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    Slavery by Another Name

    Page 4
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      a railroad line extended into the factory yard. One hundred yards

      away sat a kiln for ring limestone, ten tons of which was fed each

      day into the furnaces. Beyond the kiln was a quarry for the endless

      task of repairing the stone furnaces, a sawmil , and then seven

      thousand acres of forest from which fuel for the constantly burning

      fires was cut.20

      The nine slaves owned by the ironworks were an anomaly. Few

      industrial enterprises wanted to actual y purchase slaves. They were

      too expensive at acquisition, and too costly and di cult to

      maintain. Too unpredictable as to when they might become

      maintain. Too unpredictable as to when they might become

      uncooperative, or die. Far preferable to the slave-era industrialist

      was to lease the slave chat el owned by other men.

      In 1864, however, few such workers could be found anymore.

      Instead, the Confederate o cer commanding the Brier eld iron

      production operation, Maj. Wil iam Richardson Hunt, rented two

      hundred slaves to perform the grueling tasks necessary to continue

      equipping the rebel army.21 Late in the war, as the need for the

      area's coal and iron capacity grew dire, the Confederate government

      began to forcibly impress the slaves held by whites in the county. A

      son of Rev. Starr's—a doctor and also a resident of the Cot ingham

      Loop—became the government's agent for seizing slaves.22 There is

      no surviving record of which black men were pressed into service.

      But by war's end, Scipio Cot ingham, the sixty-three-year-old slave

      who had shared the farm longest with master Elisha, had come to

      identify himself as a foundry man. Almost certainly, he had been

      among those rented to the Brier eld furnace and compel ed to help

      arm the troops fighting to preserve his enslavement.

      As the war years progressed, ever larger numbers of local men from

      near the Cot ingham farm left for bat le duty. Two of Elisha's sons

      fought for the Confederacy. Moses and James, both husbands and

      fathers, each saw gruesome action, personal injury, and capture by

      the Union. Elisha's grandson Oliver, too young to ght with the

      troops, joined the Home Guard, the ragtag platoons of old men and

      teenagers whose job was to patrol the roads for deserters, eeing

      slaves, and Union scouts.

      In the beginning, large crowds gathered at the stores in the

      crossroads set lement of Six Mile to send them o , and groups of

      women worked together to sew the uniforms they wore. Soldiers on

      the move through the area were a regular sight, crossing the Cahaba

      on the ferry near the mouth of Cot ingham Creek, and traversing the

      main road from there toward the rail towns to the east.23

      Confederate soldiers camped often on the Cot ingham farm,

      stretching out in the big eld near the river, foraging from the

      stretching out in the big eld near the river, foraging from the

      plantation's supplies and food, exchanging spent horses for fresh

      ones. At one point late in the war, an entire regiment set camp in

      the field, erecting tents and lighting cooking fires.24

      The appearance of Confederate soldiers must have been an

      extraordinary event in the lives of the black members of the

      Cot ingham clan. The war years were a con icted period of

      confused roles for slaves. They were the subjects of the Union

      army's war of liberation, and the victims of the South's economic

      system. Yet at the same time, slaves were also servants and

      protectors of their white masters. In the woods near the Cot ingham

      home, slaves guarded the horses and possessions of their white

      owners, hidden there to avoid raids of northern soldiers. Some

      slaves took the opportunity to ee, but most stayed at their posts

      until true liberation came in the spring of 1865.

      The foundry and arsenal at Selma and the simple mines and

      furnaces around the Cot ingham farm that supplied it with raw

      materials had taken on outsized importance as the war dragged on.

      The Alabama manufacturing network became the backbone of the

      Confederacy's ability to make arms,25 as the Tredegar factories were

      depleted of raw materials and skil ed workers and menaced by the

      advancing armies of Ulysses S. Grant. Preservation of the Alabama

      enterprises was a key element of a last-ditch plan by Je erson

      Davis, the southern president, to retreat with whatever was left of

      the Confederate military into the Deep South and continue the

      war.26

      For more than a year, Union forces in southern Tennessee and

      northern Alabama massed for an anticipated order to obliterate any

      continued capacity of a rump Confederate government to make

      arms. Smal groups of horse soldiers made regular probing raids,

      against minimal southern resistance. In April of 1864, Alabama's

      governor wired Confederate Lt. Gen. Leonidas Polk, commander of

      rebel forces in Alabama and Mississippi, imploring him to send

      additional troops. "The enemy's forces …are fortifying their position

      with their cavalry raiding over the country…. It is certain that the

      with their cavalry raiding over the country…. It is certain that the

      forces wil work way South and destroy the valuable works in

      Central Alabama…. Can nothing be done?"27

      Final y in March 1865, a mass of 13,500 Union cavalrymen

      swept down from the Tennessee border, in one of the North's

      penultimate death blows to the rebel ion. Commanded by Gen.

      James H. Wilson, the Union army, wel dril ed and amply armed,

      split into three huge raiding parties, each assigned to destroy key

      elements of Alabama's industrial infrastructure. Moving

      unchal enged for days, the federal troops burned or wrecked iron

      forges, mil s, and massive stockpiles of cot on and coal at Red

      Mountain, Irondale, and Helena, north of Bibb County. On the

      morning of March 30, Union soldiers slogged down the rain-

      drenched roads into Columbiana, destroying the machinery of the

      Shelby Iron Works, shoving its equipment into local wel s and

      streams, and freeing the slaves critical to its operations.

      Against nearly hopeless odds, Nathan Bedford Forrest, a former

      slave dealer who had become the South's most storied horseman,

      met the blue advance at a point south of the town of Monteval o.

      Skirmishing along Mahan Creek, just miles from the Cot ingham

      farm, Forrest's disorganized command could only harass Wilson's

      advance. Northern troops took the Brier eld furnace on March 31,

      and left it a ruin.

      Outmanned and outfought, with ooding creeks blocking his

      maneuvers, Forrest, himself slashed by a saber in savage ghting on

      April 1, retreated for a nal stand at Selma. The next day, Wilson's

      troops charged the fortified industrial complex in Selma, and routed

      Forrest's remaining four thousand men. The Confederate general

      slipped away with an escort of one hundred soldiers, massacring as

      he made his escape most of a contingent of twenty- ve sleeping

      Union scouts he stumbled upon in a field.

      Federal forces captured nearly three thousand of Forrest's men,

      along with more than sixty pieces of e
    ld cannon, scores of heavy

      artil ery guns, nine factories, ve major iron forges, three foundries,

      twenty locomotives, immense quantities of military supplies, and

      twenty locomotives, immense quantities of military supplies, and

      35,000 bales of cot on. The arsenal, factory shops, and foundries at

      Selma were systematical y destroyed. Perhaps most shocking to

      local whites, before moving on to at ack Georgia, Wilson's o cers

      quickly raised a one-thousand-man regiment of black troops, placed

      under the command of the Third Ohio Cavalry28

      With the remaining Confederate armies commanded by Gen.

      Robert E. Lee and Gen. Joseph E. Johnston unable to unite,

      Je erson Davis's hope to continue the rebel ion as a guerril a

      struggle col apsed. Cut o from his remaining troops, his Alabama

      munitions system destroyed, deprived of the last regions of relative

      security in the South, he at empted to ee to Texas or Mexico.

      Under hot pursuit by detachments of General Wilson's troops, he

      was captured by Union forces in Georgia weeks later. The war

      came final y to its end.

      Alabama had su ered losses totaling $500 mil ion—a sum

      beyond comprehension in 1865. The total value of farm property

      was reduced during the war from $250 mil ion to less than $98

      mil ion, including the loss of slaves. Al banks in the state had

      col apsed. Agricultural production levels would not match that of

      1860 for another forty years.29

      But the nal days of the war proved to be only the beginning of a

      more inexorable and anarchic struggle. A vicious white insurgency

      against the Union occupation and the specter of black citizenship

      began to take shape, presaged by the conduct of Home Guard

      patrols like the one Oliver Cot ingham had joined. The patrols,

      uncoordinated and increasingly contemptuous of any authority

      during the war, had come to be known more as bandits and thugs

      than defenders of the Confederacy. After four years of conscriptions

      verging on kidnappings, violence perpetrated against critics of

      rebel ion, and ruthless seizures of supplies and property, the Home

      Guard was in many places as despised as the Yankee troops. But in

      the aftermath of a sudden—and in much of the South, unanticipated

      —surrender, no clear central authority existed in the domestic

      —surrender, no clear central authority existed in the domestic

      a airs of places too smal or remote to warrant a detachment of

      northern troops. In the Deep South, that meant nearly everyplace

      outside state capitals and economic centers.

      The result, in the two years preceding Henry and Mary's wedding,

      was a spreading wave of internecine violence and thievery by

      returning Confederate soldiers, particularly against those

      southerners who had doubted the war. Deserters, who had been far

      more numerous than southern mythology acknowledged, began

      set ling old scores. The increasing lawlessness of the postwar years

      was, rather than a wave of crime by freed slaves as so often

      claimed, largely perpetrated against whites by other whites.

      The Cot ingham farm sat in the middle of this unrest. One gang of

      deserters in Bibb County, made up of men believed to have

      abandoned the armies of both the North and the South, cal ed

      themselves the Uglies, and marauded through the countryside

      during the war, robbing farms and threatening Confederate

      supporters. Another gang inhabited the Yel ow Leaf swamp on the

      border with adjoining Chilton County. A paramilitary band of men

      near the town of Monteval o, cal ing itself Blackwel 's Cavalrymen,

      hunted the countryside for Confederate deserters before the

      southern surrender and continued as an outlaw gang after the war.

      The group eventual y murdered a total of seventeen local men.

      White lawlessness was so rampant in Shelby County that less than a

      year before Henry and Mary's wedding, Union military o cials in

      the Alabama capital threatened to send troops into the area to

      restore peace.30

      Chilton County had been a hotbed of such guerril a activity

      throughout the war and emerged as a refuge for Confederate

      deserters and southerners who remained loyal to the Union. A local

      plantation owner, Capt. James Cobb, who had been sent home

      from duty with the southern army due to poor health, was assigned

      the task of breaking up the gangs of deserters. The e ort spawned

      vendet as that would outlast the war. On June 3, 1865, nearly two

      months after the surrender, Cobb was seized by a group of thirty

      whites and hanged from a tree on his property. Afterward, they

      whites and hanged from a tree on his property. Afterward, they

      ransacked his home, kil ing or stealing his livestock. The former

      Confederate o cer was accused of having named seven of the

      mob's members as deserters. The Blackwel group subsequently

      captured the seven and summarily executed them.31

      Of the handful of Union soldiers sent to Bibb County to oversee a

      nominal local court system during the rst two years after the war,

      one was kil ed on a Centrevil e street corner by a Confederate

      veteran wielding an axe handle.32 Two agents of the Freedmen's

      Bureau were assigned to the area in January and February of 1866.

      The men, named Beard and Higgen-botham, were promptly

      whipped by local whites and driven from the county. Not long

      after, rumor spread that two former slaves named Tom Johnson

      and Rube Russel had been seen around the county sporting ne

      clothes paid for by Freedmen's Bureau agents. The emancipated

      slaves planned to "live like white folks and marry white wives,"

      according to a newspaper account. Johnson was promptly hanged

      from a tree on Market Street. A few mornings later, passersby found

      Russel dangling dead, in a tree not far from the scene of the earlier

      lynching.33

      Yet even as southern whites like those in Bibb County made their

      rejection of the new order so apparent, no alternative was clear

      either. The loss of slaves left white farm families such as the

      Cot inghams, and even more so those on expansive plantations with

      scores or hundreds of slaves, not just nancial y but intel ectual y

      bereft. The slaves were the true experts in the tasks of cot on

      production on most farms; in many cases it was slaves who directed

      the gangs of other slaves in their daily work. Slavery had been

      introduced into the southern colonies in the 1600s with the

      argument that whites, operating alone, were incapable of large-

      scale cot on production. The concepts of sharecropping and farm

      tenancy hadn't yet evolved. The notion that their farms could be

      operated in some manner other than with groups of black laborers

      compel ed by a landowner or his overseer to work as many as

      compel ed by a landowner or his overseer to work as many as

      twenty hours a day was antithetical to most whites.

      Moreover, the sudden wil ingness of mil ions of black laborers to

      insolently demand cash wages and other requirements to secure

      their labor was an almost otherworldly experience for whites such

      as Elisha
    Cot ingham. Former slaves were suddenly mobile too,

      seeking new lodging away from the farms of their slave lives and

      at empting to put white farmers into competition with one another

      for their work.

      In the absence of any means to supply freed slaves with land, the

      Freed-men's Bureau and northern military commanders stationed in

      the South encouraged blacks to enter into labor contracts with

      whites. The results were writ en agreements between whites and

      black farmhands l ed with provisions aimed at restoring the

      subjugated state of African Americans. One agent of the Freedmen's

      Bureau wrote that whites were unable to fathom that work "could

      be accomplished without some prodigious binding and obligating

      of the hireling to the employer."34

      Some white plantation owners at empted to coerce their former

      slaves into signing "lifetime contracts" to work on the farms. In one

      South Carolina case in 1865, when four freedmen refused such

      agreements, two were kil ed and a third, a woman, was tortured.35

      More common were year-to-year contracts that obligated black

      workers to remain throughout a planting and harvest season to

      receive their ful pay, and under which they agreed to

      extraordinarily onerous limitations on personal freedom that

      echoed slave laws in e ect before emancipation. They agreed not to

      leave the landowner's property without a writ en pass, not to own

      rearms, to obey al commands of the farmer or his overseer, to

      speak in a servile manner, and in the event of a violation of the

      rules to accept whatever punishment the farmer deemed

      appropriate—often the lash.36 Most of the early contracts adopted

      in the South in 1865 and 1866 were dissolved by commanders of

      the occupying Union troops. But they framed a strategy that

      southern whites would return to again and again.

      southern whites would return to again and again.

      When Elisha's sons arrived home from the war, they found only

      the barest gleanings of the earlier time with which to restart their

      lives. The thriving farmland world of their boyhoods no longer

      existed. After four years of steadily in ated Confederate scrip, now

      entirely worthless, the value of a man's land and tools, even of a

      bale of cot on, was nearly unknowable. Elisha's property was worth

      the substantial sum of nearly $20,000 before the war. The great

      bulk of that was invested in his slaves, and now they were his no

     


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