Read Slavery by Another Name Online
Authors: Douglas A. Blackmon
supplies as a proxy for the sale of humans themselves. Able black
men and their families routinely "sold" for $250 in this Lowndes
County. Black families who resisted their sale to other whites were
subject to brutal violence and the con scation or burning of their
homes and possessions. Once under a labor contract to any white
man, blacks knew they would almost certainly never be free of it.
Disputes over the value of the cot on they raised were set led by
local o cials control ed by the white farmers. Any man who fought
back against overseers beating workers in the eld risked gruesome
punishments and sale into the convict leasing system.
Robbed of her crop, DuBois's central character, Zora, knows she
has no recourse: "What should she do? She never thought of appeal
to courts, for Colonel Cresswel was Justice of the Peace and his son
was baili . Why had they stolen from her? She knew. She was now
penniless, and in a sense helpless. She was now a peon bound to a
master's bidding." She knew that signing a contract to work for the
Cresswel s "would mean slavery, jail, or hounded running away."
While hunger and the physical abuse of overseers haunted every
day, it was jail, the chain gang, or any other contact with the
judicial system that loomed as the greatest constant jeopardies to
blacks. Starved and manacled squads of black men prowled the
town square and the roads between plantations, hustled along by
gun- and whip-toting guards—a scene hardly changed from the
traveling slave salesmen of a half century earlier. At the slightest
provocation, Cresswel threatened this ignominious horror to any
uncooperative or insolent blacks. The result of any accusation by a
uncooperative or insolent blacks. The result of any accusation by a
white man would, almost without exception, be court-sanctioned
ownership. Once hauled before a judge, any African American
could be purchased by Colonel Cresswel or another white. One
passage of DuBois's novel described the routine courthouse scene:
"What's this nigger charged with?" demanded the Judge when the rst
black boy was brought up before him.
"Breaking his labor contract."
"Any witnesses?"
"I have the contract here," announced the sheriff. "He refuses to work."
"A year, or one hundred dollars."
Colonel Cresswell paid his fine, and took him in charge.12
In October 1905, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Judge
Speer's order against Georgia's county convict leasing system,13
nding that the federal courts had no jurisdiction to dismantle the
system of obtaining and sel ing prisoners so vividly described by
DuBois. In January 1906, Warren Reese gave up the modest o ce
in the Montgomery federal building from which he had waged his
quixotic war on slavery. The White House named a new district
at orney for central Alabama.
Three months later, in April 1906, John W. Pace was pardoned
for his crimes by President Roosevelt.14 The fol owing year, Fletcher
Turner was elected to represent Tal apoosa County in the Alabama
House of Representatives.
XI
NEW SOUTH RISING
"This great corporation."
For three years, Americans had received periodic reports on the
slavery of Tal apoosa County. The county, with its exotic
Choctaw Indian name meaning "pulverized rock," and the image
of John Pace, a brutish farmer from the backcountry became the
only enduring symbol of the peonage cases—even as hundreds and
then thousands of other incidents emerged in parts of Alabama,
Georgia, Florida, Mississippi, and Louisiana. Darkness was crowding
black life in America in an ever more sinister way.
Lost in the Alabama peonage inquiry was how the case began—
with the report to Judge Jones of a miscarriage of justice in the
adjacent Shelby County. Whatever misdeeds had occurred there—
especial y the fact that Fletcher Turner's family operated a slave-
driven quarry within the county— had been almost entirely
forgot en. The town of Columbiana—a provincial county seat
urgently hoping to embody the incipient gleam of the new century
—escaped excoriation. One town nearer to Birmingham than
Dadevil e, bustling with prosperity, new residents, and a vague
sense of Rooseveltian modernity, Columbiana was swel ing with
new wealth. Old one-man, one-mule mines of the nineteenth
century—lit le more than crude horizontal pits dug into hil sides
outside the town—were fast disappearing, replaced by giant brick
edi ces of factories like the Siluria Cot on Mil , where white men
and women could earn wages in regular hourly increments. They
worked de ned shifts, rather than the meteorological clock of
sunup to sundown that had governed farm life since the days of the
rst set lers. Keystone Lime Co. supplied trainloads of the caustic
essential ingredient for iron to the county's biggest employer, the
antebel um Shelby Iron Works, and to the ravenous new furnaces
coming into blast on the fringes of Birmingham.
The bounding economic progress promised far more for whites
than blacks, but African Americans could not resist the entrancing
al ure of new prosperity. Shelby County was now home to growing
numbers of the black members of the Cot ingham clan. Brier eld,
the old Confederate munitions foundry where Green Cot enham and
his family had sheltered during the 1890s, couldn't survive against
the new mil ennium's technology of coal, iron, and steel
production. The foundry town had been a refuge for the family in
the storm of the late nineteenth century. Sheltered by the foundry's
need for a steady supply of black workers, some of the Cot en-hams
avoided for a time the resubjugation of African Americans occurring
on mil ions of southern farms. A succession of black men linked
back to the Cot ingham farm—Scip, the patriarchal slave who now
spel ed his name Cot inham, his sons, Elbert and Henry, his
grandsons, and others—worked in the wilting orbits of re
surrounding the furnaces. Mary and the other wives and older
daughters kept house and washed or cooked for laborers. The
foundry work was grueling, but for a lit le longer Brier eld
a orded these African Americans a way station of modest freedom
and a residue of authentic independence that was fast disappearing
for most rural blacks. Relatively remote from any large population
of whites, the six hundred African Americans there could avoid the
implicit risk of mingling with whites on the roadways into the
county seat or accidental con icts on the back roads of the
countryside. The whites of the furnace town needed them. Rev.
Starr's old Methodist church stil stood—giving Brier eld's black
families their own forum for leadership and worship. In a crude,
overcrowded school for black children, Green and his two older
sisters learned to read and write.
What irony that the maker of cannons for Lee's armies and armor
for the Confederacy's warships became a place of refuge for freed
slaves. But Brier eld, with its redolent sense of post-emancipation
freedom, was vanishing. By 1910 only twenty-nine people
remained. Mary Green, and the girls, Ada and Mariet a, fol owed
the path of the South's evolving economics, moving to Monteval o,
the path of the South's evolving economics, moving to Monteval o,
a lit le town perched on a new coal mine in Shelby County just
south of Birmingham. Soon, Mary was working— washing and
cleaning for a white man. Columbiana was a short freight car ride
away. Whatever remained to harbor Green and his siblings would
quickly dissolve before the torrent of trouble pouring across their
world.
Late in the summer of the great 1903 peonage trials in
Montgomery, Green turned eighteen years old.1 Ada was twenty-
one and Mariet a nineteen. Green and his sisters and cousins had
experienced none of the emancipation exhilaration that their
parents and grandparents remembered from the end of the war.
Theirs had been a life of perplexing contradiction, of an ostensible
but most often unrealized freedom, of supposed political and
economic independence from whites but in truth, even in Brierfield,
ultimately a complete dependence on the authority and protection
of whites—or simply the security of isolation. The sisters would stay
with their mother at least until marriage. But Green was nearly a
man now, tal , lean, and muscular like his father, sharpened by the
paucity of food, hardened by the incessant labor demanded of his
life. The freedom of approaching male adulthood—even in the
circumscribed South—was an inescapable al ure.
Green soon ventured deep into the sphere of white men, though
they must have remained a mystery to him. He had to know al the
stories of his father and aunts and uncles who had lived with the
white Cot inghams on the farm by the river. But those were ancient
tales from before his birth. In his iron-town childhood and young
adult years, there had never been familial bonds with any white
people, especial y not the old Cot ingham master and his
acknowledged of spring.
Green's uncle, Abraham Cot ingham, the once spirited
Republican, having journeyed farther from the country crossroads
where the freed slaves congregated after emancipation from old
man Cot ingham's farm than any others, made his home in Shelby
County. Abraham's sons, Jimmy—known as "Cap"—and Frank, were
nearly two decades older than Green, and had already tasted the
nearly two decades older than Green, and had already tasted the
bit ersweet paradox of black life at the dawn of the twentieth
century. They had never been slaves. They had voted in elections.
Now they had seen al vestiges of legal citizenship stripped away.
Cap, Frank, and Abraham cast bal ots for the last time in 1901, the
nal election in which blacks were permit ed meaningful
participation in Alabama. Green would never experience that act.
Cap Cot ingham's ouster from the voting rol s was punctuated a
few months later by his arrest, during a visit back in Bibb County,
on a misdemeanor charge. He was quickly sold into the bondage of
a white farmer named O. T. Grimes. On February 18, 1902, Cap
and another prisoner named Henry Johnson successful y ed the
farm and escaped.2
In the fal of 1903, as Warren Reese prepared for the last
peonage trial in Montgomery, Cap was arrested again, this time by
a Shelby County deputy. The charge was for violating the Alabama
statute forbidding any person from carrying a concealed weapon.
The records of Cap's arrest signal that he was picked up as part of a
general roundup in Columbiana to l an order for black labor
from Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad Co. Cap, a muscular six-foot-
tal thirty- ve-year-old with skin as deeply black as his great-
grandfather Scipio's, was arrested along with another African
American named Monroe Wal ace. Both were charged with carrying
concealed weapons on October 2, 1903, and sentenced to four
months and twenty days of hard labor to pay their nes and fees to
the sheri and court. By the end of the month, the two were joined
in the jail by seven other blacks arrested for climbing aboard an
empty freight car, another for gambling, and one more for an
al eged pet y theft.
Six weeks later, on November 21, the county's convict labor
agent, W J. Farley, emptied the jail and delivered its contents to
Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad. Cap Cot ingham was turned over
for $9 a month.3 He survived his winter in the Prat Mines and
returned to Columbiana the fol owing year. The creep of darkness
paused, but it would not last.
As the new century bloomed, the civic con dence of the editor of
the gray-typed Shelby County Sentinel was so great that he ordered
a photographer to document the landmarks of the burgeoning town
and penned a twenty-page paean to its economic prospects and fine
citizenry. It was natural, and more than a lit le self-interested, for
editor J. A. MacKnight to do so, given that on the side he was also
the town's leading real estate man.
"The town is beautiful y situated, on a plateau which is
splendidly drained," MacKnight gushed. "There is so lit le sickness
that the doctors are nearly al poor men and their number is few."4
Hyperbole yes, but there was good reason to be enthused. The