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Slavery by Another Name

Page 45

by Douglas A. Blackmon


  worked toward for at least three decades.

  This was the snare waiting for Green Cot enham at the Columbiana

  railroad station on March 30, 1908. On the prior day, a Wednesday,

  the sheri 's chief deputy, a scrawny white man named Newton

  Eddings, grabbed Monroe Dolphus, a black man about Green's age,

  as he stood in the train yard of the depot. The deputy seized

  Cot enham the fol owing day and tossed him into the same fetid

  cel where Dolphus had spent the night. There was uncertainty

  about what charges against the men should be entered into the

  prison registry at the jail.

  prison registry at the jail.

  Initial y, Eddings claimed that the crime commit ed by Dolphus

  was taking a 25 cent tin of sh from the lunch pail of a Southern

  Railway worker. Cot enham was charged with riding a freight train

  without a ticket. There was no tangible evidence that either man

  had commit ed any infraction at al .

  Taken before Judge Longshore the fol owing day, Cot enham and

  Dol-phus each denied the charges. Eddings was unable to produce

  any evidence or witnesses to convict them. But sticking to the

  cynical script fol owed thousands of times in the South, Judge

  Longshore chose not the release the men anyway. Instead, he

  declared them guilty of "vagrancy" that catchal of ense to which any

  black man was vulnerable at almost any time. 1

  Longshore sentenced both Dolphus and Cot enham to three

  months of hard labor for Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad. Under its

  standing contract with Shelby County, the company would pay the

  county $12 per month for each man as long as he worked in their

  mines.2 The two prisoners were also ordered to pay fees to the

  sheri , judge, and other local o cials totaling $31.85 for Dolphus,

  $38.40 for Cot enham—extraordinary sums for an unemployed

  black man. Unable to pay those costs, Dolphus was ordered to

  work an extra two months and twenty days at the mines to cover

  the fees. Cot enham would have to spend an additional three

  months and six days.3

  A day later, Eddings arrived at the county jail with his shiny, six-

  inch-barreled Colt .38 pistol in a holster dangling against his thigh.

  A simple metal badge pinned to his coat read "Deputy Sheri ." He

  carried thick round manacles connected with three tight steel links.

  A trace of chains was draped over his shoulder. Eddings barked for

  Cot enham and the nine other men in the Shelby County cel s to get

  up. It was time to go to "Prat s."

  The jail sat at the corner of South Main and Mildred streets,

  almost directly across from the spare old county courthouse that the

  town fathers had just abandoned for their ostentatious new structure

  town fathers had just abandoned for their ostentatious new structure

  three blocks to the north.

  Green had never felt irons before that day.4 5 As Deputy Eddings

  clapped a shackle on his left ankle, Green must have been surprised

  how quickly his skin began to bruise, how heavily the rings of iron

  clung to the ground between himself and Monroe Dolphus. Then

  there was the startling sharp cold of the steel when Eddings slipped

  a metal col ar around his neck.

  Eddings locked the clasp on Green and did the same to "Mun," as

  the men cal ed Dolphus, and then to each of the other eight

  prisoners in the lockup that morning. Earley Bol ing, House

  Pearson, and four others had been arrested at the train station too

  and convicted for hopping a ride on an empty freight car without

  permission. Henry Witherspoon was found guilty of petit larceny—

  a crime applied to the theft of any object worth more than $10.

  John Jones, arrested as he played dice inside a circle of other black

  men squat ed in the dirt on the edges of the railroad yard, was

  convicted of gambling. Once al ten were chained together, Eddings

  told them to start walking back to the railway station. They trudged

  out the scu ed rear door of the jailhouse and around the corner,

  passing by the back porch of Sheri Fulton's wood-frame house

  next door and on toward Main Street.

  Al in the ragged group were stil in the street clothes they had

  worn at the time of their arrest. But now the men were smeared

  with the lth of the jail's grimy, wet interior. Most had been there

  for several weeks, waiting for the monthly delivery to Tennessee

  Coal, Iron & Railroad. Several walked shakily, taken aback by the

  bright sunlight and unbalanced by subsistence on the sheri 's

  meager rations and the partial sleep of nights on remnants of putrid

  bedding. As they passed the sheri 's home, the men crossed the

  shadow of the jail, looming above them, higher than al the

  surrounding structures, the face of the massive tower interrupted

  only by the keyhole window in the hanging chamber.6 On a

  Saturday morning three months later, the sheri would release the

  trapdoor of the sca old there, and Tom Pat erson, a thirty-eight-

  trapdoor of the sca old there, and Tom Pat erson, a thirty-eight-

  year-old black man convicted of murder, would twist to his death at

  the end of the rope.

  At the station, Eddings took Green and the other prisoners to the

  far end of the platform to wait for the early morning train. They

  rode the one-hour journey in the baggage car. Outside the

  Birmingham depot, Eddings piled the shackled men into an open,

  horse-drawn wagon he had telegraphed ahead to hire. Two mules

  slowly pul ed Green and the others away from the city's bustling

  center, then through the tempestuous streets of Prat City, past a

  haphazard cemetery bulging with dead prisoners’ remains near

  Smokey Row, and nal y up the long hil rising from the saloons

  and whorehouses past the Catholic church to Tennessee Coal, Iron

  & Railroad's newly completed wooden stockade at Slope No. 12.

  It was a familiar journey for Eddings, and one he didn't mind. He

  had delivered more than sixty men to the Prat Mines in the

  previous twelve months, nearly al of them black men he had

  himself rounded up and testi ed against to obtain conviction. As

  chief deputy, Eddings made considerably less than the high sheri ,

  but the business of arresting blacks and get ing them to the Prat

  Mines was a good one for a scantly educated man from deep in the

  countryside. He'd come to Columbiana to get away from the

  drudgery of the isolated farm road where his father and older

  brother lorded over his childhood, while the mother who gave birth

  to him midway through the Civil War grew progressively demented.

  By the time Eddings reached manhood, she was ful y insane.7

  Sometimes it seemed the whole South was insane in 1908. Vast

  numbers of freed slaves and their o spring like Green had

  abandoned their former owners’ lands and scat ered across the rural

  landscape, demanding wages and, almost as ridiculously to whites

  such as Eddings's father, insisting on writ en contracts to be paid for

  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 o
thers 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

 

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