According to the census
of 1860, there were in the United States, in round numbers, 487,000 free
negroes, of which the fifteen slave- holding States contained 251,000. Virginia
stood first, with 58,000; North Carolina second, with 30,000; and in the seven
States south of these, in which the most rigorous free-negro laws prevailed,
there were a total of less than 40,000. In Virginia they formed 10.60 per cent.
of the negro population, in North Carolina 8.42 per cent., and in the other
seven States alluded to considerably less than two per cent.
There is hardly another
instance in the range of history in which a class as comparatively
insignificant in numbers and as timid and unaggressive in spirit has been the
occasion of so much alarm and disquietude. The nearest parallel, though by no
means a close one, is perhaps that of the Romanist of England in the latter
part of the seventeenth century. However, to a candid mind there can be little
doubt as to whether the panic of the English Whigs or that of the Southern
slave-holders had the better foundation in reason and probability.
The laws of almost all
the slave-holding States, not even excepting many that were early to abolish
and oppose slavery, attest plainly enough what an ever-recurring,
ever-deepening problem the free-negro question was from very early colonial
times. In the frequent spasmodic reiteration of such laws we see the futile
attempts either to lay or to largely control this spectre, which, springing
into being at a word, waxed or waned as it was viewed through the medium of
alarm or security. Still, the apprehension of which the free negroes were
doubtless in nearly every case the innocent cause was natural, if not
reasonable. Not that they were formidable within themselves. Among a
homogeneous people with solidarity of interest their very existence would have
been ignored. But the slave-owners, like the upholders of all abnormal,
arbitrary institutions, could not but be excessively suspicious and susceptible
to panic. They dreaded the example and influence of free blacks dwelling among
their enslaved brethren. They saw in the free negro an instigator and
disseminator of insurrectionary doctrine which he perhaps never thought of, and
gave him credit for a philanthropy and temerity which I am sure he never
possessed.
The negro legislation
of the South--indeed, of all the slave- holding States in proportion to the
number of slaves and the consequent danger of insurrection--was harsh and grim
enough, and it is not my desire to condone it. For the sake of fairness, I
would only say, in passing, that a man whose house is stored with deadly explosives
can hardly be blamed for placing very severe restrictions on fire. The crime
and folly in placing and keeping them there overshadows, if it does not excuse,
the rest. Then slavery grew into an institution amid, and took the indelible
impress of, an era of rigorous laws and cruel, unnatural punishments the world
over. Scourgings and brandings, maimings and hangings, were as a rule inflicted
for offenses now deemed trifling. Not only were criminals treated with
incredible barbarity, but in the army, the navy, the school, the shop, the
farm, the rod was seldom out of the hand of authority. Whitefield himself held
it laudable to bring the negro under christianizing influences, even if the
only road lay through slavery; to save heathen African souls at the expense of
heathen African bodies. I would also add that it was the curse of the South to
be chained by self-interest,--self-preservation they considered it,-- that
despotic controller of conduct, in an attitude towards slavery which the more
disinterested world had outgrown and come to execrate.
To North Carolina
belongs the sorry honor of being more lenient in the execution, if not in the
spirit, of her laws governing this unhappy class than either Virginia or any of
the other Southern States. Not only did she contain the largest proportion of
whites, Texas alone excepted, and have therefore less to fear from a servile
insurrection, but the negroes, instead of being collected on large plantations
to themselves, were more generally divided up among smaller owners, in much
closer contact with the whites, better understood, better treated, and
consequently less disposed and less able to inflict harm. The number of
slave-holders in North Carolina must have been comparatively very much larger
than in the other States, as well as the number of slaves who were yearly hired
out, usually passing into the families of small non-slave-holding farmers. This
feeling of comparative safety had its influence in according both the slaves
and free negroes more privileges on sufferance than was common in the large
slave-holding States, though cruel statutes were not wanting, which were
enforced and even exceeded in time of panic. Thus the free negroes possessed
and exercised the elective franchise down to the constitutional convention of
1835, one hundred and twelve years after they had been formally disfranchised
in Virginia. The same assembly also abolished their schools, although no
penalty was ever imposed for the teaching by a white person of a negro, slave
or free, to read or write. On this question, the attitude of the State was
similar to that of the South in general. They also held real estate, which was
prohibited in many other States, and in some instances even became slave-
owners themselves.
Although North Carolina
modeled her free-negro legislation largely upon that of Virginia, she never
entirely removed every restriction from manumission, as Virginia did from 1782
to 1805. Her attitude towards the foreign slave-trade about the same period was
mid-way between that of Virginia and the States to the south. She neither
prohibited it, like Virginia, nor encouraged it, like South Carolina and
Georgia; but contented herself with imposing a tax on slave importation, and
declaring it to be "of evil consequence and highly impolitic."
Neither did the great movement for gradual emancipation in Virginia, about
1785, which under the leadership of Jefferson promised so much for a time, ever
find much favor in this State.
Of the proprietary
period in North Carolina, which came to an end in 1729, the colony being then
barely seventy years old, there is only one statute extant restricting the
manumission of slaves, or in any way relating to free negroes. This act marks
the adoption of a policy subsequently modified and never rigidly enforced
except in periods of alarm, but still to the last never wholly abandoned. This
policy had its root in the generally accepted theory of the incompatibility of
slaves and free blacks in the same community, and its end was the expulsion and
exclusion of the latter. The act permitted the manumission of "good and
orderly slaves" for "honest and faithful service," but the
freedman must forthwith depart the province forever, under penalty of being
sold to any one who would transport him out of the country. Had this law been
strictly carried out, the tender of freedom to a creature as ignorance and as
helpless as the slave perforce was would have been only mockery. For
philanthropy at large had not yet taken note of him, if indeed it had of
anything, with practical effect. But the presence of nearly 5000 slaves in the
State at the census of 1790 proves either that the act had fallen into disuse,
or that their immigration from Virginia was tolerated, as it was later on in
quiet times. Indeed, a considerable sprinkling of free negroes from this State
served in the white regiments through the whole war of the Revolution. Several
distinguished themselves. Local tradition preserves the memory of one by the
name of Dibby, of noted bravery. He lived to a great age, and I have heard old
men tell of his indignant protest at the polls when his ballot was refused at
the next election after the disfranchising convention of 1835. Several large
tracts of land in this vicinity were, during the latter part of the last century,
the property of free negroes. One was a school-teacher and the neighborhood
scribe. Several deeds in his handwriting are still preserved. The children of
some of the best families in the neighborhood were numbered among his pupils.
In fact, negroes, slave and free, were to some extent employed as teachers in
several States, about that date. It is clear that either the bitter race
prejudice of later times was then much less strong, or that the calling of
teacher was less regarded. Doubtless both conditions were true. It is well
known that the former was largely a thing of more recent growth; while neither
the Old World nor some portions of the New seem then to have been very
particular as to who had either mind or soul in charge.
After the Revolution,
public opinion, and consequent legislation to the detriment of this class and
the race in general, had received marked impulse from two different, though
collateral, sources. The first of these was the aggressive emancipatory spirit
of the North, which found national expression in the famous Quaker memorial to
Congress in 1790; the other, the periodic alarms of anticipated insurrection of
the slaves,--above all, the Nat Turner insurrection, just over the Virginia
border, in 1831.
Largely to resentment
against the abolitionism of the North, and perhaps partly to a dread lest the
newly liberated blacks of the North should gravitate towards the great mass of
their race at the South, importing the dangerous doctrines of discontent and
insurrection as they came, may be ascribed the first series of those laws
passed in 1795. The first act, passed in 1795, compelled all free negroes
entering the State to give bond in the sum of £200 for their good behavior,
which was virtual exclusion, as it was doubtless intended to be. Manumitted
slaves were permitted to remain on the same condition, which, with the aid of
their emancipators, they sometimes succeeded in complying with. Failing to give
the bond, and persisting in remaining in the State, both classes forfeited their
freedom. An act passed in 1796 was still more stringent. According to this, no
slave could be manumitted except for meritorious services, to be adjudged by
the county court, the bond as to future behavior being still required. It will
be noticed that, while the Northern States required a bond to guard against a
manumitted slave falling on the public for support, the large slave-holding
States took that means to prevent his tampering with the slaves; each section
guarding against what it had most to fear. Closely following the above act came
another, requiring six weeks' notice to be given preceding the term of the
court which would be prayed to confirm the deed of manumission. With increased
severity, it compelled the freedman to give bond in the sum of $1000 to quit
the State in ninety days after manumission. It further enacted that no deed of
manumission should work to the detriment of an emancipator's creditors.
At this time North
Carolina was less merciful to the free negro than Virginia. The former leaned,
in theory at least, rather to the policy of South Carolina and Georgia. But the
period from 1799 to 1801 was a time of great excitement and apprehension of
insurrection in Virginia. The result was that the act of 1782, facilitating the
manumission of slaves, and taking all restrictions from their residence in that
State, was repealed, and measures of unwonted severity were adopted. This alarm
also extended to North Carolina, and actuated the only legislation of
consequence on the subject for many years after that of 1795. The inference
from the fact that no supplemental legislation of this nature followed for
nearly thirty years is that either the working of the laws was satisfactory,--a
quality never characteristic of such acts,--or that they were but the
expression of a passing mood of the public mind, and that they lost their
vitality when the mood changed. If the concurrent tradition of the country is
to be believed, the latter was the case. Numbers of free negroes, especially in
the northern tier of counties, agree in the statement that their forefathers
came over from Virginia about sixty or eighty years ago, and that they were
unhindered. Here they found cheaper lands, and laws, in their execution at
least, more lenient, as well as a social attitude less hostile than in
aristocratic Virginia. That this immigration was considerable is to be gathered
from the fact that quite a third of the free-negro population of the State was
to be found in the counties contiguous to Virginia. The presence of large
numbers in some of the southern counties leads to the belief that there was
also some immigration of this class from South Carolina, though in a much less
degree. However, free negroes were to be found in every county in the State,
ranging from less than a dozen in some of the western to more than two thousand
in some of the eastern counties.
Bordering on Virginia,
and occurring at various intervals from the sea-coast to the mountains, there
were considerable areas then considered too poor for profitable cultivation. A
meagre, whitish soil, thirsty and unrecuperative, afforded grudging sustenance
to a puny, grotesque growth of blackjack and chincapin, even the renovating
pine--the badge of the State--being in many places a rarity. They were dreary,
poverty-stricken regions, inhabited almost exclusively by poor
non-slave-holding whites, and selling up to the war often as low as one dollar
an acre. The slave-holders and more substantial immigrants settled farther
inward, along the streams, or on the stiffer lands, then alone regarded fit for
producing tobacco. However, I will add that the development of the bright
tobacco industry--for which this soil, aided by commercial fertilizers, is
wonderfully adapted--has very recently made this the most prosperous part of
the State.
To this section the
free negroes had been straggling over from Virginia from a very early period.
And although their immigration into the State was prohibited, under heavy
penalty, by the acts of 1795,--supplemented by still more stringent ones, none
of which were ever repealed,--they continued to come, almost up to the war of
secession. In some cases their coming was doubtless surreptitious, but usually,
by selecting a quiet period, and settling in a favorable neighborhood, they ran
little or no risk of having the law enforced against them. They rarely, at any
rate towards the last, penetrated very deep into the State: partly because they
feared opposition; partly because they attached a vague idea of safety to the
border; mainly because there lands were cheap, and the poor white population
not averse to their settlement. For the land-owners, being in need of labor,
found it much cheaper to employ them than to hire slaves. It was only in such
neighborhoods that the free negro could ever hope to become a freeholder. The
lands farther inwardsubs were not only more valuable, but also in the hands of
large owners, who rarely sold unless constrained by debt, or desirous of moving
West. Land at the South was, in a stronger sense than elsewhere, considered the
final investment of money. Least of all would the nervous slave- owner have
been disposed to sell to this half-feared, half-despised class. But the poor
whites of the border, with no slaves to be corrupted, owned more or less poor
land, for which they were glad to find purchasers, tenants, or laborers. Yet
notwithstanding the merely nominal price of land, a large majority of these
immigrants always remained too poor to become freeholders, squatting instead on
barren, worn-out corners, or along rocky, untillable ridges; the convenience of
having this docile, uncomplaining help within call being deemed a fair
compensation for the equally superfluous wood and water they consumed. In some
instances they were tenants at will by a tenure not unlike the milder types of
feudalism.
A very few prospered,
bought larger and better farms, and even owned slaves,--one as many as
thirty,--which they held up to general emancipation. But generally, when they
bought land at all, the purchase was ludicrously small, and, in the country
phrase, "so po' it couldn't sprout er pea dout grunt'n." On these
infinitesimal bits they built flimsy log huts, travesties in every respect of
the rude dwellings of the earliest white settlers. The timber growth being
often too scant to afford fence rails, their little patches of phantom corn
mixed with pea-vines--or, rather, stubs, their little quota of hulls akimbo on
top--were encircled by brush fences, which even by dint of annual renewals were
scarcely to be regarded by a beast of average hunger and enterprise.
The subsidence of the
alarm of 1802 was followed by nearly thirty years of comparative quiet. So far
these alarms had, with scarcely an exception, ended in smoke, leaving little
permanent impress on the popular mind. The unfathomable race prejudice of later
years had not yet developed into a mania. Negrophobia was then a hardly known
malady. The resentment against the antislavery spirit of the North had not yet
been poured out on the head of the negro. The attitude of the races towards
each other was widely different from what it afterwards became. But about 1830,
a growing mistrust on the part of the whites manifested itself. Abolitionism,
hitherto the hobby of visionaries and isolated philanthropists, had now grown to
be the watchword of a militant, uncompromising party. Its subtle leaven
permeated the whole country, encouraging the slave, exasperating the master. It
would be curious to know what were the real grounds of these panics. But in all
history there are fewer mysteries more insolvable. Secretiveness is the chief
characteristic of the negro, and on this subject, above all others, he is
immovably silent. It seems most probable that there was general disquiet among
the slaves at these periods, but no far-reaching conspiracy. That the scare was
out of all proportion to the danger is not to be doubted. The mystery and
uncertainty that shrouded the whole matter left the imagination full play.
Still, all the white survivors of that time that I have questioned agree in
maintaining that a great change came over the negroes. They are said to have
suddenly become less joyous, more reticent and thoughtful. Large meetings of a
quasi-religious character were held in secret. Prayer meetings found their
scores swell into hundreds. By incredible journeys between sun and sun
representatives from many counties frequently attended the same meeting. Then
the memorable sun spots of 1831 undoubtedly wrought on the superstition of both
races. Apprehension took hold of the whites; it grew into alarm, and burst into
panic when Nat Turner and his followers began their midnight butcheries just
over the Virginia border.
In general it might be
said that the fears of the people spoke in framing the negro laws, their hearts
in executing them. But on occasions like this, it was the reverse. All the dead
laws were hunted up, put into execution, and exceeded. Patrolling, the greatest
of all hardships to the sociable, restless negro, not hitherto common in this
State, now became a system, strict and unsparing.
This highly wrought
state of the public mind naturally found expression in legislation. Minor acts
of this nature were passed in 1830, and in the following year legislation began
in earnest. >From then till 1837 the statute book abounds in stringent laws
against slaves and free negroes.
Whenever servile
insurrection arose or was apprehended, the free negro seems to have fallen
under even greater suspicion than the slave. He was half believed to value his
freedom solely as a means to sow discontent among the slaves. The fact that he
was out of all sympathy with them, that really a strong dislike existed between
the two, did not exonerate him. It was doubtless regarded as but another proof
of his astute dissimulation. It was made unlawful to free any slave under fifty
years of age, and then it could be effected only as a reward for meritorious
services. Such persons were allowed to remain in the State on giving bond in
five hundred dollars for their "good behavior." A fine of five hundred
dollars was imposed for bringing a free negro into the State, and he must leave
in twenty days or be sold, for ten years. If a native free negro left the State
for ninety days, he could never return.
The state convention
called in 1835, to amend the constitution, among other important changes, such
as the disfranchisement of the boroughs and the removal of the gubernatorial
election from the legislature to the people, also disfranchised the free
negroes. Hitherto there had existed in this State the strange anomaly of a
class incompetent to testify in court, and otherwise almost as destitute of
rights as brutes, exercising a function everywhere deemed the first of
privileges, and which the vast mass of freemen in the most enlightened
countries of the world are yet striving to attain. But even prior to their
disfranchisement the free negroes were too timid and lethargic ever to possess
even the modicum of political influence to which their numbers would seem to
have entitled them. In a few of the northern counties only do they ever seem to
have become an object to demagogues. There is still a tradition among them in
Granville County that they lost the franchise on account of their persistent
support of the notorious Potter. Potter, though a man of parts and a natural
orator, was a consummate demagogue and a violent, unscrupulous man, whose new
departure in iniquity evoked special legislation. Toward the last, the free
negroes falling more and more into disrepute, their support carried such a
stigma with it as to be an element of weakness rather than of strength to a
candidate. More than one candidate of those days, twitted by his opponent on
the stump about this element of his constituency, retorted by declaring his
willingness to throw out every free-negro ballot, if his assailant would do
likewise.
After this period, the
life of the free negro grew unspeakably harder. Not so much that the laws were
harsher, but because the attitude of the whites became and continued more
hostile. Neither the harshness nor the leniency of the laws was of great moment
to him, who could in no wise put them in operation even for his own protection.
His lot added the disability of the slave to the responsibility of the freeman.
Dependent on his own industry and enterprise, as the slave was not, he found
the field of his labor contracted, till subsistence became a formidable problem
indeed. Except among the non-slave-holding farmers, who were often too poor to
pay him sufficient hire to sustain life, he could find little employment that did
not bring him in contact with the slave, while the main end of public policy
was to keep them as far apart as possible. Intermarriage and social intercourse
were of course strictly forbidden by law. With him, all depended on the temper
of the whites among whom he lived. If they were kind and well disposed, he had
little to complain of. But if they were cruel or alarmist, his condition was
pitiable beyond words. Then all his movements were closely watched, and his
actions ingeniously tortured to sinister ends. If, in quest of employment, he
ventured out of his immediate neighborhood and neglected to take his free
papers, he got into serious trouble. Even carrying them in his pocket, if his
actions aroused suspicion and his explanation was not at once prompt, lucid,
and consistent, he also got into trouble. Dumb as a witness against the
dominant race, he not infrequently became the object of the spite of malicious
white men, or the wanton cruelty of heartless, unthinking striplings.
It is not to be wondered
that the free negroes, unelastic and prone to unthrift, underwent still further
deterioration. Cowed, perplexed, and dispirited, they huddled together on any
scant, sterile bit of land that they were fortunate enough to be possessed of,
erected clusters of their frail little huts, and like oppressed, hopeless
classes the world over sunk into profound listlessness and sloth. The women
grew unchaste, the men dishonest, until in many minds the term "free
negro" became a synonym for all that was worthless and despicable. Their
settlements were commonly contiguous to some town; the counties in which were
located Raleigh, Wilmington, New Berne, and Fayetteville containing nearly a
fourth of all the free negroes in the State, in which the apter males became barbers,
fiddlers, or Jacks-of-all- trades. Some followed ditching, well-digging, and
such work as was considered too perilous or too unhealthy to risk slaves in its
performance. I never knew a neighborhood without a free-negro shoemaker. In
fact, they were largely, perforce, a class of piddlers; and like piddlers
everywhere more indispensable than any other element of the community. The
majority kept soul and body together with the product of their sterile little
patches, eked out with a petty traffic in the rude articles of their own make,
such as chairs, splint baskets, horse-collars and door-mats made from shucks
and bark, "dug" troughs, bread-trays, etc. Many derived almost their
whole living from the sale of ginger cakes, and watermelons, wild nuts, and fruits
when in season, at the neighboring towns, or on Saturdays and "big"
days at the cross-road stores and country post-offices.
In some of the county
seats, during court week, an aged specimen of this latter type is still
occasionally to be seen selling ginger cakes. Generally tall, meagre, stooping,
slouching, for all the world the color of his own wares, he lounges half
listlessly, half dejectedly, on the shafts of the little steer-cart bearing his
antiquated confections, silently awaiting the customers that never seem to come
nowadays. He and his cakes are almost the sole survivors of ante-bellum days.
But in all his silent musings it seems not to have occurred to him that he is
an anachronism. That he is still catering to the obsolete gastronomy of a long-gone
generation, and that his goodies are caviare to their grandchildren, has never
entered his mind. At least, if it has, he is too staunch a quietist or
pessimist, no one knows which, to care much. He has seen the primitive wooden
court house supplanted by a pretentious brick one; the once boundless
court-house green contracted and contracted, till the pitiless march of brick
and mortar has left him no stopping place save an unsafe and ignoble one in the
gutter. He has seen man and nature change, but it has never suggested new
methods, any more than the fact that people quit eating home-made ginger cakes
a generation ago has suggested the advisability of discontinuing their
manufacture. Like the persistent sibyl of old, his serene confidence in his wares
is not a jot abated because they are ignored of men and have diminished in
quantity. And there he will be every court week, more punctual than judge or
jury, till some hard-hearted board of town commissioners pronounce him a
nuisance, when he will uncomplainingly take a remoter stand, unless perchance
before then death the gleaner should follow in the swath of death the reaper.
To one acquainted with
the stringent laws against the manumission of slaves and against the
immigration of free negroes, and not with the impunity with which those laws
were disregarded, the number of free negroes in the State might well be a
matter of wonder. From the infancy of the colony in the latter part of the
seventeenth century, the laws placed every bar in the way of manumission short
of total and absolute prohibition. First, only the "good and orderly"
slaves could be set free for "honest and faithful" service. Later on,
when it became the custom to construe these qualifications too liberally, the power
of determining these was removed from the master to the county court, which was
essentially the same as the method in the other Southern States. Still later, a
slave must be over fifty years of age before he could be set free at all.
Excepting for a very short period, the latter class of freedmen were the only
ones permitted to remain in the State, although under bond for their behavior.
For even the law of 1795, which permitted free negroes to enter and reside
within the State on giving a bond of £200, tantamount to prohibition, was soon
repealed. True, occasionally the legislature did, by special enactment,
sanction the manumission of slaves, and also suspend the banishing clause. But
the number manumitted in this way must have been comparatively small.
But as the laws were
often exceeded or disregarded to the negro's harm, so also were they sometimes
exceeded or disregarded in his favor. Many industrious, thrifty slaves,
especially mechanics, not only hired themselves in the face of a law forbidding
it, but with money thus earned bought their own freedom, and sometimes that of
their families, and remained in the State unmolested. Of course the whole
transaction was informal and illegal, and in the eyes of the law they were the
property of their former master. But they were practically free men, and I
never heard of a case in which a master proved treacherous. Nor would the
community have countenanced such an act.
I knew of a very
touching instance in which a free negro became the purchaser, though not the
owner, of his family. He was a blacksmith, and had married a slave woman, by
whom he had several children. His shop was on her master's farm, where he was
liked and kindly treated. But finally the master got involved in debt, and all
of his slaves, among them the blacksmith's family, were seized by the creditors
and sold to a speculator, who resold them in Mississippi. The husband, who was
then forehanded, went desperately to work, and in a few years scraped together
sufficient money, placed it in their first owner's hand, and got him to
repurchase and bring back from the terrible South the loved ones; content that
they should remain slaves--for the temper of the neighborhood was hostile to
manumission--so that he need not be separated from them.
Several large slave-holders
in the eastern part of the State not only set their slaves free by will, with
legislative sanction, but also gave them an outfit and paid their passage to
Liberia. But bills of manumission were not always sure of passage. All depended
on the mood of the legislature. A noted politician, since the war conspicuous
for his eccentricities as well as for his services to the State, is said to
have opposed one of these bills, by which a very old man sought power to free
his slaves at his death, in the following speech: "Mr. Speaker, this old
man is a slave-holder, the son of a slave-holder, the grandson of a slave-
holder. He inherited slaves without compunction, and has held and enjoyed them
far beyond the span of most human lives without a qualm. He never seems to have
realized the sinfulness of slavery as long as it was useful to himself. Now
that he totters on the brink of the grave he would fain propitiate an offended
God by an offering that costs him nothing. Like a mediaeval reprobate
bequeathing his all to the church, he would buy heaven, but his heir must pay
for it. I can see no justice in that. He has waited too late. And now, sir, if
that is his only chance of heaven, and my vote avails anything, I shall keep
him out. I vote nay." I think the bill was lost.
In the excitement
preceding the war, as well as in the disorder attending it, these mud-sills of
society, of course, had the hardest lot of all. They fared badly, not because
they were the objects of any special ill-will,--all fears of servile trouble being
eclipsed and forgotten in the pressing exigencies of the hour,--but simply
because they were unprotected in a period of general confusion and
irresponsibility. Some few were seized and sold as slaves, their feeble protest
being drowned in the tumult. All males within the drafting age of from eighteen
to forty-five were compelled to serve the Confederacy as laborers on the
fortifications, unless already acting as servants for officers in the field.
Most of the free negroes served in the latter capacity, but few officers being
willing to risk their slaves so near the Federal lines. As laborers on the
fortifications they received the same pay as white privates, while those that
served the officers were still better paid by the individuals employing them.
About the beginning of the war the question was mooted of compelling all free
negroes to choose masters and become slaves, or be forthwith expelled the
State; but it was soon lost sight of in the stress of affairs, if indeed it was
ever seriously entertained.
At the close of the war
the appellations "Old Issue" and "New Issue," to
distinguish the free from the freed negroes, were invented by the latter. The
blacks are quick at appropriating new words, and sometimes very original in
applying them; and this instance came about as follows: Early in 1864, when
Confederate money had greatly depreciated in value, it was rumored that the
government was about to make a new issue of notes, whose purchasing value would
be fixed by law, and that they would bring back the good old time prices. While
those competent to judge must have known better, popular expectation was on
tiptoe. Wonders were fondly hoped for from this magic "New Issue." It
came. Almost the only effect was at once to still farther depreciate the
"Old Issue," while prices went steadily upward. The war ended while
these terms were still fresh in the popular mind, and the only result of this
great financial scheme was to add two words--"Ol' Isshy" and
"New Isshy"--to the negro's scant vocabulary. The terms were
expressive and appropriate, and no one now thinks of using any other.
The war ended, a
radically new era began. Life and thought, with a sharp wrench, assumed new
lines. The social kaleidoscope, shaken by the rude hand of war, shivered, and
was recast into strangely new forms. The slave, suddenly metamorphosed into a
free man, struck out for himself with more or less energy and judgment, but
nevertheless under a new impulse. His quondam master, though stunned for a
while, finally dropped into a new rut, and began life anew. But the effect on
this neutral class was comparatively slight. His sloth was too profound, his
isolation too complete, he was too far out of sympathy with his surroundings,
to feel with effect the impulse of the new order of things. He saw the war end,
and oppression and disability cease, with his inherent listlessness. Almost
wholly destitute of the vigor and elasticity of the freedman and of the
industrious habits which the latter had perforce acquired as a slave, the
"Ol' Isshy" remains to-day largely an alien to the strivings and
aspirations of his contemporaries. Some, well to do at the end of the war,
failing to catch the new drift, have become impoverished. The line of
demarkation between the Old and New "Isshy" is not only still plainly
visible, but bids fair long to continue so. Associating but little with each
other, intermarriage is not common. A free negro who marries a freed one almost
invariably loses caste, and is disowned by his people. The freedmen make no
secret of their dislike and contempt for the other class, which is reciprocated
by feelings more covert, but perhaps still deeper. In their habits, manner, and
dress the free negroes still resemble, as they always did, the poorest class of
whites much closer than they do the freedmen.
Of course the cause of
the comparative retrogradation of this class is to be found in the innate
indolence and shiftlessness of the race, superinduced by their exceptionally
unfavorable conditions of life under the old regime, the influence of which
will doubtless not be entirely spent for many generations. Both instinct and
environment have been against them. But there are two factors that have worked
together to form or intensify the former that I have not yet seen duly noticed.
The first of these lies in the fact that they are almost wholly a hybrid race,
and therefore deficient in stamina, as hybrid races are in general and the
mulatto in particular. According to the census of 1860, fifty- five per cent.
of all the free-negro population consisted of mulattoes, a proportion eight
times greater than existed among the slaves. Of course the proportion of those
with blood more or less mixed was very much larger. Indeed, of all the hundreds
of free negroes that I have known from childhood, I cannot now recall a dozen
black or very dark ones. Hardly a neighborhood was free from low white women
who married or cohabited with free negroes. Well can I recollect the many times
when, with the inconsiderate curiosity of a child, I hurriedly climbed the
front gate-post to get a good look at a shriveled old white woman trudging down
the lane, who, when young, I was told, had had her free-negro lover bled, and
drank some of his blood, so that she might swear she had negro blood in her,
and thus marry him without penalty. Since I became a man I have heard it
corroborated by those who knew, and I still occasionally see the children of
this tragic marriage, now grown old men.
The other factor in
their decadence--or perhaps more correctly, another cause of their torpor and
inelasticity--is the considerable infusion of Indian blood generally diffused
by exclusive intermarriage in their own class, and which has unduly asserted
itself owing to their irregular mode of life for many generations. From the
nature of the case, the extent of this infusion is of course hard to
approximate. If the account of the free negro himself is to be received, it is
large, though his anxiety to disown all negro affinity causes one to receive
his statement with caution and allowance. But, tradition aside, many, if not
the larger part, of the free negroes whose freedom dates back further than this
century show traits of mind and body that are unmistakably Indian. In many
instances, long, coarse, straight black hair and high cheek-bones are joined
with complexions whose duskiness disclaims white blood and with features
clearly un-African. True, these extreme types are the exception; but the
majority shade up to it more or less closely. These traits are more noticeable
among women, forming no exception to the usual accentuation of racial
characteristics in the female. The mental qualities of unrecuperativeness and
transcendent indolence of a drowsy, listless type, coupled with lurking
vindictiveness, all point the same way.
My neighborhood
contains an "Ol' Isshy" town, a petrified remnant of the past, hardly
an exaggeration of the general type, in which the above race marks are to be
seen in their full development. It stands about five miles from the railroad
station, and consists of some half a dozen families, scantily provided with
fathers, crowded into as many little huts scattered here and there on a
"slipe" of very poor, rocky ridge. Here they have vegetated for
several generations since their ancestors immigrated from Virginia, early in
the century. They are intensely clannish and loyal to each other, timid and
suspicious of the outside world, of which they are incredibly ignorant. Many of
the women have grown old without ever seeing the cars or having been in a town,
although almost within sight of both. They still cherish boundless respect for
the class that are to them, and to them alone, "rich folks," coupled
with an abiding dislike of the "New Isshy," especially if he is
black. A marriage, even a liaison, with one would be instantly fatal to the
reputation of any female among them, though, excepting the African, the
children of many, in point of variety of color at least, might serve to
illustrate the five races of mankind. After their own immediate class, they
associate almost wholly with the poorest whites, though not quite as equals.
Till the reduction of
the revenue tax, a few years ago, rendered "blockading" no longer
profitable, the whole settlement was engaged, in connection with several white
men, nearly as poor as themselves, in a petty traffic in illicit tobacco. The
tobacco, after being stemmed and prepared in the lofts of their little huts and
pressed in the woods, was smuggled off at night for sale in the eastern part of
the State. The quality of the product was necessarily of the sorriest, and the
annual profit must have been paltry in the extreme. But it fended the wolf
after a fashion; the labor required was trifling and intermittent, while the
spice of danger was doubtless grateful as giving some zest to the monotonous
languor of their lives. For years they did literally nothing else, save perhaps
a still pettier traffic in unlicensed whiskey, which I suspect they have not
yet abandoned. Cold, hunger, even fatigue, they seem indifferent to, but labor
when it assumes the form of a task appalls them. Even the children, instead of
proclaiming their wants with the unthinking clamor characteristic of childhood,
pine and dwindle in silence, seeming to regard hunger as the normal condition
of life.
David Dodge.