http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/polipro/pp9905.htm 

The Atlantic Monthly

May 12, 1999

Slaves' Wages

A work of history puts a price on slave labor -- and could be used to
determine modern-day reparations

by Jack Beatty

That Swiss banks are paying compensation to the families of Holocaust
survivors is a welcome precedent for African-Americans and the muted cause
of reparations for slavery. Just as money or valuable property was stolen
from the Jews, so a vast deal of labor was stolen from black slaves. The
whole economy benefited from that labor. But this very fusion of slave
labor with economic progress makes it next to impossible to calculate how
much slave descendants should be owed. A new book tracing the
contributions of slave labor to one sector of the economy helps to
concretize the reparations question. 

In Iron Confederacies: Southern Railways, Klan Violence, and
Reconstruction, Scott Reynolds Nelson, who teaches history at the College
of William and Mary, shows how slave labor built both the intrastate
railways of the antebellum South and the South's first interstate railway
system, a wartime project of the Confederate government in Richmond.
Nelson shows that after the Civil War freedmen working on the rails became
the object of Ku Klux Klan violence and corporate betrayal. 

Nelson begins with the railway mania that seized the South in the mid
1800s. "Between 1855 and 1865, 375 miles of track were laid out each year
in the southern states," he writes. In the North, privately incorporated
railroads could pay for construction by selling stock, especially to
merchants and others along their rights-of-way. The southern states could
not adopt this formula. Slaves were not consumers. Settlements were
scattered, retail stores few, and customers rare. The South, consequently,
was not attractive to northern railroads or to northern and European
railway investors. 

Instead, as financiers of last resort, state governments in the South had
to pay for their own railroads. They did this by issuing state bonds and
by using slave labor. They paid some plantation owners with state-backed
securities for the use of their slaves. (As commodity prices slumped
planters were more and more willing to rent slaves to the railroads.) One
railroad, the Charlotte & South Carolina, openly boasted of its labor
policy. "By the application of slave labor to the performance of almost
the entire work," the line's directors wrote in 1848, "railroads in the
southern states are built more cheaply than in any other portion of the
Union." The work was punishing in the extreme. To "make the grade" -- that
is, to keep the track at an even level -- slaves had to blast through
rocks, losing fingers and eyes in explosions, and shovel mountains of
dirt. 

Most of the state-financed lines ran intrastate (from the coast inland)
not interstate; southern state legislatures were reluctant to pay for
infrastructure that would benefit citizens of other states. After
secession, the Confederate government, desperate for foodstuffs from the
deep South to reach the battlefields of Virginia, set about building an
interstate railroad. The Confederate Congress chartered a corporation, the
Southern Express Company, to perform the work. Twelve-hundred slaves were
leased out to the railroad from Virginia alone. The government used armed
force to coerce them, and many were worked to death. One in every three
escaped. Those recaptured were either maimed or shot. 

The railroad the slaves gave their lives for came too late to affect the
outcome of the war, though it did cut the time of a mail run from Atlanta
to Richmond, from more than a week before the war to two or three days
after it. And the iron rails through Virginia, the Carolinas, and into
Georgia made a permanent addition to the post-war economy. 

A new interstate system along the "Confederate corridor" in the uplands of
the Piedmont was pieced together after the war, this time by the largest
corporation in the United States, the Pennsylvania Railroad. Georgia
opened its prisons to supply free convict labor to this enterprise. The
prisons were full of black sharecroppers arrested for "crimes" like
stealing shovels or breaking contracts with their white landlords. The
construction company building the line for the Pennsylvania Railroad,
Nelson writes, "sometimes ... whipped convicts nude for minor offenses." 

The Ku Klux Klan came into existence in the Carolinas to fight the
northern railroad because they saw it as a threat to a southern way of
life built around black subordination. Klansmen terrorized freedmen
working on the line. Hooded terrorists mounted on hooded horses would whip
a man, then, piling agony on pain, rub persimmon sticks into his raw back.
As Reconstruction ebbed in the South, the holding company acting for the
Pennsylvania Railroad made peace with Klan leaders through bribes and the
issuance of stock. "The Southern Railway Security Company posed as the
inheritor of the Confederate state by putting up former Confederates as
officers ... recruiting the very Klansmen who were destabilizing the
region to be its employees, and supporting the end of Reconstruction,"
Nelson writes. Capitalism is infinitely flexible. 

* * *

Who should pay for this exorbitant theft of labor? The plantation owners
who rented their slaves are no more. The Confederacy is gone with the
wind. The Pennsylvania Railroad went bankrupt long ago. That leaves the
state governments of the southeastern states. Unlike the other parties,
they still exist. They are continuous with the state governments that
built the pre-war railroads. They are analogous to the Swiss bankers.
Indeed, in one respect they are more like the Nazi government than the
bankers -- they perpetrated the theft. They stole human labor, dignity,
and lives. Pain and suffering weigh in the reckoning of their liability. 

With modern methods of scholarship it should be possible to find
descendants of the slaves from whom these states stole everything. One can
imagine a kind of class-action suit brought by these descendants on behalf
of the whole class affected -- the slaves of the southeast who built the
state railroads in the antebellum years. Considered strictly as a legal
matter, the case for reparations to the descendants of slaves has lacked
plausibly liable targets who are still in a position to pay damages.
Nelson's book fingers some flush targets, and the Swiss banks have not
only established a relevant precedent but also given us a chance to get
used to the idea of trans-historic liability as a formula of justice. 


Jack Beatty is a senior editor at The Atlantic Monthly and the author of
The World According to Peter Drucker (1997) and The Rascal King: The Life
and Times of James Michael Curley (1992). 

Copyright (c) 1999 by The Atlantic Monthly Company. All rights reserved. 


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