8 research outputs found
The Views Of Judge Woodward And Bishop Hopkins On Negro Slavery At The South, Illustrated From The Journal Of A Residence On A Georgian Plantation
Frances Anne Kemble. The Views Of Judge Woodward And Bishop Hopkins On Negro Slavery At The South, Illustrated From The Journal Of A Residence On A Georgian Plantation. Philadelphia: Democratic State Central Committee, 1863. 35 pages.
UUID: 09B78388-4809-40EC-A33A-9FF9C14C3344
LCSH: Slavery; Antislavery movements; Slavery and the church; Civil War; Correspondence (Letters), United States--Georgia--History--Antebellum South, 1838-1839;Kemble, Mrs. Frances Anne (Late Butler). The Views Of Judge Woodward And Bishop Hopkins On Negro Slavery At The South, Illustrated From The Journal Of A Residence On A Georgian Plantation. "The next objection to the Slavery of the Southern States, is its presumed cruelty, because the refractory slave is punished with corporeal correction. But our Northern law allows the same in the case of children and apprentices." "The Savior himself used a scourge of small cords when he drove the money-changers fro the Temple. Are our modern philanthropists more merciful than Christ, and wiser than the Almighty?" Bishop Hopkins. Pict. wraps with the iconic photographic view of a badly-whipped slave. 1863. 32 pgs. "The diary from which the following extracts are taken was kept in the winter and spring of 1838-39, .... The narrative is in the form of letters written by Frances Anne Kemble (then Mrs. Butler) to a friend in the North. ... No argument will reach the man who is not convinced by this "remarkable revelation of the interior life of Slavery." The man with multiple keloid scars on his back shown on the cover of this pamphlet is Private Gordon, an ex-slave who joined the Union forces after a daring escape, he had received a nearly fatal beating on Christmas Day, 1862. The text of this pamphlet is drawn from Frances Anne (Fanny) Kemble's noted work, Residence on a Georgia Plantation." Kemble, an Englishwoman, moved to the Georgia Sea Islands after inheriting several plantations and numerous slaves. Her shock and disgust at their appalling treatment caused an end to her marriage. (William Gladstone's "Men of Color" p. 78-79.) Two small tapes at top and bottom of spine. Overall a very nice copy of a scarce piece. Thompson p. 302. $785.00.Processed by Valdosta State University Archives and Special Collections, 2016. Dallas Suttles, [email protected]. Scan date: 4/15/2016. Canon Rebel T3/T5. PPI: 600dpi. OCR: ABBYY FineReader 11.0
"A Winter's Journey To Georgia, U.S." by Mrs. Butler from *Bentley's Miscellany*, Volume 10
Booklet, Extracted 14 page excerpt: "A Winter's Journey To Georgia, U.S." by Mrs. Butler from *Bentley's Miscellany*, Volume 10. New York: Joseph Mason, 1842. Scanned from an original print at Valdosta State University Archives and Special Collections as 600dpi 24/bit tiff converted to pdf/a format w/ ABBYYFineReader 12.0. Processed by Valdosta State University Archives and Special Collections, 5/20/2017. Dallas Suttles, [email protected] Friday morning we started from Philadelphia, by railroad, for Baltimore. It is a curious fact enough, that half the routes that are traveled in America are either temporary or unfinished,—one reason, among several, for the multitudinous accidents which befall wayfarers...
Power and Agency in Antebellum Slavery
This essay synthesizes conclusions about the agency of enslaved people drawn from three books by William Dusinberre: Them Dark Days; Slavemaster President; and Strategies for Survival
‘Lives of living death’: The reproductive lives of slave women in the cane world of Louisiana
This paper examines the seasonality of childbirth among slave women and addresses the relationship between seasonal workloads, nutrition, and pregnancy on large sugar plantations in nineteenth-century Louisiana. Unlike the rest of the American South, where the slave population grew, bondspeople in southern Louisiana experienced natural population decrease. This derived in part from imbalanced sex ratios, but as this article shows, conceptions peaked during the annual harvest season but fell away at other times due to nutritional stress, overwork, heat, and exhaustion. By combining plantation sources with contemporary scholarship on reproductive physiology, the article places Louisiana's reproductive history in contest and establishes the limits sugar production imposed on the slave women's capacity for childbirth