Read Slavery by Another Name Online
Authors: Douglas A. Blackmon
county was in the sweetest bend of a rising economic curve. More
land was under farm production than at any point since the arrival
of white squat ers a century before. In each harvest since the turn of
the century, Shelby's cot on gins and compresses pumped out more
than ten thousand bales—totaling in excess of ve mil ion pounds
of handpicked ber. The only hint of the coming bol weevil
debacle that a decade hence would sweep in to ravage the elds
were fearful exclamations from farmers in far-away Texas. The
town population, more than two thousand already, was growing at
a heady rate. Two railroads, the Southern Rail Line and the
Louisvil e & Nashvil e, converged at the freight terminal at the end
of Depot Street. A cot on gin, grist mil , and warehouses crowded
the edge of the commercial district, and plans were being nalized
for that most tantalizing of new luxuries, an electric light plant.
Columbiana was brimming with n-de-siècle optimism. Working
furiously to bring a measure of re nement and civic improvement,
stil coarse towns across the South were laying the building blocks
on which twentieth-century American prosperity would rise. The
community's most respected leaders championed e ulgent
campaigns to bring the rst paved streets, public schools, and
shared utility systems—al social advancements careful y engineered
to transform their town but that would also exclude from its
benefits nearly al African Americans.5
benefits nearly al African Americans.
(There was proof to Columbiana of the town's rising
sophistication in Henry Walthal , the son of the sheri and himself
chief deputy at the Shelby County jail a few years earlier. In the
1890s, he helped his father capture and sel black prisoners ful -
time and taught theater on the side. In the summers, he produced
Shakespeare with a local cast until final y joining a traveling theater
company. Removed to the nascent Hol ywood, Walthal starred a
decade later as the Colonel in The Birth of a Nation, D. W Gri th's
1915 blockbuster lm based on the Dixon blockbuster, white
supremacist stage show, The Clansman. The lm was the rst
moving picture ever shown at the White House. President Woodrow
Wilson, a southerner and an open racist, was said to have praised
the film.)
At the monumental cost of $250,000, Shelby County erected a
new courthouse that without exaggeration could be described only
as extraordinary. Replacing an unadorned brick edi ce scu ed and
scarred with more than a half century of unceremonious use, the
new building was a temple to citizen governance and, even more
so, to the county's rising expectations for itself.
At the grand entrance on Main Street, four columns soared fty
feet to an ornate Greek Revival portico. Encircling the roo ine on
every side, a carved parapet railing framed cupolas of hammered
brass leaf on each wing of the building. At the center of the roof
rose an immense octagonal clock tower, looming magni cently
above the town. In the low sun of early evening, the building's
chiseled west facade, constructed of thousands of tons of yel ow
limestone quarried from the ridges above the nearby Coosa River,
glowed luminescently The shadow fal ing to east and south was
nearly large enough to blot out the rest of the town's jumble of
humble red-brick stores and whitewashed houses. The building was
the community's ag plunged into the earth of the new century, a
clear portent of the ambitions of those who led it. A new future was
coming, to be built and shaped in the manner of its new makers.
The architect of this bold new vision, if not of the courthouse
itself, was Judge A. P. Longshore. A lawyer, a devout Baptist, and a
itself, was Judge A. P. Longshore. A lawyer, a devout Baptist, and a
fervent populist, he commanded a nearly mesmerized local
fol owing. How else that a county stil licking its wounds from the
Civil War would agree to borrow a fortune to build the grandest
courthouse in the South? To Longshore, a rate of 6 percent per
annum on county bonds was simply the wage to be paid for a
di erent future. Already, he dressed and looked in the manner of
the new century rather than the last. Above a mustache twisted at
each end and a tiny tufted goatee on the point of his chin, Judge
Longshore looked ahead, only ahead.
From atop the courthouse, Columbiana's other highest spire was
clearly visible at the opposite diagonal of town. With angular
Victorian sternness, it descended sharply into a square tower of
stacked bricks and then three stories down to the iron-barred door
of the Shelby County jail. A dozen dank cel s on the other side of
the building were heated by coal grates and il uminated by shafts of
sunlight coming between the bars on every window. As new
prisoners passed Sheri J. H. Fulton's house next door and
approached the front entrance on West Sterret Street, one odd
window at the top of the jail's tower could not escape their notice.
Almost as tal as a man, circular at the top and rectangular at the
bot om, the opening in the shape of a giant keyhole gave view into
the county's hanging chamber. There, men condemned to die would
arrive on steps from the second- oor cel block and then twist at the
end of a rope, safe from any last e orts to escape their fate, but
with justice stil plainly on view.6
In the newspaper editor's assessment of Columbiana in 1907,
Mac-Knight included just one photograph containing a black face.
Standing, expressionless, with each arm draped on the shoulders of
a young white child in her care, the woman was identi ed only as
"Black Mammy on Duty." On the whole, MacKnight reported that
"the negro population is not excessive, and is orderly and law-
abiding. They have their own churches and schools, and many of
them own their homes. The ease with which a livelihood is made
here renders them independent, and it is not easy to secure either
male or female help from among them."7
male or female help from among them."
Indeed, obtaining African Americans was crucial and sometimes
di cult, as any traveler arriving in Shelby County during the rst
decade of the century would have seen long before the train pul ed
up to the weathered wooden platform in Columbiana. The rails
into and out of town were surrounded by endless vistas of cot on
and its production.
While the twentieth century brought wonders of technological
advancement in the realm of early automobiles, faster trains, and
electric il umination, every square foot of cot on eld was being
tended in a way lit le di erent from how Scipio had done it on the
Cot ingham place in 1840. It took hands. Mil ions of them had to
be available to plow and seed, and mil ions more to hoe and pick.
That meant African Americans. Strong, dependent, docile black
men. The leaders of Shelby County and thousands of other southern
towns and counties were intent on assuring that they could be
found.
The great crusade against involuntary servitude—and especial y
Judge Jones's famous charge to the grand jury and the Supreme
Court's ruling against Georgia's Judge Speer—achieved an
unexpected result for those in the South most reliant on black
backs. Instead of ending the new regimes of forced labor, Judge
Jones's denunciations and the subsequent legal rulings became
guideposts for a reorganization of the contemporary tra c in black
men. Indeed, the further the court opinions decrying peonage
echoed across the southern landscape, the more hol ow they
became.
The Supreme Court's renunciation of Speer's at empt to outlaw
the misdemeanor convict leasing system was so complete that the
opinion was not even writ en, but issued summarily and oral y.
Among the thousands of words of Judge Jones's famous direction to
the federal jury on the de nitions of legal and il egal labor
practices, a single sentence ultimately rose to greatest prominence.
Jones advised that persons convicted of misdemeanors whose
Jones advised that persons convicted of misdemeanors whose
sureties "confessed judgment" for them and worked them against
their wil could avoid violating the peonage statue by fol owing a
simple procedure. The laborers must be convicted in an authentic
court— not by any bumpkin justice of the peace. The judgment and
penalty had to be writ en down and recorded with the local courts.
And the contract between the defendant and the person paying the
ne—in which the defendant agreed to work for a certain amount
of time to pay o the penalty— had to be signed "in open court
with writ en approval of the judge."
The implication was clear. There would be no risk of another
energetic U.S. at orney arresting white farmers for peonage so long
as they, and local judges, were su ciently hygienic in the records
they maintained.
The old southern window dressing of legal rights for African
Americans won the day again. There was no evidence of the decline
anticipated by Reese and Jones in the number of African Americans
being held by private individuals as a result of ostensible court
nes. If anything, the number of black men "confessing judgment"
swel ed, now plainly and unabashedly acknowledged in open court.
Moreover, undaunted by Judge Jones's ruling against the state's
laws forbidding black men from leaving the employment of one
white man without permission to work for another, the Alabama
legislature passed a new but essential y identical "false pretenses"
statute. Once held under a labor contract, black men who at empted
to leave their employers faced criminal prosecution for doing so. If
they had entered into the contract to avoid an earlier prosecution,
the departure would exponential y increase the time they could be
held as slaves.
In Shelby County, the number of African Americans "confessing
judgment" in open court bal ooned.8 Between November 1890 and
August 1906, the dank county jail admit ed 1,327 prisoners, facing
a total of more than 1,500 charges. Physical descriptions were
recorded only intermit ently, but during the periods when notations
of race were made, more than 90 percent of those arrested were
black. A few were women.
black. A few were women.
A fortunate group of 326 prisoners—general y whites and black
men with some modicum of means—were able to scrape together
enough cash to post a bond and obtain freedom until a later trial
date. Most then simply forfeited their bonds and remained free.
Among the 1,001 prisoners left behind, acquit als were
infrequent. Fewer than 250 defendants won their freedom, by virtue
of a not guilty verdict or some other discharge during the sixteen
years. Al but a handful of the other 750 were ordered to pay
nominal nes coupled with huge fees. A total of 124 of those new
convicts, fewer than 17 percent, were able to pay their judgments.
Ben Holt, convicted of vagrancy on August 29, 1906, was ordered
to pay the county a ne of $1. The costs of his arrest and
prosecution, however, totaled $76.28. Instead of paying, he
confessed judgment with a white farmer named James Wharton,
who paid the ne and fees and in return owned Holt for a
minimum of two hundred days.9
Of the remaining six hundred men, convicted of pet y crimes and
unable to pay what the courts demanded of them, almost ve
hundred were bartered into forced labor. More than two dozen
convicts were leased to other industrial concerns, eight each to the
Sloss mines and Alabama Manufacturing Co. Eight more were
acquired by two sawmil companies, Walter Brothers, in Sprague,
Alabama, and Henderson-Boyd Lumber Co., in Richburg,
Alabama.10
Among the leadership circles of a place such as Shelby County,
the casual acquisition of blacks through the now careful y
choreographed ritual at the courthouse became a routine perk of
modest influence.
Arrested for petit larceny in May of 1905, Jim Goodson was ned
$25. To avoid being sent to the mines with other county convicts,
he agreed to sign a contract for labor with Robert E. Bowden to
work 236 days "in his rock quarry" Bowden bridged two groups
common in southern towns—as both an important local
entrepreneur and a savvy political intimate of the most powerful