Read Slavery by Another Name Online
Authors: Douglas A. Blackmon
punish the convicts severely for not nishing their tasks and have
seen them work until ten and eleven o'clock at night to nish their
tasks and then be whipped for working overtime," Keith said.
Asked to describe the instruments used by the camp whipping
boss, Keith said convicts were beaten with a thick strap of leather
at ached to a handle. "You take a strip of heavy harness leather
about as wide as my three ngers or a lit le bit wider and about
two and a half feet long. It would weigh somewhere in the
neighborhood of …three and a half pounds," Keith testi ed. "Some
times they would wet the leather by spit ing on it and rubbing it on
the sand; that was when they wanted to bring the blood. It would
hurt a great deal worse to og them with it than with the dry
strap…. The sand wil take the skin of ."6
In the yard where the whippings took place, the warden also
kept a herd of between forty and fty hogs. The aggressive animals
—made fearless of the docile prisoners—crowded in on the
emaciated men to grab scraps of bread or other food that fel to the
ground. One evening, Abe Wynne was al owed to brew a pot of
co ee on an open re in the yard. Since arriving at the mine as a
fourteen-year-old, his once stout, six-foot frame withered to just 160
pounds. When a hog began nosing against him for food, he splashed
a cup of hot cof ee on the pig to drive it away.
Word quickly spread to the warden that Wynne had abused one
of his hogs. As punishment, witnesses testi ed that Wynne was
forced to strip naked, held stretched across a barrel by two other
prisoners, and then whipped with a leather strap sixty-nine times.
"The whipping was more than he could stand," Keith said.
A few days later, Wynne's older brother, Wil , visited what was
cal ed the mine hospital. He told the commission his brother was
lying on a lthy bed, stil wearing his convict stripes with no
underclothes and coated in the dust of the mine. "I saw that the boy
could only live a short time and it grieved me," testi ed Wil
could only live a short time and it grieved me," testi ed Wil
Wynne. "About al I asked him was if he was prepared to die."
Delirious and unable to tel his brother what happened, Wynne
died a week later. The boy's family was told he'd contracted
"gal oping" tuberculosis and succumbed suddenly7
James W English, the owner of Durham Coal and Coke, was a
luminary of the Atlanta elite and a man hardly anyone in the city
rising from the Civil War's ashes would have associated with so
cruel a kil ing as Abe Wynne's. But by 1908, English—despite
having never owned antebel um slaves—was a man whose great
personal wealth was inextricably tied to the enslavement of
thousands of men.
Born in 1837 near New Orleans and orphaned as a teenager, he
apprenticed himself to a carriage maker and then served notably as
a young man in the Confederate army, rising to become a captain in
a prominent Georgia brigade. Serving in a forward position near
Appomat ox, he received the rst writ en surrender demand from
Ulysses S. Grant to Robert E. Lee. After the South's defeat, he went
to Atlanta, to establish himself in the business and politics of the
bustling new capital of southern commerce. He was elected to the
city council partly on the renown of his war service, and later
served on the Atlanta school board and as the city's police
commissioner. He led a drive to make Atlanta the state capital of
Georgia, cementing its foundation as an economic center, and in
1880 he was elected mayor.8
Presiding from a regal home a few blocks from the center of the
city, English, a portly man with a thick shock of white hair and a
matching mustache, fostered a col ection of enterprises that grew as
Atlanta emerged from its Civil War ruin. The base of his wealth was
the Chat ahoochee Brick Company, a business perfectly consonant
in the 1870s and 1880s with the needs of a booming metropolis
recovering from Union general Wil iam Tecumseh Sherman's ring
of the city a decade earlier.
As a police o cial and as mayor, English saw the rich potential
As a police o cial and as mayor, English saw the rich potential
of using black forced laborers in his enterprises. Chat ahoochee
Brick relied on slave workers from its inception in 1878, and by the
early 1890s more than 150 prisoners were employed in the wilting
heat of its res. The company held another 150 forced laborers at a
sawmil in Richwood, Georgia, three hundred slaves at its Durham
mines in Walker County, and several dozen more at English's Iron
Belt Railroad and Mining Company. By 1897, English's enterprises
control ed 1,206 of Georgia's 2,881 convict laborers, engaged in
brick making, cut ing cross ties, lumbering, railroad construction,
and turpentining.
During his tenure as mayor of Atlanta, English launched the
Georgia Paci c Railroad, eventual y tying Atlanta to the coal elds
of Alabama and then on to the cot on nub of Greenvil e,
Mississippi. While building that rail line in 1883, English il egal y
bought hundreds of convicts—and the coal mine they worked in—
from Alabama's leading slave driver, John T Milner.
English parlayed his industrial wealth to become one of the
South's most important nanciers as wel . In 1896, he founded
Atlanta's Fourth National Bank and became its rst president. Early
in the next century, after a series of mergers, it became First
National Bank of Atlanta, one of the largest nancial institutions in
the South.9
Before the legislative commission in 1908, former employees of
Chattahoochee Brick testi ed that the factory on the outskirts of
Atlanta was a place of even greater physical coercion and indignity
than the coal mine where Abe Wynne was kil ed. By the rst years
of the twentieth century English had turned over daily management
of the business to his son, Harry who later would take over
operations and build a landmark home on Atlanta's elegant Paces
Ferry Road, directly across from the governor's mansion.
English strenuously denied to the commit ee that any "act of
cruelty" had ever been "commit ed upon a convict" under the
control of himself or any member of his family. He insisted that he
and his son were essential y absentee owners of the brick factory,
and his son were essential y absentee owners of the brick factory,
having lit le to do with its daily operations. "I have not been there
in over three years," English maintained. His son visited no more
than once or twice a month, he said—despite company records
showing close family management.
The former mayor claimed he ordered the superintendent of
operations to make certain workers "were wel fed, wel shod, wel
clothed, and wel cared for….
"If a warden in charge of those convicts ever commit ed an act of
cruelty to them," English said indignantly, "and it had come to my
knowledge, I would have had him indicted and prosecuted." Yet his
testimony a rmed how Chat ahoochee Brick—like so many
southern industries in which the new slavery ourished—forced
laborers to their absolute physical limits to extract modern levels of
production from archaic manufacturing techniques of a distant era.
The plant used a brick-making process lit le changed from
seventeenth-century Europe. Nearly two hundred men sold by the
state of Georgia, the local county, and the city of Atlanta—virtual y
al of them black—labored at the complex of buildings, giant ovens,
and smokestacks nine miles from the city and a short distance from
the Chat ahoochee River. Thousands of acres of cot on and
vegetable fields owned by the company surrounded the plant.
Gangs of prisoners sold from the pestilential city stockade on
Bryan Street dug wet clay with shovels and picks in nearby
riverbank pits for transport back to the plant. There, a squad of
men pushed clay that had been cured in the open air into tens of
thousands of rectangular molds. Once dried, the bricks were carried
at a double-time pace by two dozen laborers running back and
forth—under almost continual lashing by English's overseer, Capt.
James T. Casey—to move the bricks to one of nearly a dozen huge
coal- red kilns, also cal ed "clamps." At each kiln, one worker stood
atop a barrel, in the withering heat radiating from the res,
furiously tossing the bricks into the top of the ten-foot-high oven.
After being baked for a week or more, the ful y hardened bricks
were loaded, stil hot, in groups of eight or ten onto crude wooden
pal ets tied to the necks and backs of young black men. The
pal ets tied to the necks and backs of young black men. The
laborers ran—also carrying two more hot bricks in each hand—
across the yard and up a narrow plank to train cars waiting on an
adjacent railroad spur and stacked the new bricks for delivery.
Witnesses testi ed that guards holding long horse whips struck any
worker who slowed to a walk or paused. By the end of every day,
200,000 or more new bricks were loaded on the railcars.
English obviously had grown rich in his years in Atlanta, but few
people realized quite how lucrative the slave labor business
became. The prisoners of the brickyard produced nearly 33 mil ion
bricks in twelve months ending in May 1907, generating sales of
$239,402—or roughly $5.2 mil ion today. Of that, the English
family pocketed the equivalent of nearly $1.9 mil ion in pro t—an
almost unimaginable sum at the time.1011
A string of witnesses told the legislative commit ee that prisoners
at the plant were forced to work under unbearable circumstances,
fed rot ing and rancid food, housed in barracks rife with insects,
driven with whips into the hot est and most intolerable areas of the
plant, and continual y required to work at a constant run in the
heat of the ovens. The plant was so hot that guards didn't carry guns
for fear their cartridges might spontaneously detonate. One former
guard told the commit ee that two hundred to three hundred
oggings were administered each month. "They were whipping al
the time. It would be hard to tel how many whippings they did a
day," testi ed Arthur W. Moore, a white ex-employee of the
company. Another former guard said Captain Casey was a
"barbarous" whipping boss who beat fteen to twenty convicts each
day, often until they begged and screamed. "You can hear that any
time you go out there. When you get within a quarter of a mile you
wil hear them," testified Ed Strickland. 11
A rare former convict who was white testi ed that after a black
prisoner named Peter Harris said he couldn't work due to a grossly
infected hand, the camp doctor carved o the a ected skin tissue
with a surgeon's knife and then ordered him back to work. Instead,
Harris, his hand mangled and bleeding, col apsed after the
procedure. The camp boss ordered him dragged into the brickyard.
procedure. The camp boss ordered him dragged into the brickyard.
"They taken the old negro out and told him to take his britches
down, he took them down and they made him get on his al fours,"
testi ed the former prisoner, J. A. Cochran. "I could see that he was
a mighty sick man to be whipped. He hit him twenty-five licks."
When Harris couldn't stand up after the whipping, he was thrown
"in the wagon like they would a dead hog," continued Cochran, and
taken to a nearby eld. Stil unable to get on his feet, another guard
named Redman came over and began shouting. "Get up from there
and get to work. If you ain't dead I wil make you dead if you don't
go to work," Redman said. "Get up from there you damn negro. I
know what's the mat er with you, you damn negro, you want to run
away." Harris never stood. He died lying between the rows of
cot on.12
Another black laborer drew the wrath of Captain Casey when he
said he couldn't complete his assigned task of tossing 100,000
bricks to the top of a kiln. Sweating so profusely in the heat that
the barrel beneath and the ground al around were drenched, the
man said he was about to col apse. "God damn your soul," shouted
Captain Casey, according to witnesses. "I wil murder you if you
don't do that work."
Then the overseer told the man to climb down, whipped him
with a leather belt at ached to a wooden handle, and ordered him
back to work. Incensed at the pace the brick thrower was working,