The Slaves And The Slaveowners Views Of Slavery That face of his, the hungry cannibals Would not have touched, would not have stained with blood; – But you are more inhuman, more inexorable, Oh! ten times more than tigers of Hyrcania. Shakespeare I chose the topic about slavery for my research paper because I thought it would be an interesting experience doing research about slavery. It is American history and the more we know about it, the better we can understand what is going on today in our country. I think that because slavery was abolished very recently in terms of historical periods of time, it still has an impact on todays economic and political life.
Searching for the writings by slave owners was a more difficult task then searching for the writings by slaves. However, I found a lot of useful material in various sources. The slavery in the United States is no doubt a shameful history of our country. White people transferred the slaves living in Africa to the New Land and treated them as their property, not as human beings. The living and working conditions of slaves and their food were extremely poor.
Those were inhuman conditions in which the slaves had to survive. Endless executions of the slaves made the situation even worse. Slavery was a period of time when one race treated the other race as animals, things, property, but not as people. Unfortunately, not everyone saw the situation as it was in reality at that time. As we can see from many different sources available today, the points of view of slaves and slave owners on slavery were the opposite to each other. That can be seen in various slaves and slave owners descriptions of slavery.
The Essay on Nat Turner Slave Slavery Slaves
The Fires of Jubilee: Nat Turner's Fierce Rebellion Stephen B. Oates The Fires of Jubilee, is a well written recollection of the slave insurrection led by Nathaniel Turner. It portrays the events leading towards the civil war and the shattered myth of contented slaves in the South. The book is divided into four parts: This Infernal Spirit of Slavery, Go Sound the Jubilee, Judgment Day, and Legacy. ...
Slaves described their dwellings, food, clothes, labor, and the terrible treatment of slaves by their masters. O the other hand, slave owners described the relationships between slaves and their masters in a very positive way. They argued that slavery is very beneficial for the slaves and the slaves are very happy to live with their masters. Let us now consider both these points of views in details.
First of all, let us look at the slaves description of the cloth they wore. The clothes supply was as minimum as possible and the quality of the clothes was very bad. Here is how one of the slaves describes it. Our dress was of tow cloth; for the children nothing but a shirt; for the older ones a pair of pantaloons or a gown in addition, according to the sex…
In winter, a round jacket or overcoat, a wool hat once in two or three years, for the males, and a pair of coarse shoes once a year (Lester 65).
This scanty list of items was the only things available to the slaves. Certainly, it was not enough for the people who worked very hard for more than ten hours a day. The clothes were very dirty and with holes all over the place pretty soon. Imagine if you have to wear the same shirt day after day for the long time. The masters did not care about slaves children; they did not distribute much clothes for them either.
According to the slaves, it was their problem what to put on their children when it was cold outside (Feldstein 45).
However, some slaves say there were some masters who gave some extra material for the children, but it was not sufficient any way. Others gave any additional clothes only for extra work (Feldstein 45).
As for the slave owners seeing the slaves situation, one of the slaveholders reveals that he used to distribute new clothes once a year (Feldstein 45).
This testimony by the slave owner actually testifies the slaves descriptions of the slavery that makes us believe to the slaves even more. However, there were a lot of slave owners who saw the situation quite differently.
The Essay on Set Free Slave Prospero Master
Throughout the play The Tempest there is a relationship that pits master and slave in a harmony that benefits both parties. Though it may sound strange, these slaves sometimes have a goal or expectation that they hope to have fulfilled. Although rarely realized by its by its participants, the Master -- Slave, Slave -- Master relationship is a balance of expectation and fear by the slaves to the ...
One anonymous slave owner in his letter to Lord Brougham argues that… as a slave, he [a black person] would have at least the protection of one master interested in his welfare; as a freeman, almost beyond the pale of government protection, with no one to take care of him, of a despised and inferior race, a stranger in a land of strangers, how miserable would be his fate! (Williams 41) That is what this person really believes, and he was not alone. The slave owners really believed that slavery was very beneficial for the slaves, and they clothed their slaves well. According to the slaves, their dwellings were unimaginably poor huts that were not suited for living at all. Let us look at some descriptions of their huts to realize how terrible the conditions of the slaves were. One of the slaves remembers that the hut usually was…
one-room log cabin… without a partition and a total furnishing were generally a bed, a bench and a few cooking utilities (Feldstein 42).
Another former slave tells us that… they [were] erected with posts and crotches, with but little or no frame-work about them. They [had] no stoves or chimneys; some of them [had] something like a fireplace at the end…
(Moulton 19).
It is obvious that these cabins with no furniture inside did not seem like peoples homes. The slaves lived almost outside. Some of the emancipated slaves remember that they used to sleep… on a miserable bed, [and their] children on the floor (Lester 62-63).
One of the former slaves remembers his experience of living in such a cabin as very uncomfortable. The cabin [was] constructed… without floor or window. The latter is altogether unnecessary; the crevices between the logs admit[ted] sufficient light. In stormy weather the rain [drove] through them… (Lester 63-64).
As for the furniture of the cabins, another former slave remembers that he used to sleep on a plank twelve inches wide and ten feet long. As a pillow he used a stick of wood. He had only one blanket and nothing else to make himself warmer (Lester 63).
Except cold, rain, and wind, many slaves suffered from a great amount of mosquitoes.
Some slaves remember that they kept a smoke from their fireplaces all night to secure themselves from all the insects (Moulton 19).
The Essay on Slavery Slaves Would Work
Slavery in the south in the late eighteen hundreds, was not only beneficial to the plantation owners and farmers, but to the economy itself. In 1850 the south contributed greatly to the Industrial Revolution, with Great Britain producing an abundance of textiles, cotton was in heavy demand. The economy required large amounts of cotton to be produced, and slave labor was a necessity. The status of ...
Sleeping on the planks, being cold, wet during the rains, and in the smoke; that was the way slaves lived in their huts. These conditions of living made slaves lives very difficult and caring for children almost impossible. Let us now see how slave owners saw the slaves conditions of living. Here is what a slaveholder tells in one of his letter.
The condition of the slaves of the United States… is far in advance of that of any similar number of laborers following similar occupations, in any other land under the sun (Williams 32).
Obviously, from what we have heard from the slaves we can claim that this statement is not very accurate. The slaves did not have very good houses as this person implies. But one thing puzzled me when I read it. What makes the author of this letter be so confident in his words Where is his proof It is very hard to believe that practically with nowhere to live, nothing to wear or eat, the condition of the slaves was so good as the person argues.
Many slaves say that the food they ate at the plantations was extremely bad and insufficient. One of the former slaves remembers that they had only two meals a day. The first time they ate was at twelve oclock, which was the middle of their working day, and the second time – late at night when the work for the day was done (Lester 64-65).
Certainly, the slaves were hungry all the time. Considering how much they had to work, there is no wonder why many of them had faints caused by their hunger.
According to a slave the meal itself usually consisted of cornmeal and salt herrings, … to which was added in summer a little buttermilk and the few vegetables which each might raise for himself and his family on the little piece of ground… (Lester 64).
A former slave remembers that the very typical thing for a plantation was that children younger than eight years old did not receive any food at all. They could eat only what their parents left over from their meals (Feldstein 44).
Certainly, many female slaves did not eat already very scanty food to feed their children.
The same person remembers that returning home late at night women mixed cornmeal with a little water, and backed it on the fire (Feldstein 43).
The Essay on Slavery In Brasil Slaves Slave Work
Because certain forms of slavery had existed for centuries on the continent of Africa, Brazilian historians used to say that blacks imported from across the Atlantic were docile and ready to accept their new status as slaves. This assertion is based on the unwarranted assumption that was true of a limited area of Africa was typical of the continent as a whole. All slavery in brazil was essentially ...
That was the only time when children could eat during the day. With so scarce food as the slaves had, it was almost impossible to survive. Charles Ball, a former slave, wrote that there were a lot of… raids on the smokehouse…
(Feldstein 43).
That was the only way slaves could get some extra food to feed themselves and their children. However, Charles Ball added that… if a slave were caught stealing, his punishment would… be severe (Feldstein 43).
A former slave remembers that he used to steal some food from his master to survive.
He says that if a turkey was stolen by the slaves, they tried to implicate an imaginary fox. When they stole potatoes, they tried to implicate the hogs (Feldstein 45).
As we can see the conditions of the slaves were inhuman. They had to have a lot of endurance to survive in their situation. The slave owners viewing of how they fed their slaves differs form all the descriptions made above by the slaves themselves.
The same slave owner whom we have seen before also says in his letter to Lord Brougham that… America found in the slave… a savage, and she has civilized him! … She found him naked and starving, and she has clothed and fed him! (Williams 32) Again, this person was not alone who thought that slaveholders clothed and fed the slaves. Many slave owners shared the same point of view. They really believed that their slaves were well dressed and fed.
They saw the slaves situation as very good and they thought of themselves as of the very kind people who did all these good things for uncivilized savages. According to the slaves description of their labor, they had to work on the plantations very hard. They were called to work at five oclock in the morning and they worked until late night (Feldstein 48).
Often slaves had to work without any tools. One of the former slaves wrote that they were given a row in the field and they had to remove all the weeds from there. He remembers that in the end of the day, overseers checked everyones row.
For every… stray weed that had been left in the row, … the slave who had left it got a flopping more or less severe (Feldstein 48).
Another former slave remembers that they had to plough with the oxen or mules. The women as frequently as the men perform[ed] this labor, feeding, currying, and taking care of their teams and in all respects doing the field and stable work (Lester 65).
The Essay on Runaway Slave States Slaves Slavery
On September 23 rd, 1862, Abraham Lincoln provided our wonderful nation with The Emancipation Proclamation. This speech declared all slaves free in those states still in rebellion against the United States on January 1 st, 1863. The statement only applied to the states which, after that date, were under the military control of the Union Army. It did not apply to those slave states such as ...
Also, we have some memories of former slaves that tell us how difficult it was to work on the cotton plantation.
Men, women, and children, all had to work on the plantation. He remembers that… women and children picked cotton till the blood runs from the tips of their fingers… (Feldstein 47).
He also remembers that they feared the flogging every minute of their work (Feldstein 47).
They could not stop working even for a moment.
According to another former slave, a woman surrounded with her children, half starved, was often… whipped at night if she does not perform her task (Moulton 18).
Women did not have time to care for their children; they had to work as much as men. They had to bring their little children with them to the field and put them in the field dirt. The children were alone all day crying because they were hungry and were not seeing their mothers. A slave remembers that often these children were…
found dead in the field and in the quarter for want of the care of their mothers (Feldstein 48).
Leaving children in the field was also dangerous because of the poisonous snakes. A slave remembers that some women worked with their children on their back because of those snakes (Moulton 18).
It is well known that the slaves labor is the most hard and miserable among all kinds of labor. And these accounts only prove the fact. Many slave owners accepted that the slaves worked very hard.
One of the former slave owners testified that when the business went quite poorly, … the slaves were called up to work long before daylight… and worked… some of them all night (Moulton 18).
However, in his saying, there is no hint of regret. He states it as a very usual thing, and justifies it by the bad business situation. He still does not realize how evil it was to force the slaves to work for so long time. Another ex-slaveholder, Colonel Bingham, wrote an essay on slavery when slavery was already abolished, but he was still confident that slavery was more beneficial for black population then a free state.
The Essay on The Underground Railroad Slaves Slavery Slave
... the rightful owner 2. The Nation grew divided on the slavery question. The Fugitive Slave Law called ... not believe in the institution of slavery and worked to end it, the Underground Railroad ... the freed slaves. Many North American indentured slaves were freed after they had served their time after ... worked for the Union during the Civil War as a cook, a nurse, and a spy. She later settled in New York ...
In his essay, Bingham says that… the race antagonism… [is] no where perhaps more strong then among the white laborers of the North West against the negro… (Bingham 247).
He implies here that the slaves labor was more beneficial for the slaves because they were not oppressed racially. However, the institute of slavery oppressed the slaves in a enormous degree and some personal antagonism in the North is nothing in comparing with slavery.
Also it does not justify the inhuman exploitation of the slaves. The most terrible and sad aspect of slavery described by the slaves is their punishments by their masters. It is the fact that the whippings often were very severe. It is hard to believe that some people could do all these terrible things to other people. Harry Thomas, a fugitive slave, remembers one of the terrible mornings… The master came for me, took me home, stripped me stark naked, made a paddle of thick oak board, lashed me across a pine log, secured my hands and feet, and whipped me with the paddle…
He whipped till he broke the paddle. After that, he took me to the house, and hit me with a hickory stick over the head and shoulders, a dozen times or more: then he got salt and water, and a corn cob, and scrubbed me. Then he sent me to water the hogs, naked as I was, in January (Testimony Of The Canadian Fugitives 7).
It is very scary what this person went through while he was a slave.
William Hall, another fugitive slave, described one more example of the executions. I saw nine persons at different times, made fast to four stakes, and whipped with a leather strap from their neck to their heels and on the bottoms of their feet, raising blisters: then the blisters broken with a plaited whip, the overseer standing off and fetching hard blows. I have seen a man faint under this treatment. I saw one about eighteen years old…
used in this way: seven weeks after he fainted in consequence; his nerves were so shattered that he seemed like a man of fifty (Testimony Of The Canadian Fugitives 9) As for the slave owners, N. L. Rice made a very interesting argument when he made a speech participating in the debates on slavery held in the City of Cincinnati in October 1845. He said that… the laws of India make the wife the slave of the husband; and even in Ohio, a man may so treat his wife as to render her life a burden, without being in danger of the penalty of the law. Shall we then denounce the marriage relation as in itself sinful (Blanchard, Rice 56) He accepts that the slaves were treated very badly, but claims that it does not imply that slavery itself is bad.
Obviously, it is very bad for India and Ohio at that time that there were no laws that would protect a woman from domestic violence. Also his argument is very week in protecting slavery. However, many slave owners of that time were convinced by his speech. That is why he represents the point of view of many slave owners. The writing by Colonel Bingham, whom we have already seen, reveals a different perception of the relations between slaves and their masters.
He denies a bad treatment of the slaves by their masters at all. He says that… in the history of the whole world there never were as kindly relations existing between two races on the same soil as between the slave owner and the slave in the South before the Civil War (Bingham 248).
As a proof of his words he says that he always loved black people. He gives an example of how much he loved a black woman who helped his parents to raise him. He says that he…
loved her next to [his] parents (Bingham 248).
But how about other black people whom he exploited and punished pretty regularly Did he love them, also Definitely it is very week argument, but it reveals slave owners seeing of the relationship between a slave and his master. We can see how distorted it was. We have seen writings and memories of both former slaves and slave owners.
We found out that the slaves and slaveholders saw the slavery in absolutely different ways. I personally believe the slaves accounts that described every detail in constructing the reality of slavery. The slaveholders, however, talked in general without a single example from their experiences as slave owners. Also, very often, it is hard to believe what they say in their essays. But why these people could be so evil I think the best answer for the question can be found in Inside View Of Slavery by C. G.
Parsons who was a visitor from the North at the time of slavery. He wrote that the system of slavery influences the slaveholder, and its… tendency to harden the heart, to dry up all the fountains of human sympathy, to make one callous to the wrongs and the woes of these around him, is stamped upon the very surface of society throughout the South (Parsons 203).
Probably that is the answer to the question why the slave owners point of view is so different from the slaves. Probably, it is true that the system of slavery affected them in such a way that they were not able to comprehend the reality of their evil.
After writing this paper I realized that I did not really know that much about the history of the living conditions of slaves. I certainly knew many historical facts about slavery, but I did not know much about the conditions of the slaves, their food, dwellings, etc. The experience of writing this paper was quite useful for me in understanding the salves life and in trying to understand different points of views on slavery. It was very interesting to think why salves and slave owners writings are so different. As a whole, thinking about the topic itself gave me an opportunity to study the very interesting period in our history. I am glad that I wrote this paper and I am satisfied with my paper as a result of my research.
Works Cited Albers, Harry S. , ed. Testimony Of The Canadian Fugitives. web canadianslaves. html (24 Nov. 1996).
Bingham, Colonel R. An Ex-slaveholders View Of The Negro Question In The South. Asheville: European Edition Of Harpers Monthly Magazine, 1900. 243-256. Blanchard Rev. J.
and N. L. Rice. A Debate On Slavery: Held In The City Of Cincinnati, Of October, 1845. Detroit: Negro History Press, 1846.
34-60. Feldstein, Stanley. Once A Slave. New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc. , 1971. 39-87.
Lester, Julius. To Be A Slave. New York: Scholastic Inc. , 1968. 28-76. Moulton, Horace.
American Slavery As It Is: Testimony Of A Thousand Witnesses. New York: Arno Press and The New York Times, 1968. 17-45. Parsons, C.
G. Inside View Of Slavery: Or A Tour Among The Planters. Boston: John P. Jewett And Company, 1855.
203-231. Williams, James. Letters On Slavery From The Old World. New York: Negro Universities Press, 1969.
30-43. Bibliography Albers, Harry S. , ed. Testimony Of The Canadian Fugitives. web canadianslaves. html (24 Nov.
1996).
Bingham, Colonel R. An Ex-slaveholders View Of The Negro Question In The South. Asheville: European Edition Of Harpers Monthly Magazine, 1900. 243-256. Blanchard Rev.
J. and N. L. Rice. A Debate On Slavery: Held In The City Of Cincinnati, Of October, 1845.
Detroit: Negro History Press, 1846. 34-60. Feldstein, Stanley. Once A Slave. New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc. , 1971.
39-87. Lester, Julius. To Be A Slave. New York: Scholastic Inc. , 1968. 28-76.
Moulton, Horace. American Slavery As It Is: Testimony Of A Thousand Witnesses. New York: Arno Press and The New York Times, 1968. 17-45. Parsons, C.
G. Inside View Of Slavery: Or A Tour Among The Planters. Boston: John P. Jewett And Company, 1855. 203-231. Williams, James.
Letters On Slavery From The Old World. New York: Negro Universities Press, 1969. 30-43.