As many of the slave
regulations were enacted to deal with extreme cases and some of them were
not generally enforced, it is necessary to consider also the social status
of the blacks to determine exactly what the institution was iu Kentucky. In
this commonwealth slavery was decidedly patriarchal. The slave was not such
an unfortunate creature as some have pictured him. He usually had set apart
for himself and his family a house which was located near the master’s
mansion. While this home may have been a rude cabin made of small logs, with
a roof covered with splits and an earthern floor, likely as not the master’s
son was attending school a few weeks in the year in a neighboring log cabin
which boasted of no more luxuries than the humble slave dwelling. The
servant and his family were well fed and had plenty of domestic cloth for
all necessary wearing apparel.
The kind of clothing which
the Kentucky slave had can be seen best by a study of the runaway slave
advertisements where a description of apparel was often essential to the
apprehension of the Negro. “Billy” in 1803 ran away from his owner in
Lexington and took such a variety of clothing with him that the master was
unable to give a description of them. “Jack,” running away from his owner in
Mercer County, had on when he left and took with him “one pale blue jeans
coat, one gray jeans coat, and an old linsey coat; one pair of cloth
pantaloons, one pair of jeans, and one of linen.” “Thenton,” when leaving
his master in Warren County, took with him “a now black smooth fur hat, a
yellow woollen jeans frock coat, more than half worn; three shirts, two of
coarse cotton and one entirely new, the third a bleached domestic and new;
one blanket; one pair of pantaloons, of cotton and flax.” “Jarret,” from
Leitch-field, wore when he left “a smooth black Russia hat” and took with
him “a pair of buckskin saddle bags . . . and a great deal of clothing, to
wit: one brown jeans frock coat, and pantaloons of the same; also, a brown
jeans overcoat, with large pockets in the side; a new dark colored overcoat,
two pair blue cloth pantaloons, and an old silver watch.” The clothing of
“Esau,” from Meade County, was described as “brown jeans pants, black
cassinet pants, blue cloth pants, three fine shirts, one black silk vest and
one green vest, one brown jeans frock coat, one pale blue coat, velvet
collar; coarse shoes and black hat.” “Stewart” left his master in Bullitt
County dressed in typical Negro attire— “a black luster coat, made sack
fashion, and a pair of snuff colored cassinet pantaloons; also, a black fur
hat with low crown and broad brim, and vest with purple dots on it.”
“George,” living in Marion County, had an outfit of “Brown jeans frock coat
(skirt lined with home-made flannel dyed with madder), a pair of new black
and yellow twilled negro jeans pantaloons, white sooks, factory shirt with
linen bosom, and black wool hat.” An owner advertising in 1852 stated that
his slave “Andy” had three suits of clothes with him when he ran away.8 It
is perfectly evident from the reading of these slave advertisements that the
male Negroes were as substantially clothed as any members of their race
could expect to be at that time even in a state of’freedom. The surplus
clothing as described above was all a part of the slave’s own property and
not taken from the master’s wardrobe. There were many cases of theft but
they need not be considered in this discussion.
A large majority of all
runaway slaves were men and even when advertisements dealt with female
fugitives it was only on rare occasions that the owner attempted to give a
description of the clothing which was worn. Will Morton in 1806 gave a list
of “Letty’s” clothing as “two or three white muslin dresses, one of fancy
chintz, salmon colored linsey petticoat, white yarn stockings, and good
shoes, with sundry other clothing of good quality.” At such an early date in
the history of Kentucky slavery the apparel of this young slave woman
compares very favorably with that which was worn by the white people.
In sickness the slaves were
cared for by the same physician who looked after the master and his family
and should occasion demand assistance any member of the owner’s household
might be found nursing a sick Negro. There was no limit to the supply of
fuel for the winter, for the slaves had the right to cut timber for their
own use anywhere m the woods of the estate.
As in Virginia, the slave was
permitted to have a little “truck-pateh” of half an acre or more, where he
could raise any crop that he desired. In Kentucky these small plots of
ground were nearly always filled with sweet potatoes, tobacco and
watermelons. The soil was not only conducive to their cultivation but they
were the three favorite agricultural products for personal consumption.
These particular crops needed little cultivation once they were planted and
such as was necessary could easily be done on Saturday afternoons, when the
slave was at leisure.
Historians have reminded us
that in most of the Southern States there was a tendency for the more
energetic of the slaves to work for pay during their idle hours and thus
eventually secure a sufficient surplus to buy their own freedom. In Kentucky
such cases were very rare. Most Negroes seem to have been content with their
condition in such bondage as existed in the State. There were many cases in
which a Negro refused to purchase his freedom although he had the necessary
amount of money. George Brown, the famous Negro author of Recollections of
an Ex-slave, published in the Winchester Democrat, has given us some
experiences which testify to the feeling existing between master and slave.
In 1857 his mistress was offered $2,100 for George, but when talking the
matter over with him she found that he had serious objections to the
prospective purchaser. She showed an interest in Brown’s welfare by refusing
to sell him. In later years when freedom was within his grasp for the
asking, Brown “bought himself” for $1,000 because, as he says in his own
words, it was not honorable for him to “swindle his young mistress out of
her slave.” Such was the example of a Kentucky slave who purchased his own
freedom, not for his own benefit, but for that of his mistress.
Another factor entered into
this question. In the later years, once a slave secured his liberty, he was
immediately required to leave the State and if such a one had lived all his
life in Kentucky, he would naturally hesitate to depart into an unknown
region. Many of the slaves did earn considerable money by cobbling shoes,
cutting wood, and making brooms, but most of them showed little tendency to
save their earnings for any future deliverance from bondage. They were more
concerned then—as they often are even yet—with the pleasures of the day.
More often they were to be found wasting their spare change on whisky, a
problem which grew greater for the master with passing years.
In addition to the regular
Saturday afternoon and Sunday off every week the slaves were given several
other holidays throughout the year, the most extensive being at Christmas
time. At Easter they were allowed two or three days rest and when au
election was being held there was no work done outside of the regular
chores. The general election day in those times was the first Monday in
August and it was the custom for most of the slaves throughout the
“penny-royal” and “bluegrass” to journey to the county seat, where they
would all congregate and have a general frolic in accordance with Negro
standards of a good time. In the later years of slavery the towns had
established sufficient control of the Negroes gathering in their
jurisdiction so that the drink evil was more or less mitigated. The fear of
the law was a great incentive to their proper conduct on those rare
occasions when they had a whole day in town to themselves without any tasks
to perform for their master. As Rothert has well observed, however, the
slave sometimes did have to care for his drunken owner and take him home. To
the student acquainted with Kentucky history and social conditions such a
brief statement suggests a wealth of material on the local type of slavery.
That ardent abolitionist from
across the sea, James Silk Buckingham, has recorded a characteristic picture
of the Kentucky slave at rest and in gala attire:
“We remained at Henderson the
greater part of the day, it being a holiday with the negro slaves on the
estate, so that it was difficult to get the requisite number of hands to
complete the landing in a short time. Some of the female slaves were very
gaily dressed, and many of them iu good taste, with white muslin gowns, blue
and pink waists, ribbons, silk handkerchiefs or scarfs, straw bonnets, and a
reticule for the pocket handkerchief held on the arm. In talking with them,
and inquiring the reason of the holiday, one said she believed it was
Easter, another said it was Whitsuntide, and a third thought it was
midsummer. They were chiefly the household slaves, who are always better
treated, better dressed, and more indulgent than the field laborers. The men
who were employed in landing the cargo appeared to be more cheerful in their
general aspect and behavior than the field slaves I have seen at the South:
and there is no doubt that in Kentucky their condition is very much better
than in most other states, their work lighter, their food and clothing
better, and their treatment more kind and humane.”
Legally, there were no
marriages among the slaves. They were not citizens, but property. The men
were urged to take their “wives” from among the women of the home estate, if
a suitable companion could be found. But if not they eventually secured one
in the neighborhood and the master usually allowed the slave a pans to see
his wife every night in the week. While such a cohabitation was not exactly
a legal affair most of them were held as sacred as those more legalized
unions among the master class. "Many masters paid an unconscious tribute to
these unions. When there ran away a slave who had a wife living in the
neighborhood or even at a great distance the owner would make mention of the
exact locality of the wife in order that people in that region would be on
the lookout for the fugitive. J. C. Bucklin in 1824 did not give much of a
description of David, who had left his master, but he very carefully stated
that he had a “wife and children at 'William Shirley’s, about 16 miles from
this place, on the Westport Road.” An owner in Fayette county after giving a
detailed picture of “Arthur” added that “Capt. Peter Poindexter, eight miles
from Lexington owns his wife, and I expect that he will be in that
neighborhood.” A more extreme example was that of “Dick,” a Lexington slave
who ran away to New Orleans, the owner thought, because “he has a wife
living in that city, and he has been heard to say frequently that he was
determined to go to New Orleans.” Such cases as this were the logical
consequence of the slavery system. They existed in Kentucky just as in any
other slave State, but they were few compared with those slaves unions that
were never broken.
It was to the economic as
well as humanitarian interest of the master to have sympathy with the peace
and contentment of his servant. Thus most of them took care that the family
relationships of the slaves should not be disturbed. Oftentimes when the
owner of either a husband or a wife was on the point of moving out of the
county the masters would get together and make a trade which would obviate
any disruption of the slave family. Under such conditions a man would part
with a servant who otherwise could not have been bought at any price. Such a
situation was possible only in a State where the personal interest in a
slave and his welfare took precedence over merely his economic value to the
owner.
Charles Stewart in My Life as
a Slave has given us his own experiences of home life and marriage among
slaves in Kentucky. He lived in Paris and was engaged in handling race
horses. Soon after coming from Virginia to Kentucky he fell in love with a
young mulatto girl, who was the property of a Mr. Robertson, who gave his
consent to their marriage, promising never to part them by his own free
will. In his own dialect Stewart dictated his story. “So I married her, an’
tuk her to a little house I had fixed up near de stables, an’ she
clear-starched an’ sewed an’ ’broid-ered an’ wukked wid de hand-loom, an’
made more pretty things dan I could count. She paid her marster, en course,
reg’lar, so much a month fur her hire, but, lor’, she neber touched her
airnin’s fur dat. I had plenty of money to lure as many wives as I wanted,
but dis one was de onliest one I eber did want, an’ so it was easy enough.”
After two years his wife became very sick and died and the grief of the
Negro man was touching in the extreme. “She was jes’ as fond o’ me as I was
of her, an’ it did ’pear hard luck to lose her jes’ as I was makin’ up my
mind to buy her out and out, only en course, it was a fortunate thing I
hadn’t bought her, as long as she had to die, kase den I would ha’ lost her
an’ de money too. Arter she was in de ground it jes’ ’peared to me like
eberything was different; I tuk a dislikement to Paris, an’ I didn’t feel
like goin’ home to Virginny.” His master agreed to let him go wherever he
liked if he could find an owner to suit him and finally Stewart went to
Louisiana after an interview with Senator Porter of that State. He was to
stay six months to see how he liked it and then if agreeable he was to stay
there. He must have been a rather unusual Negro, for his selling price was
finally fixed at $3,500.
But life among the slaves of
Kentucky was not by any means a path of roses. Many anti-slavery leaders
attested to this fact. The most trustworthy statement that was ever made on
this general subject was that embodied in the pamphlet of the Presbyterian
Synod of Kentucky in 1835 advocating gradual emancipation. The following
brief extracts are most significant:
“The system produces general
licentiousness among the slaves. Marriage, as a civil ordinance, they cannot
enjoy. Until slavery waxeth old, and tendeth to decay, there cannot be any
legal recognition of the marriage rite, or the enforcement of its consequent
duties. For, all the regulations on this subject would limit the master’s
absolute right of property in the slaves. In his disposal of them he could
no longer be at liberty to consult merely his own interest . . . their
present quasi-marriages arc continually voided (at the master’s pleasure). .
. . They arc in this way brought to consider their matrimonial alliances as
things not binding, and act accordingly. We are then assured by the must
unquestionable testimony that licentiousness is the necessary result of our
system.
One would infer from this
observation of apparently fair-minded men that slave unions were not very
sacred affairs and that any disruption of them would amount to little, but
in the same document these Presbyterian preachers give a back-handed
compliment to the stability, at least in temperament, of the average slave
marriage.
“Brothers and sisters,
parents and children, husbands and wives, are torn asunder and permitted to
see each other no more. These acts are daily occurring in the midst of us.
The shrieks and agony often witnessed on such occasions proclaim with a
trumpet tougue, the iniquity of our system. There is not a neighborhood
where these heartrending scenes are not displayed; there is not a village or
road that does not behold the sad procession of manacled outcasts, whose
mournful countenances tell that they are exiled by force, from all that
their hearts hold dear.
It is strange that these two
opposing views should appear in the same pamphlet, but nevertheless they are
both undoubtedly true pictures of slavery in Kentucky. It is merely a
question as to which of the two represented the majority of cases.
Licentiousness there was, but it was certainly very much less among the
slaves of Kentucky than in the far South. Slave unions were treated with
more respect by the masters of Kentucky than in most slave States. As has
been pointed out in a previous chapter, the very fact that the few instances
of inhuman separation of slave families produced such a storm of public
disapproval shows that it was not a very general practice in the State.
From the legal standpoint the
slave had no rights or privileges in the attainment of even a meager
education. On the other hand Kentucky was the only slave State, with the
exception of Maryland and Tennessee, which never passed any laws forbidding
the instruction of slaves. Thus no penalty was attached to Negro education,
neither was any encouragement given. Those slaves who learned to read were
the servants of masters who because of conscientious scruples taught them
how to read the Bible. Few slaves ever learned to write, for they might then
be tempted to serve as unofficial dispensers of passes in the owner’s name.
The general objection to any reasonable amount of education wras the
tendency towards dissatisfaction with the servile status thereby aroused. If
the slave could learn to read well, it was feared that he would become a
victim of the “filthy” abolitionist literature, which through the resultant
effect upon the Negroes would have produced no end of trouble to the slavery
system. Hence, for the most part, the Kentucky slave remained in blissful
ignorance, and well for him as such and the institution he represented that
his learning was no greater.
Out of a collection of some
three hundred and fifty runaway slave advertisements concerning Kentucky
slaves the author has found 71 cases in which mention was made that the
Negro could read and instances in which he could write. The latter cases are
all included in the former classification also. On that basis a little over
ten per cent of the slaves could read and write and about twenty per cent
could read but were unable to write. There are, however, two strong reasons
against any such general conclusion. In the first place, the more a slave
learned the more liable he was to become dissatisfied and run away; and
secondly, the careful mention which was made in advertisements of the
Negro’s ability to read or write would tend to show that it was more or less
an unusual accomplishment.
Taking up the question of the
education of slaves in the State, the Presbyterian Synod of Kentucky said in
1834 that “Slavery dooms thousands of human beings to hopeless ignorance ...
if slaves are educated it must involve some outlay upon the part of the
master. ... It is inconsistent with our knowledge of human nature to suppose
that he will do this for them. The present state of instruction among this
race remains exactly what we might . . . naturally anticipate. Throughout
the whole land (State), so far as we can learn, there is but one school in
which, during the week, slaves can be taught. The light of three or four
Sabbath schools is seen glimmering through the darkness that covers the
black population of the whole State. Here and there a family is found where
humanity and religion impel the master, mistress or children to the
laborious task of private instruction.”
It should be added in this
connection that the same statement would hold true of the free Negro
population of Kentucky at the same period. Until long after the Civil War
there was no provision made for their education other than that of
individual enterprise. The public education of the whites was not on a plane
comparable to that of any of the Northern States until after the
reconstruction period, and even then Kentucky lagged behind for years.
The church and its influence
for the betterment of society under the slavery system was more effective
than the school. The chief religious paper of the State was the Presbyterian
Herald and one of its most persistent pleas was that the proper religious
instruction of the Negro servant class would answer most of the objections
to the institution. “The most formidable weapon in the hands of the
abolitionist,” said the editor, “is the indifference which he charges to the
Christian slaveholder toward the spiritual welfare of the slave under his
control. Disarm him of this weapon, and you have done much to render him
powerless.”
Religious instruction in
families of Christian habits of life, however, was not so sadly neglected.
The household servants were usually brought to the house during the family
worship and the scriptures were not merely read to them but explained. No
restrictions were ever placed on church attendance either by law or by
custom. Many slaves united with the white churches and throughout the State
today one may find any number of old churches w hose records still show
several of these Negroes on the church rolls. Most of them are very kindly
remembered for their good moral character and abiding faith. Such a
condition was not so prevalent among the agricultural slaves, except where
they were few in numbers. Even here, however, the religious instinct was not
suppressed in any manner. Their religion at the most was a very crude
imitation of the worship of their masters. They were not confined to the
rear seats of the white churches for their attendance at Sunday services.
They could hold their own meetings in schoolhouses and vacant church
edifices.
It was these distinctively
slave gatherings that gave rise to one of the most interesting of all Negro
characters—the preacher. Tradition and story have related many a charming
picture of this quaint representative of Negro faith, but unfortunately few
life stories of any of them have ever been preserved. In nearly all the
county histories we find mention of several of these Negro exhorters who
seemingly were men of some degree of intelligence. The majority of them were
apparently themselves slaves, subject to the will of their masters, and
while the restrictions on their movements were very lax, they seldom if ever
spoke beyond the borders of their home county.
One of the famous Negro
preachers of the early nineteenth-century South was Josiah Henson. From 1825
to 1828 he was a slave in Daviess County, Kentucky, and in his autobiography
he has given us a picture of the circumstances under which he became a slave
preacher. “In Kentucky,” said he, “the opportunities of attending on the
preaching of whites, as well as of blacks, were more numerous; and partly
attended by them, and the camp meetings which occurred from time to time,
and partly from studying carefully my own heart, and observing the
developments of character around me, in all the stations of life which I
could watch., I became better acquainted with those religious feelings which
are deeply implanted in the breast of every human being, and learnt by
practice how best to arouse them, and keep them excited, and in general to
produce some good religious impressions on the ignorant and thoughtless
community by which I was surrounded. . . . I cannot but derive some
satisfaction, too, from the proof*
I have had that my services
have been acceptable to those to whom they have been rendered. In the course
of the three years from 1825 to 1828 I availed myself of all the
opportunities of improvement which occurred and was admitted as a preacher
by a conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church.”
In Ballard County there was
another interesting exhorter. Advertising for his Negro Jack who had run
away in 1850, C. B. Young pointed out that although he was a slave and the
property of the “subscriber” he was a well-educated Baptist preacher and in
the pursuit of his vocation he was well known by “many of the citizens of
Paducah, McCracken County, and also by citizens of Hickman and Fulton
Counties, and is thought by many to be a free man.”
The only credentials which
the Negro preacher carried, according to his own testimony, came directly
from the Lord. His education was only of a sufficient character to enable
him to read the Bible and line out the words of the hymns. His creed was
never the creation of any school of theology. It was usually an original
interpretation of supernatural phenomena varying widely even in one
individual from time to time. Convinced of his supernatural calling, he felt
inferior to 110 one in the power of exegesis. As long as he held bis balance
and remained on terra firma his followers believed in him as he believed in
himself. But as Lucius Little lias well said: “Once in a while a colored
preacher lost his influence with his congregation by drinking too deeply of
the Pierian spring. Too much learning raised him out of their orbit. They
fell on stony ground.’’ Strange, yet how true, that the more ignorant a
slave minister was, the more power of influence for good he had among his
fellow human beings.
James Lane Allen has given us
a splendid little sketch of three of these native characters whom he
evidently knew in his younger days:
‘‘One of these negro
preachers was allowed by his master to fill a distant appointment. Belated
once, and returning home after the hour forbidden for slaves to be abroad,
he was caught by the patrol and cruelly 'whipped. As the blows fell, his
words were, “Jesus Christ suffered for righteousness’ sake; so kin I.”
Another was recommended for
deacon’s orders and actually ordained. "When liberty came, he refused to be
free, and continued to work in his master’s family until his death. With
considerable knowledge of the Bible and a fluent tongue, he would
nevertheless sometimes grow confused while preaching and lose his train of
thought. At these embarrassing junctures it was his wont suddenly to eall
out at the top of his voice, “Saul, Saul. Why persecutest thou me?” The
effect upon his hearers was electrifying: —as none but a very highly favored
being could be thought worthy of enjoying this persecution. He thus
converted his loss of mind into spiritual reputation.
A third named Peter Cotton,
united the vocations of exhorter and wood-chopper. He united them literally,
for one moment Peter might be seen standing on his log chopping away, and
the next kneeling down beside it praying. lie got his mistress to make him a
long jeans coat and on the ample tails of it to embroider, by his direction,
sundry texts of scripture, such as “Come unto Me, all ye that are heavy
laden.” Thus literally clothed with righteousness, Peter went from cabin to
cabin, preaching the Word. Well for him if that other Peter could have seen
him.”
One of the dominant features
of such a type of religion among the Negroes was the resulting prevalence of
superstition. It almost seems that in their ignorance they adopted every
form of supernatural fear that was ever known among our ancestors. But if it
had ended there the matter would not have been so important socially. In
their constant association with white children they brought their fears of
“ghost-hauntings” and other fantastic ideas into the minds of the very
young. The peculiarity of the Negro slave as compared with the other
superstitious races was his own sinister imaginative productions. They
related none of the valuable tales of ancient mythology, but rather did they
fill the earth with goblins, witches and ghosts—the result of their own
dreams and fancies.
The many stories of this sort
which a “mammy” related to a child a half century ago can be reproduced by
the old man of the twentieth century and the effect of the old ideas of
magic is still with him. The prevalence of superstitious ideas in Kentucky
today might easily be traced back to the associations of slavery times. But
such a weakness may not always have done harm; not every child was so
influenced. The natural play of the Negro instinct was worth much to his
peace and contentment. Here again Shaler has given us a rather unique
observation from his own experience:
“The only movements of the
spirit in the religious field that I can remember came from two sources: my
mother’s singing. . . . The other spiritual influence came from the negroes.
A number of them used to meet at night to talk religion beneath a shed which
lay open to the northern sky. One of them, well named “Old Daniel,” had a
fervid imagination and excellent descriptive powers. He would picture the
coming of the great angel as if it were before his eyes; the path of light
shooting down from about the North star,—the majesty of his train. Then the
rolling of the heavens “like a scroll”—I did not know what this process was
like, but it seemed vaguely fine—and then the burning up of the world. I was
always greatly moved when hearing these exhortations which must indeed have
been rather wonderful things, but they made no permanent impression upon me.
In fact I regarded them as ‘nigger talk.'
The patriarchal character of
slavery as it existed in Kentucky is best shown in the relationship which
generally existed between the master and his slave. The pioneers who brought
their slaves with them from Virginia encountered many dangers not only in
crossing the mountains but after they had settled in the new State. Many
were the times when the slave proved himself a hero and even encountered
death in order to protect the master and his family. Tradition and history
have handed down' many of these stories to us, but the most famous of all,
as well as the best authenticated, was the experience of Monk Estill, who
was the slave of Colonel James Estiil, of Madison County. In a struggle with
the Indians in 1782 in the region where Mount Sterling is now located Monk
cried out to his master in the thick of the fray: “Don’t give way, Marse
Jim; there’s only twenty-five of the Injuns and yon can whip them.” Colonel
Estill was killed and Monk was taken prisoner but he soon managed to escape,
and after joining his comrades carried one of the wounded men twenty-five
miles. The young master was so grateful to Monk that he gave him his freedom
and kept him in the best of comfort the rest of his life. This was the
experience of what is supposed to have been the first slave in the district
of Kentucky.
Not only was the slave on a
par with his master when it came to facing dangers but even in the field of
sports he had as pleasant an outing as his overlord. While the one may have
spent the day in fox hunting or deer driving, when nightfall came the Negro
was apt to emerge from his quarters followed by his faithful dog in search
of possum or coon. While the master may have enjoyed a feast of venison at
his table the Negro was just as well satisfied with the less valuable but
savory game that graced his own meal.
With the exception of the
house servants most of the slaves of the State were employed in agricultural
pursuits, but, as we have seen elsewhere, even here they w^ere not to be
found in large droves as in the States of the South. There were only a few
big landed estates which were cultivated by the owners under their own
supervision and in the large majority of cases the field slaves worked side
by side with the whites. Often an owner’s circumstances compelled him to
labor in the fields with his slaves and when doing so he rarely demanded
more of them than he did himself. Such a condition was not only true in the
early days when there were few slaves but it extended throughout the slavery
era. The stories of the mildness of the institution in Kentucky which
reached the North were little accredited by the radical element, which could
never see any virtue in servile labor. Perhaps the most zealous abolitionist
who visited the State was J. W. Buckingham, who wrote in 1840 that the
“condition of the Negroes, as to food, clothing, and light labor struck me
as being better in Kentucky than in any other State.” While traveling in the
heart of the slave section of the State between Frankfort and Louisville he
saw many instances of black and white laborers, slave and free, working side
by side in the same field.
The relation between the
owner and the household type of slave was of a more intimate nature and the
master was careful to pick only the best of the Negroes. In such an
environment we see the picture of the Kentucky gentleman of song and story,
and the Negro in all the best that tradition has related of him. The latter
became identified with the family of the master in sentiment and feeling.
Under ordinary circumstances he had nothing to worry about, and with no
cares pressing upon him, he became as happy as any Negro ever was. If the
crops failed, or the owner became bankrupt he had none of the anxiety of his
master, although lie may have displayed the greatest sympathy with the
existing condition. It was his duty to give only his labor to his master and
in return he was sheltered, clothed and supported when sick or too old to
labor; and at last when his earthly toils were over, he was given a
Christian burial. The humble affection which the slave had for his master in
conjunction with the extreme confidence which he held for the outcome of all
pecuniary troubles is shown by instances in the life history of every
slaveholding family. No matter what might be the circumstances and
conditions of the estate the slave could go on in his daily work without any
fears or cares, except for the one great cloud that in the event of a
disruption of the estate through a legal process he might be sold to satisfy
his master’s creditors.
From our present viewpoint
the treatment may have been at times rather harsh but we must be careful to
judge it from the general standard of those times. It has been pointed out
that it would bear “favorable comparison with the treatment of the white
sailors in the British and American navies of the same period.” The slave
code allowed a much severer policy than was generally carried out, for it
must be considered that the law was made to fit the worst cases, where such
action was justifiable. Often the attitude of the master appeared harsher
than it was really meant to be. It may have been merely a display of
authority on his part when he reprimanded a servant who had really committed
only a minor indiscretion.
There were naturally other
scenes in which the treatment of slaves would not appear in such a favorable
light. The chronically bad master, however, was at all times and under all
circumstances under the ban of a just public sentiment. Should, by chance, a
slave under such a one secure vengeance on his heartless overlord, the
general feeling of the community was on the side of the slave. Strange to
say, it was very often true that persons who had known little concerning
slavery until they came to Kentucky, as soon as they had accumulated a
sufficient surplus, became the owners of slaves and proved to be the hardest
taskmasters. Much light is thrown on this situation by Shaler.
“In the households where I
was intimate the slaves were about on the same footing as the oiher members
of the family; thry were subjected to sudden explosions of the master's
temper much asi were his children. I well remember a frequent scene in my
grandfather’s house, where it was the custom that I should go every Sunday
afternoon for counsel and instruction. They were at first somewhat fearsome
occasions for a little lad thus to be alone with an aged and stately
grandfather. I soon wun his interest, in some measure by my fears, and came
greatly to enjoy the intercourse, for he knew how to talk to a boy, and we
became, in a way, boys together, in our sense of the funny side of things.
It was the custom, too, for him to divide the session of three or four hours
with a brief nap taken in his chair. . . .
“As his rooms were near the
negro quarter he would make ready for his siesta by sending forth the
servantman who waited on him, bidding him tell the people that they were to
keep quiet during the performance. I can see him now with.his pig-tail
hanging down behind the back of the easy chair and a handkerchief over his
face as he courted slumber. For a minute or two it would be still, then the
hidden varlets would be as noisy as before. Then the pig-tail would begin to
twitch, and he would mutter: ‘Jim, tell those people they must be still.’
Again a minute of quiet, and once more the jabbering and shouting. Now with
a leap he would clutch his long walking-stick and charge the crowd in the
quarter, laying about him with amazing nimbleness, until all the offenders
were run to their holes. Back he would come from his excursion and settle
himself to sleep. I could see that his rage was merely on the surface and
that he had used it for a corrective, for he evidently took care not to hurt
any one.’
“There is a common opinion,”
said he, “that the slaves of the Southern households were subjected in
various ways to brutal treatment. Such, in my experience, was not the case.
Though the custom of using the whip on white children was common enough, I
never saw a negro deliberately punished in that way until 1862, when, in
military service, I stayed at night at the house of a friend. This old man,
long a widower, had recently married a woman from the state of Maine, who
had been the governess of his children. In the early morning I heard a
tumult in the back yard, and on looking out saw a negro man, his arms tied
up to a limb of a tree, while the vigorous matron was administering on his
back with a cowhide whip. At breakfast I learned that the man had well
deserved the flogging, but it struck me as curious that in the only instance
of the kind that I had known the punishment was from the hands of a Northern
woman.” Shaler lived in Campbell County in the extreme northern section of
the State, where there were only a few slaves and the treatment was milder
perhaps than in any other part of Kentucky.
The general attitude is best
shown by the two laws passed in 1816 and 1830. It had always been considered
that the slave, being the property of his owner, it remained for him and for
him alone to serve as the disciplinarian of the Negro. The increasing abuse
of this right by outsiders led to a law in 1815 giving the owners a power of
action against persons abusing their slaves, and in February, 1816, the
provisions were made more specific. If any person should “whip, strike or
otherwise abuse the slave of another” without the owner’s consent, the
latter could recover damages in any circuit court in the commonwealth—
regardless of whether or not the punishment so inflicted injured the ability
of the slave to render service to his master.
Some of the contemporary
comment would seem to imply that the theory of the law was based on the
property conception of the slave and not upon humanitarian motives. In other
words, it was perfectly proper to punish any slave as one saw fit as long as
one did not interfere with the property value of the servant. Fearon, while
visiting the State in 1818, came across an example of this kind and after
telling the story of the punishment makes this comment: “It appears that
this boy (thu one who had been whipped) was the property of a regular
slave-dealer, who was then absent at Natchez with a cargo. Mr. Lawe’s
humanity fell lamentably in my estimation when he stated, that ‘whipping
niggers, if they were his own, was perfectly right, and they perhaps
deserved it; but what made him mad was, that the boy was left under his care
by a friend, and he did not like to have a friend’s property injured.* The
conduct observed by Fearon was clearly in violation of the law of 1816,
unless the absent master had given over his rights in full to the man La we,
who administered the punishment. It may have been the spirit of the laws of
Kentucky that Lawe had in mind when he spoke to Fearon. On the other hand,
it could easily be given the interpretation which Fearon made. The trend of
public opinion was more and more in the interest of justice for the slave as
the law of 1830 shows:
If any owner of a slave shall
treat such slave cruelly, so as in the opinion of the jury, to endanger the
life or limb of such slave, or shall not supply his slave with sufficient
food or raiment, it shall and may be lawful for any person acquainted with
the fact or facts, to state and set forth in a petition to the Circuit
Court, the facts, or any of them aforesaid, of which the defendant hath been
guilty, and pray that such slave or slaves may be taken from the possession
of the owner, and sold for the benefit of such owner, agreeably to the 7th
article of the Constitution.
In accordance with this law,
if a jury of twelve men were convinced that a master treated his slave
cruelly, or failed to provide him the proper food and clothing, the slave
would be sold into better hands and the master would have to pay the costs
of the suit. Most assuredly there was no place in the eyes of the law for an
inhuman slaveholder. Not only was such a one a criminal in the eyes of the
courts but he was socially ostracized in the ordinary circles of the
community.
Two instances of this kind in
Lexington will show the public feeling. In 1837 Mrs. Turner, the wife of a
wealthy Lexington judge, was accused of inhuman cruelty. Her own husband was
the chief complainant, stating that “that woman has been the cause of the
death of six of my servants by her severities.” The trial caused intense
excitement among the people of Lexington, more so perhaps for the reason
that the defendant was a member of a prominent Boston family and her husband
was a former judge of the criminal court in New Orleans. The court
proceedings were brought to an end when the woman was pronounced insane and
placed in the asylum.
Early in 1839 a Mr. and Airs.
Maxwell were tried in Lexington for the inhuman treatment of a female slave
servant. The indignation of the citizens of Lexington is apparent from the
publicity that was given to the proceedings in the local papers. A Dr.
Constant testified that he saw Mrs. Maxwell whipping the Negro severely,
without being x>ar-ticular whether she struck her in the face or not. The
lacerations had brought blood in considerable quantities for he had found
some on the steps. He had noticed previously that the slave had been thinly
clad and was barefooted even in cold weather. During the previous months he
had noticed several scars on her and at one time she had had one eye tied up
for a week. A Mr. Winters was once passing along the street and saw one of
the boys whipping the slave girl with a cowhide. 'Whenever she turned her
face to him he would hit her across the face either with the butt end or
small end of the whip to make her turn around square to the lash, in order
that he might get a fair blow at her. A Mr. Say had noticed several wounds
on her person, chiefly bruises. Capt. Porter, the keeper of the workhouse,
thought the injuries on Milly’s person were very bad, some of them appeared
to be burns, and some were bruises or stripes from a cowhide whip. The trial
was held amidst a turmoil of resentment against the defendants and there was
apparently no one in sympathy with them whatever.
Any discussion of the
relationships in slavery times would be incomplete without adding the
characterization of the Kentucky master as drawn by a celebrated author who
was born in the heart of the bluegrass and was thoroughly familiar with the
type:
“The good in nature is
irrepressible. Slavery, evil as it was, when looked at from the remoteness
of human history as it is to be, will be judged an institution that gave
development to a certain noble type of character.
“Along with other social
forces peculiar to the age, it produced in Kentucky a kind of farmer the
like of which will never appear again. He had the aristocratic virtues:
highest notions of personal liberty and personal honor, a fine especial
scorn of anything that was little, mean, cowardly. As an agriculturist he
was not driving or merciless or grasping; the rapid amassing of wealth was
not among his passions, the contention of splendid living not among his
thorns. To a certain carelessness of riches he added a certain profuseness
of expenditure; and indulgent towards his own pleasures, towards others, his
equals or dependents, he bore himself with a spirit of kindness and
magnanimity. Intolerant of tyranny, he was no tyrant. To say of such a man,
as Jefferson said of every slave-holder, that he lived in the perpetual
exercise of the most boisterous passions and unremitting despotism, and in
the exaction of the most degrading submission, was to pronounce judgment
hasty and unfair.
‘'Rather did Mrs. Stowe,
while not blind to his faults, discern his virtues when she made him,
embarrassed by death, exclaim: “If anybody had said to me that I should sell
Tom down south to one of those rascally traders, I should have said, ‘Is thy
servant a dog that he should do this thing?’” |