stretching out in the big eld near the river, foraging from the
plantation's supplies and food, exchanging spent horses for fresh
ones. At one point late in the war, an entire regiment set camp in
the field, erecting tents and lighting cooking fires.24
The appearance of Confederate soldiers must have been an
extraordinary event in the lives of the black members of the
Cot ingham clan. The war years were a con icted period of
confused roles for slaves. They were the subjects of the Union
army's war of liberation, and the victims of the South's economic
system. Yet at the same time, slaves were also servants and
protectors of their white masters. In the woods near the Cot ingham
home, slaves guarded the horses and possessions of their white
owners, hidden there to avoid raids of northern soldiers. Some
slaves took the opportunity to ee, but most stayed at their posts
until true liberation came in the spring of 1865.
The foundry and arsenal at Selma and the simple mines and
furnaces around the Cot ingham farm that supplied it with raw
materials had taken on outsized importance as the war dragged on.
The Alabama manufacturing network became the backbone of the
Confederacy's ability to make arms,25 as the Tredegar factories were
depleted of raw materials and skil ed workers and menaced by the
advancing armies of Ulysses S. Grant. Preservation of the Alabama
enterprises was a key element of a last-ditch plan by Je erson
Davis, the southern president, to retreat with whatever was left of
the Confederate military into the Deep South and continue the
war.26
For more than a year, Union forces in southern Tennessee and
northern Alabama massed for an anticipated order to obliterate any
continued capacity of a rump Confederate government to make
arms. Smal groups of horse soldiers made regular probing raids,
against minimal southern resistance. In April of 1864, Alabama's
governor wired Confederate Lt. Gen. Leonidas Polk, commander of
rebel forces in Alabama and Mississippi, imploring him to send
additional troops. "The enemy's forces …are fortifying their position
with their cavalry raiding over the country…. It is certain that the
with their cavalry raiding over the country…. It is certain that the
forces wil work way South and destroy the valuable works in
Central Alabama…. Can nothing be done?"27
Final y in March 1865, a mass of 13,500 Union cavalrymen
swept down from the Tennessee border, in one of the North's
penultimate death blows to the rebel ion. Commanded by Gen.
James H. Wilson, the Union army, wel dril ed and amply armed,
split into three huge raiding parties, each assigned to destroy key
elements of Alabama's industrial infrastructure. Moving
unchal enged for days, the federal troops burned or wrecked iron
forges, mil s, and massive stockpiles of cot on and coal at Red
Mountain, Irondale, and Helena, north of Bibb County. On the