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Slavery by Another Name

Page 26

by Douglas A. Blackmon


  train after testifying. Judge Jones ordered a deputy U.S. marshal to

  protect the man. He urged the at orney general to send a special

  investigator into the area quickly24

  At orney General Knox, a shrewd lawyer from Pennsylvania who

  before entering government service had amassed a fortune as

  counsel to some of the largest U.S. corporations, was hardly an

  obvious al y of southern blacks. A dapper man who contravened

  current fashion with a clean-shaven face and sported high col ars

  and broad French cu s, he had no natural a nity for the South or

  its black inhabitants. His greatest claim to fame was as legal counsel

  to Andrew Carnegie's vast steelmaking enterprises. In 1901, he

  played a key role in the merger of Carnegie Steel with J. P.

  Morgan's Federal Steel Company and virtual y every other major

  steel and iron concern in the nation. The new organization was U.S.

  Steel Corporation—the largest and most powerful business entity

  Steel Corporation—the largest and most powerful business entity

  created up to that point. It immediately control ed 7 percent of the

  nation's gross domestic product. Four days after the merger was

  o cial y consummated, President McKinley, a close friend since his

  col ege years, named Knox at orney general. Less than six months

  later, McKinley was dead, and Knox was part of Theodore

  Roosevelt's cabinet.

  In light of Roosevelt's pledge of a renewed commitment to black

  civil rights, At orney General Knox could hardly ignore Judge

  Jones's report of slavery stil being practiced forty years after

  Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation. Moreover, the al egations

  reanimated a running legal dilemma for the Justice Department. At

  least some federal o cials, especial y native southern Republicans

  serving as prosecutors, judges, or in government posts in the South,

  were acutely aware that slavery had never truly disappeared.

  The Justice Department was already on notice. Four years earlier,

  in 1899, the colorful federal prosecutor in Atlanta, Edward A.

  Angier, went so far as to mount a lone prosecution against one of

  Georgia's most prominent planters, Wil iam Eberhart, in Oglethorpe

  County, for conspiracy to hold blacks in a state of peonage—a

  crime de ned by an obscure and never before used 1867 federal

  law passed to prohibit the long-standing Mexican practice of debt

  slavery in the new territory of New Mexico.

  Relying on his brother-in-law, a justice of the peace, to convict

  black laborers on any charge the planter wished to use, Eberhart

  enslaved men and women and forced them to bind their children to

  him as apprentices. He routinely claimed to have loaned money to

  black workers and then held them on his plantation near the town

  of Wintervil e to work o the debt— often for years at a time.

  Before a grand jury, witnesses described Eberhart as a sadistic brute

  who routinely beat adults and children to the edge of death. When

  laborers ed to Atlanta, Eberhart sent deputy sheri s into the city to

  hunt them down, beat them into submission, and drive them back

  to the plantation in chains.

  In one count of the indictment, Eberhart was charged with

  enslaving a black man named Charley Cal oway in January 1896 by

  enslaving a black man named Charley Cal oway in January 1896 by

  falsely claiming he owed the planter money. When Cal oway

  resisted, Eberhart assaulted and degraded the laborer at every

  imaginable physical and emotional level: witnesses said that

  Eberhart brutal y beat Cal oway's wife, Mary, and then at gunpoint

  forced the woman to "yield her body to the lustful embraces" of the

  plantation owner.

  When Charley Cal oway at empted to escape the farm, Eberhart

  had him hauled back and placed in handcu s. Eberhart then beat

  him "upon the back, head, face and body" and, in an overt act of

  sexual humiliation, had Cal oway stripped naked and chained into

  a bed with a sick laborer named Orange Neeley

  Later, Eberhart brandished his pistol and forced Cal oway "to

  pinion his own beloved son, Robert Cal oway, outstretched to the

  ground, and did make the said Charley Cal oway hold his said son

  while the said Wil iam Eberhart did violently and unmerciful y beat

  the said Robert Cal oway with heavy sticks and other weapons"

  until the boy was crippled. As a nal indignity, Eberhart—like the

  Alabama slavemasters who at empted to seize the children of

  freedmen in the 1860s—forced Cal oway to sign contracts

  apprenticing his remaining children, two of whom were stil

  nursing babies, into Eberhart's control until they turned twenty-one

  years old.25

  Despite wide knowledge of Eberhart's sadism, scores of local

  white citizens ral ied to Eberhart's defense, signing a petition that

  labeled the evidence against him as "the testimony of irresponsible

  negroes." Angier, the prosecutor, pressed on with the case, but

  acknowledged to his superiors in Washington that "we are the

  pioneers in this movement, and as this is the rst time this

  ‘peonage’ section has ever been invoked." Angier saw clearly that he

  was at acking more than debt slavery perpetrated by a single man.

  He sought permission from the Department of Justice to widen his

  investigation into adjoining counties and warned: "In this

  proceeding we have at acked the most powerful combination and

  formidable ‘Convict Ring’ (as it is cal ed) in the State.

  formidable ‘Convict Ring’ (as it is cal ed) in the State.

  "Every resource known and unknown to the law wil be resorted

  to by these potent and opulent in uences to break down this Bil

  [of indictment], as we have selected the ring-leader for the rst

  case," Angier wrote.26

  In the end, it took no more than another audacious argument and

  a compliant federal judge to col apse the case. Before a trial could

  be convened, Eberhart's at orneys chal enged the most fundamental

  premise of the case—arguing that no federal statute speci cal y

  made it a crime to hold a person in slavery. The presiding judge

  agreed: "The indictment did not state an o ense within the

  jurisdiction of the federal courts."27 The case was never tried. "The

  judge …indicated that the State Court alone had jurisdiction of the

  mat ers and things embraced in these indictments," Angier wrote to

  Washington.28

  Despite the horror of the al egations, no local courts took up the

  case. The fate of the Cal oway family was never known.

  Two years later, unaware of the failed peonage prosecution in

  Georgia, a U.S. commissioner named Fred Cubberly, living in the

  Florida Panhandle town of Bronson, witnessed turpentine farmer J.

  O. Elvington seize a black man and his wife at gunpoint, claiming

  they could not leave his camp deep in the malarial swamps until a

  $40 debt had been paid. The incident con rmed to Cubberly

  rumors he had heard that forced labor was rampant among the

  crude forest labor camps across northern Florida and adjoining

  areas.29 Nearly thirty thousand men toiled in the turpentine farms


  under excruciating conditions to supply a booming market for pine

  tar, pitch, and turpentine used to caulk the seams of wooden sailing

  ships and waterproof their ropes and riggings.

  Workers carved deep V-shaped notches into the trunks of

  mil ions of massive slash and longleaf pines towering in the stil

  virgin forests. Smal galvanized iron boxes or gut ers were at ached

  to the trees to col ect the thick, milky pine gum that oozed from the

  wounds in winter. During spring and summer, as sap began to run,

  mil ions of gal ons of pine resin oozed into the containers. Working

  mil ions of gal ons of pine resin oozed into the containers. Working

  feverishly from before dawn to the end of light, turpentine workers

  cut fresh notches into every tree once a week, gathered the gum and

  resin by hand, boiled it into vast quantities of distil ed turpentine,

  and hauled it in hundreds of thousands of barrels out of the deep

  woods. When trees stopped producing gum and resin, the camp

  owners harvested them for lumber. As the demand for turpentine

  products soared, the timber companies relentlessly acquired fresh

  tracts of forest to drain and armies of men to perform the grueling

  work.

  Imprisoned in stockades or cel s, chained together at night or

  held under armed guards on horseback, the turpentine farms were

  bleak outposts miles from any chance of comfort or contact with

  the outside world. Workers were forced to buy their own food and

  clothes from a camp commissary and charged usurious interest rates

  on the salary advances used to pay for the goods—typical y at least

  100 percent.

  A week after witnessing Elvington's seizure of two black workers,

  Cubberly encountered three "man hunters" at the local train station,

  led by Samuel M. Clyat , a turpentine farmer from Georgia

  searching for several men who had run away from his camp. Clyat

  and the others, including a deputy sheri from his home county,

  forced two workers, Wil Gordon and Mose Ridley, back to Georgia

  at gunpoint.

  Cubberly began investigating similar complaints and making

  reports to the U.S. at orney in Pensacola, Florida. In the summer of

  1901, the federal prosecutor there, John Eagan, passed on to the

  newly appointed At orney General Knox let ers from Cubberly and

  a local at orney in the area al eging that "it is common practice

  among parties engaged in Turpentine business in the Northern

  District of Florida, to hold laborers … in a state of Involuntary

  Servitude."

  Eagan added that he personal y confirmed some of the al egations

  and ordered that an indictment be sought. The system of coercion

  he had discovered in Florida, authorized under an 1891 state law

  making it a crime for a worker to leave his employer after wages

  making it a crime for a worker to leave his employer after wages

  had been advanced, was virtual y identical to that of Eberhart in

  Georgia and what Alabama investigators were soon to discover.

  "The laborers in this line of business are as a general rule colored

  men and are imposed on and treated outrageously by their

  employers," Eagan wrote. "A warrant is issued by a Justice of the

  Peace and placed in the hands of a constable or sheri who

  proceeds to forcibly deliver laborer to the possession of the

  employers who made the complaint, and the employer holds him

  in service until his claim, including al costs and charges of the

  proceedings, are worked out."30

  In November 1901, a Tal ahassee federal grand jury indicted

  Clyat for peonage. He stood trial ve months later—despite the

  unexplained disappearance of Gordon and Ridley, who were never

  again seen after their seizure and return to Georgia. Clyat was

  found guilty and sentenced to four years in the federal penitentiary.

  Recognizing that the conviction could destroy the underpinning of

  their industry—and a critical element of the southern economy—an

  association of turpentine and timber companies ral ied to Clyat 's

  defense. They hired as at orneys U.S. senator Augustus Octavius

  Bacon and U.S. congressman Wil iam G Brantley both of Georgia. In

  the lawyers’ appeal of the conviction, they observed to the higher

  courts that the holding of slaves in the United States was not

  technical y a crime. "Congress has never passed a law providing

  punishment for slavery or for involuntary servitude," Brantley

  reminded the gal ery during a speech before the U.S. House of

  Representatives.31

  The peonage statute, they claimed, amounted to unconstitutional

  federal interference into mat ers of state jurisdiction. It was

  improper to apply it to Clyat because no formal "system of

  peonage" existed in the South.

  As Clyat 's case languished in the Circuit Court of Appeals

  throughout 1902, new al egations of slavery in the turpentine

  camps continued to surface . Then came the let er to At orney

  General Knox from Judge Jones describing a whole new

  General Knox from Judge Jones describing a whole new

  manifestation of the involuntary servitude system in Alabama,

  potential y extending across an even larger area of the South.

  Knox responded by directing the federal prosecutor in

  Montgomery, Warren S. Reese Jr., to investigate the al egations. "I

  have this day addressed a communication to each deputy marshal in

  this district …requesting them to make a special investigation of the

  peonage question," Reese responded enthusiastical y. "If from these

  reports I am satis ed that at empts are being made or have been

  made to deprive citizens of African descent of their liberty, I wil

  report the same in ful to you and request the detail of a Secret

  Service Operative if I deem the same necessary"32

  It took less than two weeks for federal marshals to report the

  discovery of scores of black slaves in Shelby, Coosa, and Tal apoosa

  counties. The grand jury in Birmingham issued indictments against

  nine Shelby County men near the end of April.33

  But the original al egations made before the Birmingham grand

  jury were tepid compared to what other agents in the field began to

  learn. It was clear that not just one slavery ring existed in Alabama,

  but layers upon layers of them, blanketing the state. The men

  forced into labor in Shelby and Coosa counties were victims of only

  the outermost edge of a network emanating from the farms and

  other business interests of John Pace and his partners in Tal apoosa

  County. A separate operation run by the sheri of Lowndes County

  in the southern section of the state—where more than 25,000 black

  farm laborers and sharecroppers lived—appeared to involve

  hundreds or thousands of slaves and dozens of local landowners.

  More rings operated in at least a half dozen other locations.

  In some areas, local whites who were appal ed by the conduct of

  their neighbors, or at orneys who had at empted in the past to free

  forced black laborers in the southern courts, volunteered tales of

  excruciating abuse to federal investigators. But in most locales, few
>
  whites expressed any misgivings about the forced labor going on in

  plain sight.

  plain sight.

  A lawyer named L. E. White, from Columbus, Georgia, a bustling

  town on the main train line running through Tal apoosa County,

  told Reese how he had traveled to Dadevil e the previous summer

  looking for a missing young black man named Esau Wil iams. He

  tracked him down at a farm owned by Fletch Turner, where

  Wil iams and several other black men were being forced to cut

  wood. White bought his freedom for $25 and returned the boy to

  his mother.

  A few weeks later, the family of Glennie "Speedy" Helms, another

  young black man who had been traveling with Wil iams, sent the

  lawyer back looking for their son. White found him and more than

  a half dozen others working at a sawmil owned by Turner near the

  set lement cal ed Jackson's Gap. He had to pay $48 for Helms. But

  most striking to White were the execrable working conditions he

  found—a scene that must have been strikingly similar to the

  operations of the slavery-driven sawmil near the Cot ingham

  plantation half a century earlier. "When I found this boy he was at

  the sawmil at work completely naked, no clothes on at al ,

  absolutely naked," White said. "And there were some six or eight

  other negroes there working in the same naked condition."34

  Reese was astonished by the evidence piling up in his o ce, and

  quickly asked for the assignment of two Secret Service agents to

  assist. "I never comprehended until now the extent of the present

  method of slavery," he wrote to At orney General Knox,35 asking for

  a meeting in Washington to plan a dramatic legal at ack.

  The investigation could only have occurred with a man such as

  Warren Reese in the role of U.S. at orney. Reese and two part-time

  assistants constituted the sum total of the U.S. government's

  regulatory and judicial reach into the portion of Alabama he served.

  It would be another ve years before the agency that became the

  Federal Bureau of Investigation was created in Washington. Until

  then, the handful of investigators employed by the U.S. Justice

  Department were nearly al accountants temporarily retained from

  the examiners section of the Treasury Department. The reach of

  the examiners section of the Treasury Department. The reach of

  federal power in a place as remote as Alabama was only as strong

 

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