Highlights
of Last Section of the book
Here are
the most important points I picked up from chapters 14-18.
-Key
transition from indentured servitude to slavery:
It is
questionable how long Virginia could have continued on this course, keeping men
in servitude for years and then turning them free to be frustrated by the
engrossers and collectors of customs…That Virginia changed course and avoided
such an outcome was owing to no conscious decision…But while Culpeper and
Effingham and their immediate successors were striving to hold the freemen
still for the fleecing, the colony was already moving toward a new social
order, in which freemen would not have to be held still, toward a society that
would nourish the freeman's freedom and at the same time make possible the
unlimited exploitation of labor.
The problem
was not, as in England, to find work for them but simply to keep them working
for their betters.
As we have seen, Virginians had coped with the problem
in several ways: by creating an artificial scarcity of land, which drove
freemen back into servitude; by extending terms of service…The burdens imposed on Virginia's workers
placed the colony continually on the brink of rebellion…. There remained, however, another way of
compelling men to a maximum output of labor without as great a risk of rebellion
as Virginians had been running.
Slavery is a mode of compulsion that has
often prevailed where land is abundant, and Virginians had been
drifting toward it from the time when they first found something profitable to
work at. Servitude in Virginia's tobacco fields approached closer to slavery
than anything known at the time in England…2 But for Virginians to have pressed
their servants or their indigent neighbors into slavery might have been, initially
at least, more perilous than exploiting them in the ways that eventuated in the
plundering parties of Bacon's Rebellion…
They converted to slavery simply by buying
slaves instead of servants. The process seems so simple, the advantages of
slave labor so obvious, and their system of production and attitude toward
workers so receptive that it seems surprising they did not convert sooner…Why
did they wait so long? The high
mortality rate made indentured servitude cheaper.
When the mortality rate declined, slaves
became a better deal.
-The key
transition to stability via slavery:
Virginia had developed her
plantation system without slaves, and slavery introduced no novelties to
methods of production….The plantation system operated by servants worked. It
made many Virginians rich and England's merchants and kings richer. But it had one insuperable disadvantage. Every
year it poured a host of new freemen
into a society where the opportunities for advancement were limited. The
freedmen were Virginia's dangerous men. The
substitution of slaves for servants gradually eased and eventually ended the
threat that the freedmen posed: as the annual number of imported servants
dropped, so did the number of men turning free.
The planters who bought slaves
instead of servants did not do so with any apparent consciousness of the social
stability to be gained thereby. Indeed, insofar as Virginians expressed
themselves on the subject of slavery, they feared that it would magnify the
danger of insurrection in the colony….But
slaves proved, in fact, less dangerous than free or semi-free laborers. They
had none of the rising expectations that have so often prompted rebellion in
human history. They were not armed and did not have to be armed. They were
without hope and did not have to be given hope.
Plus, with slavery Virginians could exceed all their previous efforts to
maximize productivity….There was no limit to the work or time that a master
could command from his slaves, beyond his need to allow them enough for eating
and sleeping to enable them to keep working.
-The logic behind cruelty to slaves
and their different treatment before the law: The only obvious disadvantage that slavery
presented to Virginia masters was a simple one: slaves had no incentive to
work… In the end, Virginians had to face the fact that masters of
slaves must inflict pain at a higher level than masters of servants. So in 1669 the assembly faced the facts and
said masters would not be held liable for beating a slave to death. The slaves’ protection would lie in the fact
that a man would not want to destroy his own property.
-The transition to racism:
Virginians
could be confident that England would condone their slave laws, even though
those laws were contrary to the laws of England. The English government had
considered the problem in 1679, when presented with the laws of Barbados, in
which masters were similarly authorized to inflict punishment that would not
have been allowed by English law…It was not necessary to extend the rights of Englishmen
to Africans, because Africans were
"a brutish sort of people” and a threat of rebellion because of their
numbers… slaves were introduced into a system of production that was already in
working order. The substitution of slaves for servants probably increased the
productivity and almost certainly increased the profitability of the plantation
system. But slavery required new methods of disciplining the labor force,
methods that were linked to racial contempt.
-How racist attitudes about blacks developed:
-What is important for an
understanding of the role of race, masters, initially at least, perceived
slaves in much the same way they had always perceived servants. Both displayed
the same attitudes and habits: they were shiftless, irresponsible, unfaithful,
ungrateful, dishonest; they got drunk whenever possible; they did not work hard
enough or regularly enough….These were
precisely the complaints that English economists and statesmen were making
against the English poor during the years when slavery was becoming the
prevailing form of labor in Virginia.
-Although the
replacement of servants by slaves reduced the annual increment of poor freemen,
the numbers already on hand were still sufficient to keep the threat of another
Bacon in everyone's mind. If freemen with disappointed hopes should make common
cause with slaves of desperate hope, the results might be worse than anything
Bacon had done. The answer to
the problem, obvious if unspoken and only gradually recognized, was racism, to
separate dangerous free whites from dangerous slave blacks by a screen of
racial contempt.
-It had been the
original intention of the founders to exploit native labor. And as Virginians
began to expand their slave holdings, they seem to have had Indians as much in
view as Africans. If the natives of Virginia were insufficient in number,
substitute natives from other regions could be brought in, whether from other
parts of America or from Africa. They were both, after all, basically uncivil,
unchristian, and, above all, unwhite
-Preparing the
groundwork in England for slavery in Va.: In practice
the discipline of the poor in England stopped short of actual
enslavement…Neither the workhouse nor its successor, the factory, enslaved its
occupants, at least in any legal sense. But they can be seen as a step in that
direction, and there were plenty of voices outside Parliament crying for the
next step…Proposals for enslavement did not come to
fruition; but they suggest that the English poor of this time, seemed to many
of their betters to be fit for slavery. The contempt that lay behind these
proposals and behind many of the workhouse schemes is not easy to distinguish
from the kind of contempt that today we call racism. The stereotypes of the
poor expressed so often in England during the late seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries were often identical with the descriptions of blacks expressed in
colonies dependent on slave labor—the poor were "the vile and brutish part
of mankind"; the black were "a brutish sort of people."
The union of
freedom and slavery
-How, then, did
Virginia gentlemen persuade the voters to return the right kind of people to
the House of Burgesses? How could patricians win in populist politics? The
question can lead us again to the paradox which has underlain our story, the
union of freedom and slavery in Virginia and America.
-Once the small
planter felt less exploited by taxation and began to prosper a little, he became
less turbulent, less dangerous, more respectable. He could begin to see his
big neighbor not as an extortionist but as a powerful protector of their common
interests.
Their
interests were not, to be sure, identical. But, both wanted small poll taxes
and were debtors and sellers. So, it was
appropriate for the large man to serve as a spokesman for the whole country.
What was more
important for the future, the common
interests that enabled the small planter to trust the large, also encouraged
the large planter to trust the small.
Big men could afford to
empower and pander to little men because their interests were comparable and because their prosperity no longer depended on wringing the last possible
penny from him. A new generation of magnates…did not have to
antagonize the lesser freemen to grow… The difference lay in the new confidence
that the two felt in each other and in their colony. As their fortunes rose,
the most successful did not think so much of exchanging life in Virginia for
life in the old country…Unlike the English gentry they mimicked, Virginia's
great planters’ fortunes rested less on extracting rents from tenants or taxes
from freemen than on the labor they extracted from African men and women permanently
enslaved to them. They no longer needed to exploit other Englishmen in the ways
their fathers had.
***Central
thesis:
-It may be
coincidence that so many Virginians who grew up after the advent of slavery
turned out to be ardent republicans. And it may be coincidence that among their
predecessors who lived before slavery became prevalent, so many were
unrepublican, unattractive, and unscrupulous, not to say depraved. On the
other hand, there may have been more than coincidence involved. Although it
seems unlikely that slavery had any tendency to improve the character of
masters, it may have had affinities with
republicanism that escaped Jefferson's analysis. The presence of men and women who were, in law at least, almost totally
subject to the will of other men gave to those in control of them an immediate
experience of what it could mean to be at the mercy of a tyrant. Virginians may
have had a special appreciation of the freedom dear to republicans, because
they saw every day what life without it could be like.
-There it was. Aristocrats could more safely preach equality in a slave society
than in a free one. Slaves did not become leveling mobs, because their
owners would see to it that they had no chance to. The apostrophes to equality
were not addressed to them. And because
Virginia's labor force was composed mainly of slaves, who had been isolated by
race and removed from the political equation, the remaining free laborers and
tenant farmers were too few in number to constitute a serious threat to the
superiority of the men who assured them of their equality. Moreover, the small
farmers had been given a reason to see themselves as already the equals of the
large.
-The common identity that created
the “easy familiarity” that made
their commitment to republicanism safe: Virginia's small fanners could perceive a common
identity with the large, because there was one, even more compelling than those
we have already noticed. Neither was a slave. And both were equal in not being slaves.
-In the
republican way of thinking, zeal for liberty and equality could go hand in hand
with contempt for the poor and plans for enslaving them.
-The combination, which to us seems
bizarre and unnatural, may become more comprehensible if we take a closer look
at the role of the independent yeoman farmer and at the role of the not-so-independent
poor in republican thought. We have seen that the cornmonwealthmen elevated
the yeoman farmer and insisted on his independence to resist the encroachments
of tyranny. By the same token they distrusted anyone who could be bent to the
will of another (eg, women, children, and slaves who must be joined to
independent men.) It was the able-bodied poor, nominally but not
actually independent, who spelled danger to liberty. Not only did they
contribute nothing to the common welfare, but they sapped the independence of
those who had to succor them…Some
British republicans thought it better to enslave the poor than be enslaved by
them or by the demagogic leaders that their condition invited…
-The keepers
of republican liberty must be wary of extending a share of it to men who were
incapable of defending it and might become a means of destroying it. If the
poor were already enslaved, would it not be wise to keep them so? Virginia, in
spite of her abundant lands, had already encountered a rebellion of the
unenslaved poor in 1676. Since then she had gradually replaced her free labor
force with slaves, and by 1776 she enjoyed the situation that Andrew Fletcher
had wished to achieve in Scotland. Two-fifths of Virginia's people were as poor
as it is possible to get; but they were all enslaved, and all worked
productively for private masters, who were thereby strengthened in their
independence and able to take the lead in resisting British tyranny.
-The “flying
buttress of freedom”: One wonders if it might not have been taken more seriously if
Virginia's slaves had belonged to the same race as their masters. The fact that
they did not made it easier for Virginians to use slavery as a flying buttress
to freedom.
-In England, the poor were viewed
almost as an alien race, but they needed special markings—the slaves did not
require that.
-As the number of poor white
Virginians diminished, the vicious traits of character attributed by Englishmen
to their poor could in Virginia increasingly appear to be the exclusive
heritage of blacks… Racism thus absorbed in Virginia the fear and contempt that
men in England…felt for the inarticulate
lower classes. Racism made it possible for white Virginians to develop a
devotion to the equality that English republicans had declared to be the soul
of liberty. There were too few free poor on
hand to matter. And by lumping Indians,
mulattoes, and Negroes in a single pariah class, Virginians had paved the way
for a similar lumping of small and large planters in a single master class.
It appears that Virginia had an abundance of men who were already enslaved so why did they convert to enslaving African Americans ? Did they feel that Africans were less likely to run away and were they seem as more profitable than other groups? Finally,Did the people of Virginia adopt the attitude that there was no law against having as many enslaved African Americans as they wanted to? so they did?..
ReplyDeleteDidn't slaves become more profitable because they were seen as property? They were a long term investment, where "servants" were released from their from of slavery after a period of four to seven years. Couldn't slave owners borrow money using their slaves as collateral?
Delete" -The logic behind cruelty to slaves and their different treatment before the law: The only obvious disadvantage that slavery presented to Virginia masters was a simple one: slaves had no incentive to work… In the end, Virginians had to face the fact that masters of slaves must inflict pain at a higher level than masters of servants."
ReplyDeleteI am in complete disagreement with this statement. I understand that is what the author said, and you are merely summarizing. But I can also imagine of other ways to give them incentives to work. The masters knew that their servants were willing to work with the idea of freedom and benefits during and after servitude. If the masters wanted to, they did not need to resort to violence, they could have given more rewards. I feel that the reason behind the cruelty simply comes down to racism. The same incentives could have been provided to both slaves and servants, however, they chose not to give it to "colored" slaves.
Anyone else have an opinion on why the masters resorted to such cruelty?
I have to agree with your analysis of the central thesis of this book. Unfortunately, it seems the argument the author uses falls short for me. I feel the book showed us over and over again a society of servants and masters involved in a political and economical dance for the two to create a society of order. However, with the slaves it was much different. Again I feel it boils down to race and that a similar workforce, if white, would not have produced a society of paradox. To me, it seems more likely that the ability for Virginians to champion democracy while being slaveholders comes down to never acknowledging that indians or black slaves were part of the equation of society. They are lesser beings to them. That is my opinion of the central thesis of this book.
ReplyDeleteI agree with your opinion on the book's argument. I felt like the author did not spend enough time discussing racism and slavery compared with the amount of time that he spent discussing the politics and economics of early Virginia. I agree with you that it seems to come down to race more than the economic and political situation.
Delete