Read Slavery by Another Name Online
Authors: Douglas A. Blackmon
Casey ordered two other black laborers to hold him across a barrel
and began whipping again. Lash upon lash fel across his back and
but ocks. Final y the unnamed man was released. "The negro
staggered o to one side and fel across a lumber pile there, and
laid there for a while," testi ed one witness. Soon he was dead. The
camp doctor declared the cause of death to have been drinking too
much water before going to work at the kiln.13
On Sundays, white men came to the Chat ahoochee brickyard to
buy, sel , and trade black men as they had livestock and, a
generation earlier, slaves on the block. "They had them stood up in
a row and walked around them and judged of them like you would
a row and walked around them and judged of them like you would
a mule," Cochran said. "They would look at a man in the row and
say, ‘Trot him around and let me see him move.’ They would come
to one fel ow and they say ‘there is a god damn good one.’ …They
would make such remarks as, ‘There is a man worth two hundred
and fifty dol ars. There is one worth two hundred.’ "
A similar picture emerged in the investigation around slave camps
and coal mines owned by Joel Hurt, the rich Atlanta real estate
developer and investor most remembered in Atlanta as the
visionary behind the city's earliest and most elegant subdivisions.
Virtual y every white person of any social signi cance lived in one
or the other of Hurt's signature developments—the High Victorian
Inman Park or Druid Hil s, an area of wide promenades and lush
parks designed at his behest by the rm of Frederick Law Olmsted.
Hurt was also the founder of Atlanta's Trust Company Bank—the
city's other preeminent nancial institution, the streetcar operator
that became Georgia's rst electric power company, and an early
investor in concerns that would become some of the most iconic
companies in the South. His namesake building near the Five Points
business center dominated the early Atlanta skyline at seventeen
stories—making it one of the tal est structures of the early twentieth
century.
In 1895, Hurt bought a group of bankrupt forced labor mines and
furnaces on Lookout Mountain, near the Tennessee state line. The
mines were previously owned by former Georgia governor Joseph
E. Brown, who enthusiastical y led the secessionist movement in
Georgia prior to 1861, governed the state during the Civil War
years, and afterward remained a staunch defender of antebel um
slavery.
The most powerful politician in Georgia from the 1860s until his
death in 1894, Brown, stil contemptuous of the Emancipation
Proclamation, l ed his mines with scores of black men forced into
the shafts against their wil . A legislative commit ee visiting the sites
the same year Hurt bought them said the prisoners were "in the
the same year Hurt bought them said the prisoners were "in the
very worst condition …actual y being starved and have not
su cient clothing …treated with great cruelty." Of particular note
to the visiting o cials was that the mine claimed to have replaced
whipping with the water cure torture—in which water was poured
into the nostrils and lungs of prisoners—because it al owed miners
to "go to work right away" after punishment.14
Cal ed to testify before the commission at the Georgia capitol in
1908, Hurt lounged in the witness chair, relaxed and unapologetic
for any aspect of the sprawling business he'd taken over from
Brown and aggressively expanded through the traf ic of forced black
laborers.
After acquiring Brown's mines, Hurt ramped up production, in
part to ful l contracts to sel coal to Tennessee Coal, Iron &
Railroad in Birmingham—which couldn't get enough fuel and ore
from its own slave mines to keep furnaces burning at ful operation.
Hurt already had 125 convicts in his largest slave mine. He bought
one of English's mines to acquire fty men held there, and then set
out to obtain even more forced laborers from other work camps
around the state.
Hurt's gentle appearance in the witness chair—wavy black hair
slicked to his scalp and a soft shaven face that de ed the day's
convention for thick mustaches—was an almost obscene contrast to
the account of slave trading he quietly of ered the commit ee.
Needing more laborers in 1904, Hurt, who identi ed his
profession as "capitalist," said he turned to a man who was "trading
in" the sale and resale of leases on convicts. Soon, he was put in
touch with J. W. Cal ahan, who held thirty-nine black and two
white men on a turpentine farm in the deep woods of south
Georgia. Hurt wrote him on Christmas Eve asking if the men could
be purchased. "If you wil name the lowest price at which you are
wil ing to dispose of them, we may be able to come to an
agreement," Hurt wrote. "In making a price, state whether the men
are average able-bodied; how many of them are white, if any;
whether any of them are maimed or crippled, or in any way
whether any of them are maimed or crippled, or in any way
disabled…. Yours very truly, Joel Hurt."15
Over the next week, amid the yuletide and New Year
celebrations, Hurt and Cal ahan furiously traded let ers and
telegrams negotiating an arrangement for fty black men. Cal ahan
rst demanded an up-front fee of $200 per worker—or a total of
$10,000—fol owed by monthly payments totaling $200 a year for
each man. The price of slave labor had changed lit le in fifty years.
Hurt countero ered an $8,000 up-front fee, and urgently wired
his thirty-one-year-old son, George, managing the company's iron
furnace on Lookout Mountain, that the men had been obtained.
Before the deal could be consummated, though, Cal ahan was
contacted by another bidder. On January 6, 1905, he sold the men
to the competitor in an al -cash transaction.16 An infuriated Hurt
continued to wheel and deal in the byzantine web of Georgia's slave
tra c—threatening lawsuits against Cal ahan when he failed to
deliver laborers on time and giving cash to state wardens who
demanded payo s to facilitate the movement of laborers from one
location to another. "We wil hold you for al damages which we
may sustain if you fail or refuse to deliver the convicts," Hurt wrote
Cal ahan in early 1905.17
The re ned Atlanta businessman was nonchalant when the
legislators asked about execrable descriptions of his camps, blaming
any excesses on lax guards and wardens who—despite the payo s
made by his companies— he said refused to work the prisoners
hard enough.
"They would stand up and let a convict run away from them and
be afraid to shoot at him, and the only way to get a warden that
was any account was to pay him extra money," Hurt testi ed.
"When a convict starts to escape he ought to shoot, he ought to stop
him or run him down and catch him."18
Another witness before the commission—former chief warden
Jake Moore—testi ed that no prison guard could ever "do enough
whipping for Mr. Hurt."
"He wanted men whipped for singing and laughing," Moore told
"He wanted men whipped for singing and laughing," Moore told
the panel.19
When the commission cal ed Hurt's son George to testify, the
younger Hurt said convicts in his coal mines had been punished too
lit le—not too much. Asked to cite an occasion when a warden
refused to punish a prisoner who should have been, Hurt said: "That
would be like numbering the sands of the seashore."20
"Do you remember what you wanted them whipped for?"
responded a commissioner.
"For the lack of work," the younger Hurt replied.
"What was the task you required of them?"
"From two to six tons," said Hurt.
Asked why men had been forced to work in the mines into the
night, violating prison rules that convicts should labor only from
sunup to sundown, Hurt mocked the question: "Yes sir, but they are
under the ground and it's rather hard for the warden to tel exactly
when the sun is up or down."
Hurt was also sarcastical y dismissive of charges that arose from
the death of a black convict named Liddel , explaining that the man
died not because of a whipping he received but because of "the
bursting of a blood vessel while the convict was struggling against a
whipping."
Hurt said Liddel was a huge man, weighing nearly three hundred
pounds, who refused to enter the mines. A guard chained Liddel to
a tree in the same yard where the boy named Wynne had been
beaten to death, and forced him to sit for hours exposed to the
bright sun. Later, the guard ordered Liddel to lie down for a
whipping. When he refused, four men held Liddel while the guard
whipped him with a leather strap. Liddel began "growing purple
under the eyes," and later died, Hurt testi ed. He added that the
blood vessel most likely burst because "the man was guilty of
commit ing masturbation to such an extent that his mind had
become af ected."
Hurt said he witnessed another occasion when the warden was
Hurt said he witnessed another occasion when the warden was
struggling to deal with a "powerful negro …who had been
insubordinate ever since" arriving at the mine. To force the prisoner
to begin digging, a guard told another black convict, named Jim
Blevens, to at ack him. The two African American men, both forced
against their wil s into the coal mine camp, now stood in the prison
yard facing each other like gladiators, holding mining picks in their
hands. The face-o lasted only seconds. The "insubordinate" man
lunged forward, swinging his pick wildly. The smal er man stepped
aside to dodge the at ack and then swung his own tool in a high
downward arc. The long blade of the pick descended onto the other
man's head—piercing his jaw, throat, and chest. The wounded
prisoner fel to the ground, Hurt testi ed, and Blevens "then put his
foot on the negro's head and pul ed his pick out." The injured man
died from the wound.21
As the legislative inquiry progressed into August 1908, the sordid
stories of il ness and mayhem—coupled with even more
voluminous accounts of corruption and payo s—stirred an
outpouring of public condemnation. Atlanta's leading pastor, Dr.
James W Lee, sermonized at Trinity Church that the convict leasing
system was a "disgrace" to the state. His and other churches passed
resolutions cal ing on the legislature to abolish the practice
entirely22
A technological y more advanced competitor in the brick-making
business—a young engineer named B. Mi in Hood—began
advertising "Non-Convict Bricks" in the Atlanta Constitution. The
city council—which previously bought mil ions of the former
mayor's hard red rectangles to pave hundreds of blocks of sidewalks
—voted to bar the purchase of any goods made by convicts.
Final y a crowd of more than two thousand people gathered for a
mass meeting in Atlanta's Grand Opera House—the same forum
where The Clansman had drawn sel -out crowds two years earlier.
Presided over by the state's sit ing governor, Hoke Smith, the
gathering listened to a series of speeches condemning the lease
system and then voted overwhelmingly to support a cal for its
system and then voted overwhelmingly to support a cal for its
abolition. Similar public meetings in the town of Rome and
elsewhere across Georgia on the same day produced the same
result. Newspaper editorials chimed in agreement—though most
said the prisoners should be taken out of private hands and put to
work improving the state's desperately inferior roads.23
Spurred by the public outcry, Governor Smith cal ed a special
session of the state legislature, which authorized a public
referendum on the fate of the system. In October 1908, Georgia's
nearly al -white electorate voted by a two-to-one margin to abolish
the system as of March 1909. Without slave labor, business
col apsed at Chat ahoochee Brick. Production fel by nearly 50
percent in the next year. Sales—of nineteen mil ion bricks—
dropped to less than half of 1907. Total pro t dwindled to less
than $13,000.24
The apparent demise of Georgia's system of leasing prisoners
seemed a harbinger of a new day—especial y coming just two years
after Atlanta's bloody race riot. Social progressives applauded the