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From
http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig/jarvis11.html

}}}>Begin
Another Yankee Sin

by Gail Jarvis

As February is both "Black History Month" and the anniversary of
President Lincoln’s birthday, we know we will be hearing a lot about
slavery as well as the War Between the States. Unfortunately, most of
what we hear will be from television and other main stream media as
well as the entertainment field - the most unreliable sources. They
will present the conventional, easy-to-understand, version of events
because many people today cannot deal with an issue that has more
than one variable.

We also know from previous Februarys that simplified depictions of
slavery will focus primarily on the South. Last year, a letter to the
editor of an area newspaper, contained this bizarre sentence: "The
South still needs to undergo a catharsis, face up to its sins and
admit its guilt in order to rid itself of the dregs of evil left in
the wake of a war fought to defend slavery." The letter went on to
great lengths to indict the South as being solely responsible for
slavery in America.

But thousands of Africans didn’t magically appear at Natchez plantations one morning. 
The story of slavery in America is more complex and involves other players in addition 
to the Southern planters.

Among the other villains were the New England slave traders, financed by New York 
bankers, who used specially constructed ships to transport slaves from Africa. These 
Yankee clippers were designed to hold a maximum number
 of slaves using a minimum amount of space. Viewing replicas of slave ships at the 
Mystic Seaport Museum in Connecticut will give you an appreciation of Yankee ingenuity.

These ships would depart New England loaded with trinkets, weapons and, of course, 
rum, which would be traded to tribal chieftains in exchange for the Africans they held 
as slaves. On return trips, the ships would stop in
 the West Indies and exchange slaves for sugar and molasses, which were taken to New 
England to be distilled into rum.

Countless slaves died before the ships reached America and their corpses were 
unceremoniously tossed into the ocean. Those who survived the harsh crossing were sold 
primarily to planters in the Caribbean; roughly 90%, and
 the South; roughly 10%.

New England’s exploitation of slaves was one of America’s best kept secrets until 
fairly recently. But now some historians refuse to comply with the conspiracy of 
silence and they are showing us New England’s dirty linen.
 One of these historians is Joanne Pope Melish and her recent book, Disowning Slavery: 
Gradual Emancipation and Race in New England, 1780-1860 exposes what has been called 
"a virtual amnesia about slavery in New England."


New England newspapers, operating from a "Chamber of Commerce" mindset, rarely mention 
the region’s history of slave labor. And some residents of the State of Rhode Island & 
Providence Plantations want the State’s officia
l name changed to simply "Rhode Island" in order to eliminate the reminder of slavery 
connoted by the word "plantations."

America slavery did indeed begin in New England with Massachusetts being the first 
colony to legalize the use of slaves in 1641. Other colonies quickly followed suit and 
soon New England’s economy was almost dependent upo
n slave labor. At first, captured American Indians were exchanged for black slaves 
from the West Indies. But eventually New Englanders realized that slave trading was 
more profitable than harpooning whales. "At New Englan
d slavery's peak, around 1760, roughly one in four families owned slaves" which is the 
same percentage of families in the South owning slaves just prior to the War.

In fact, to a greater or lesser degree, slaves were used throughout all the developed 
regions of the nation and the New England slave traders amassed huge fortunes from the 
buying and selling of human beings. Although sla
ve trading was outlawed in 1808, the practice continued surreptitiously for several 
years. But long before it ended, slave traders, like their counterparts in organized 
crime, began funneling their profits into reputable
ventures and these new investments began to prosper.

The immense monetary success of the slave trade created a ripple effect on the entire 
New England economy. In fact, if you trace the source of wealth of many of the 
region’s old aristocratic families, you will find that i
ts genesis was, directly or indirectly, the slave trade.

As the slave trade gradually ended, what happened to these New England families is 
best described by the old saying: "First you obtain money and then you obtain morals." 
The affluent families became respectable and took p
ride in their newly acquired virtue. Also, their enormous wealth afforded them the 
wherewithal as well as the leisure for benevolent activities. One of the first causes 
the New Englanders embraced was the Abolition moveme
nt. It offended their sensibilities that Southern planters were using slave labor.

It’s easy to picture these distinguished Boston gentlemen and their elegant ladies, 
dressed in their Sunday finest and comfortably ensconced in their Unitarian pews. 
Their faces surely reflected the compassion they felt a
s they listened to one of William Ellery Channing’s fiery Abolition sermons. No doubt 
they wondered if there was a way to lift Southerners up to their moral level.

However, there is one question the Abolitionists never asked: Who is more culpable? 
Those who sell slaves or those who buy them? Apparently their minds became 
compartmentalized to the point that such questions didn’t aris
e. However, we know how writers of textbooks answered this question. But textbooks 
were published primarily in New York and Boston, not Atlanta.

But, to the end, Lady Luck smiled on New Englanders. When they were forced to end 
their commercial exploitation of slaves, they fared much better than the South did at 
the same juncture. The federal government didn’t take
 away their assets or their right to vote. Nor did it place them under military rule. 
And Confederate troops didn’t march across New England burning homes, schools and 
libraries; raping and looting and leaving only the sc
orched earth.

February 8, 2002

Gail Jarvis [send him mail] is a CPA living in  Beaufort, SC, an
unreconstructed Southerner, and an advocate of limited government.

Copyright © 2002 LewRockwell.com
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