Read Slavery by Another Name Online
Authors: Douglas A. Blackmon
their labor—despite that only the rarest among blacks could write
their own names, much less read the words on the page. Stil ,
blacks insisted upon it, and whites initial y acquiesced, knowing
that cot on could not be grown and picked without black labor.
Stranger stil , until just barely a decade earlier, in the counties to
Stranger stil , until just barely a decade earlier, in the counties to
the south of Eddings's boyhood home, where slaves had
outnumbered whites before the war, tens of thousands of African
Americans continued to cast bal ots in every election. Only the
sustained war of atrocities against African Americans in every
section had nal y forced them to ful y submit to Alabama's new
constitution and its provisions banning them from the vote and any
aspects of legal equality. Stil , a perverse cloud hung over the state
of white and black coexistence.
The New South, with its rising great cities of Birmingham and
Atlanta, railroads and factories, was by contrast a utopia compared
to the civil bat le elds of the countryside. Like thousands of other
young southern whites and crowds of young blacks, Deputy Eddings
ed the scarred rural landscape for a semblance of civilization and
opportunity. Now, at the age of forty-two, he was ful y a town man,
moving on the edge of the circle of leaders who were shaping
Columbiana into a model of what prosperous Alabama wished to
be in the young twentieth century. He enjoyed the monthly trips, or
sometimes more often if the mines needed more men, to deliver
African Americans to Prat City. He ignored the prisoners’ pleas to
let them escape and their promises to bring him cash from a father
or uncle if he would set them free.
When girlfriends or mothers of young black men came begging at
the jailhouse, he couldn't help but be tempted. The carnal pleasures
of taking a black girl when you pleased had been a privilege of rich
white men for so long in the South. Now simple men like Eddings
could do the same—tel ing girls to come around to the jailer's room
for an hour of compulsory sexual performance in exchange for a
favor to their man inside. It was hardly even furtive. Guards did the
same at hundreds of jails. At the lumber camps in southern
Alabama, women seeking the freedom of their men were simply
arrested when they arrived, chained into their cel s, and kept to
serve the physical desires of the men running the camps. The slave
camps and mines produced scores of babies—nearly al of them
with white fathers.8
There was no risk of penalty to any white law enforcement
There was no risk of penalty to any white law enforcement
o cer who chose to force himself on a black woman who
presented herself in the vulnerable circumstances of a jail. To al
whites, these were by de nition worthless women—even more
worthless than other black females. Even many African Americans,
terri ed of losing further respect or security among whites, looked
askance at any black who became associated with prisoners and
debt slavery. These women were friendless and abandoned even
among their own. And the laws of the South were interpreted
explicitly to ensure that the rape or coercion of a black woman by a
white man would almost never be prosecuted as a crime.
Indeed, South Carolina governor Cole Blease, citing his belief in
the animalistic inability of blacks to control themselves, routinely
pardoned the kil ers of black men, especial y in the case of African
Americans commit ing violence against African Americans. "This is
the case of one negro kil ing another—the old familiar song—‘Hot
supper; liquor; dead negro,’ " the governor wrote in one
explanation of a pardon. As for sexual assaults of black women,
Governor Blease asserted it was the nature of every African
American woman to want sex at any opportunity. "Adultery seems
to be their most favorite pastime," he said. "I have …very serious
doubt as to whether the crime of rape can be commit ed upon a
negro."9
On each trip to Prat , Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad Co. paid
Eddings a fee for every African American, in addition to his
expenses for train fares, meals, wagon rental from the livery, and,
occasional y, lodging in the city when Eddings couldn't make the
last train back to Columbiana.
Arresting, convicting, and transporting these prisoners was
Eddings's primary livelihood. His and Sheri Fulton's entire
compensation came from an assortment of fees charged for every
action taken by the o ce and paid into the Shelby County Fine and
Forfeiture Fund. The courts col ected fees for serving subpoenas,
foreclosing on delinquent loans, arresting and testifying against
foreclosing on delinquent loans, arresting and testifying against
criminal defendants—tacking the charges onto the nes levied
against nearly every person brought before the county or circuit
judge. Eddings and the sheri —along with the court clerk, the town
solicitor, jury members, witnesses, and nearly any other white
person who played a part in the seizure and conviction of each
prisoner—were awarded fees by the judge and received warrants to
exchange for the money as the prisoner's labor paid down his nes.
Since that typical y took months, or years, the sheri and others
accumulated court-issued scrip for the money—IOUs of a sort. Over
time, they cashed the redeemable warrants as money accumulated
in the county cof ers.
The remuneration was often lucrative. Sheri Fulton, a smooth-
shaven man partial to bow ties, was already balding when he was
rst elected at age thirty-one in 1906. He defeated the former chief
deputy by just seven votes—and even then only by packing the
bal ot box with votes cast by dead men. (Fulton was thrown out of
o ce by a judge two years later for the fraud, but never pursued
criminal y.) During the November before Green Cot enham was
arrested, Fulton cashed out a stack of scrip stemming from sixty- ve
di erent cases in the prior year, and col ected a total of $373.50—
equivalent to about $7,000 a century later.
More lucrative stil , Sheri Fulton, like al his counterparts in
Alabama, also was al owed to keep whatever excess remained from
the state's monthly "feeding" payments received for food provided
to prisoners in the jail. Since nearly al the arrests in the county
were of black men who were soon shipped to Prat Mines, they
required lit le more than cornmeal mush and pork fat, which
Sheri Fulton's wife could prepare. Unlike the occasional white
man thrown into the jail, the black prisoners, nearly al of them
itinerants with no local families or white landowners to speak for
them, could neither say nor do anything about the scant provisions.
Deputy Eddings arrived at the Prat Mines complex and continued
up the hil , past the coke ovens, to the new Slope No. 12 mine at
Booker City, a black neighborhood bought up by Tennessee Coal,
Iron & Railroad when a thick mineral vein was identi ed there a
Iron & Railroad when a thick mineral vein was identi ed there a
year earlier. He delivered Cot-tenham, Dolphus, and the others to
the prison captain. What the company's mine boss and guards did
with Cot enham, or any of the hundreds of other black men they
purchased, was entirely up to them.
Even as a child of two former slaves, versed in the old people's
stories of whips and dogs and weeks spent with feet blistered and
ngers bleeding from picking cot on, Green had never conjured
anything so foreign as what he witnessed on the surface and in the
catacombs beneath Prat City.
For ve days after arriving at Slope No. 12, Green Cot enham had
not seen the rising dawn or the set ing sun. It was not as if he were
a "farm Negro," panging to be on the land and in the sun like so
many of the others around him. It was not as if he had never before
been in the company of brutish or crude men. And it was not as if
he had never before been compel ed to spend his days in grueling
labor. But however contemptuous he might have been of the
whining country boys shivering and sniveling at the shouts of the
crew boss, and however boldly he may have chal enged any man to
touch him, Green could not have been prepared for his fate befal en
here.
Green spent every day but one in a vast labyrinth of black rock
tunnels, shared only by dozens of dirty mules and squadrons of
desperate men, al slick with sweat and coated in pulverized coal.
The absence of sunlight, vegetation, or any prospect for the touch of
a not venal human hand had to tear at his soul.
Long before sunrise each morning, two white men swung open
the doors from the entryway at the center of the wooden prison
barrack and pushed into the rancid wooden cavern where Green
and two hundred other black men, chained to one another, lay
wrapped in coarse blankets. Running the fty-foot length of the
room, a continual series of bunk beds dangling on pipes at ached to
the ceiling were piled with bodies. Where there was no space on a
surface, men draped themselves in suspended contortions across
canvas hammocks stretched between the bunks on either side of a
narrow aisle down the center. A single potbel ied stove, long gone
narrow aisle down the center. A single potbel ied stove, long gone
cold, stood at the center of the room.
On Saturday, April 11, 1908, the sudden opening of the doorway
ushered in a blast of crisp spring air, cut ing with swift relief
through the musty wet stink of the men, stil sheathed in the black
detritus of the mine waiting for them outside. As the guards moved
toward the opposite end of the room, releasing the men's irons
from chains looped through their beds and barking for reluctant
prisoners to wake, the men responded in an awkward, col ective
undulation. As each awakened and moved, a succession of pairs of
legs and irons slid wearily toward the keys held in the hands of the
guard, each time pul ing the legs of the next man toward the guard
as wel , and then the next, and the next, al of them spil ing
gradual y of the bunks in a long, groggy metal ic jangle.
Once on their feet and refastened to their chains, Green and the
column of prisoners led out through a front stoop, down the
wooden steps, and into a plain kitchen. Each man stu ed a biscuit
and a cut of cold bacon into his mouth and shuf led out the door. At
the point of shotguns, they tramped into the deep darkness, across
the bare yard, past the pen of bloodhounds trained to track "Negro
scent," past the barrel across which men were stretched naked
almost nightly to be whipped with a leather strap, out the
mammoth gate of the stockade, and up to the ori ce where they
would enter the earth.
There, high on the ridge above Prat City, Green for a moment
would have glimpsed the luminescence of the industrial spectacle
throbbing atop the geological wonder of the coal and iron ore
discovered beneath the hil s of northern Alabama. There had been
nothing more than one prosperous farm in this val ey forty years
earlier, but now in 1908 a city of nearly 150,000 people was
consuming the land. The acrid smel of coal smoke never
dissipated. On the farthest horizon glowed the Sloss Furnaces,
where Col. James W. Sloss, the man more responsible than any
other for the sensational economic boom of what was cal ed "the
Magic City," had presided over a con agration of re, machines,
and molten iron unlike anything ever before seen in the South. In
and molten iron unlike anything ever before seen in the South. In
the val ey between the high smokestacks of the furnaces and the
hil top perch of Slope No. 12, the lights of new o ce buildings and
churches glimmered at the commercial center of Birmingham.
One can only imagine what l ed Green's mind as he walked
toward the manway to Slope No. 12 in the darkness that Saturday
morning. Farther than he had ever been in his twenty-two years
from the two counties—Bibb and Shelby—where his family, rst as
slaves, then as freedmen, lived for four generations, blinking
through the darkness and the grit in his eyes, he must have studied
the molded let ers in the concrete archway above the portal