Slavery in America, typically associated with blacks from Africa, was an enterprise that began with the shipping of more than 300,000 white Britons to the colonies. This little known history is fascinatingly recounted in White Cargo (New York University Press, 2007). Drawing on letters, diaries, ship manifests, court documents, and government archives, authors Don Jordan and Michael Walsh detail how thousands of whites endured the hardships of tobacco farming and lived and died in bondage in the New World.
Following the cultivation in 1613 of
an acceptable tobacco crop in Virginia, the need for labor accelerated.
Slavery was viewed as the cheapest and most expedient way of providing the
necessary work force. Due to harsh working conditions, beatings, starvation,
and disease, survival rates for slaves rarely exceeded two years. Thus,
the high level of demand was sustained by a continuous flow of white slaves
from England, Ireland, and Scotland from 1618 to 1775, who were imported to
serve America's colonial masters.
These white slaves in the New World
consisted of street children plucked from London's back alleys, prostitutes,
and impoverished migrants searching for a brighter future and willing to sign
up for indentured servitude. Convicts were also persuaded to avoid
lengthy sentences and executions on their home soil by enslavement in the
British colonies. The much maligned Irish, viewed as savages worthy of
ethnic cleansing and despised for their rejection of Protestantism, also made
up a portion of America's first slave population, as did Quakers, Cavaliers,
Puritans, Jesuits, and others.
Around 1618 at the start of their
colonial slave trade, the English began by seizing and shipping to Virginia
impoverished children, even toddlers, from London slums. Some
impoverished parents sought a better life for their offspring and agreed to
send them, but most often, the children were sent despite their own protests
and those of their families. At the time, the London authorities
represented their actions as an act of charity, a chance for a poor youth to
apprentice in America, learn a trade, and avoid starvation at home.
Tragically, once these unfortunate youngsters arrived, 50% of them were dead
within a year after being sold to farmers to work the fields.
A few months after the first
shipment of children, the first African slaves were shipped to Virginia.
Interestingly, no American market existed for African slaves until late in the
17th century. Until then, black slave traders typically took their
cargo to Bermuda. England's poor were the colonies' preferred source of
slave labor, even though Europeans were more likely than Africans to die an
early death in the fields. Slave owners had a greater interest in keeping
African slaves alive because they represented a more significant
investment. Black slaves received better treatment than Europeans on
plantations, as they were viewed as valuable, lifelong property rather than
indentured servants with a specific term of service.
These indentured servants represented
the next wave of laborers. They were promised land after a period of
servitude, but most worked unpaid for up to15 years with few ever owning any
land. Mortality rates were high. Of the 1,200 who arrived in 1619,
more than two thirds perished in the first year from disease, working to death,
or Indian raid killings. In Maryland, out of 5,000 indentured servants
who entered the colony between 1670 and 1680, 1,250 died in bondage, 1,300
gained their right to freedom, and only 241 ever became landowners.
Early in the 17th century, the
headright system, a land allocation program to attract new colonists, began in
Jamestown, Virginia as an attempt to solve labor shortages. The program
provided acreage to heads of households that funded travel to the colony for
destitute individuals to work the land. It led to the sharp growth of
indentured servitude and slavery because the more slaves imported by a
colonist, the larger the tracts of land received. Promises of prosperity
and land were used to lure the poor, who were typically enslaved for three to
15 years. All the while, agents profited handsomely by augmenting their
land holdings. Corruption was rampant in the headright system and
included double-counting of individual slaves, land allocations for servants
who were dead upon arrival, and per head fees given for those kidnapped off
English streets.
Purveyors of slaves often worked in
teams of spirits, captains, and office-keepers to kidnap people from English
ports for sale in the American labor market. Spirits lured or kidnapped
potential servants and arranged for their transport with ship captains.
Office-keepers maintained a base to run the operation. They would
entertain their prey and get them to sign papers until an awaiting ship became
available. Spirits and their accomplices were occasionally put on trial,
but court records show that they got off easily and that the practice was
tolerated because it was so profitable.
The indentured servant system of
people who voluntarily mortgaged their freedom evolved into slavery.
England essentially dumped its unwanted in the American colonies, where they
were treated no better than livestock. Servants were regularly battered,
whipped, and humiliated. Disease was rampant, food was in short supply,
and working and living conditions were grim. War with local native Indian
tribes was common. Severe punishment made escape unrealistic.
Initially, running away was considered a capital crime, with clemency granted
in exchange for an agreement to increase the period of servitude.
In the 1640s, the transportation of
the Irish began. Britain's goal was to obliterate Ireland's Catholics to
make room for English planters. Catholics who refused to attend a
Protestant church could be fined. If they were unable to pay, they could
be sold as slaves. Following the end of the English Civil Wars in 1651,
English military and political leader Oliver Cromwell focused his attention on
Ireland, where the people had allied with the defeated royalists during the
conflict. Famine was created by the intentional destruction of food
stocks. Those implicated in the rebellion had their land confiscated and
were sold into slavery. Anyone refusing to relocate was threatened with
death, including children.
Scots were also subjected to
transportation to the British colonies for religious differences, as England
imposed Anglican disciplines on the Church of Scotland as well. The
English army was deployed to break up illegal church assemblies and imprison or
deport religious protesters.
Cruelty to servants was
rampant. Beatings were common, and the perpetrators, buttressed by juries
made up of fellow landowners, were rarely punished for abuse or even
murder. In time, efforts were made to improve the lot of servants.
Legislation in 1662 provided for a "competent diet, clothing and
lodging" and disciplinary measures not to "exceed the bounds of
moderation." Servants were granted the right to complain, but the
cruelty continued.
Infanticide by unmarried women was
common, as they could be severely punished for "fornication."
The mother faced a whipping, fines, and extra years added to her
servitude. Her offspring faced time in bondage as well. If the
mother was the victim of a rape by the master, he faced a fine and the loss of
a servant but wasn't subjected to whipping.
Several uprisings in the American
colonies awakened slave owners to problems, exposing their vulnerability within
the caste-like master-servant social system they had created. In 1676,
Nathaniel Bacon, an aristocrat from England who became a Virginia colonist,
instigated an insurrection, referred to as Bacon's Rebellion, that changed the
course of white slavery.
Prior to Bacon's Rebellion, much
discontentment existed among servants over seemingly empty promises of land
following their periods of indenture. When they were finally freed of
their obligations, many found that they couldn't afford the required land
surveying fees and the exorbitant poll taxes.
In 1675, when war broke out with
some of the native tribes, Bacon joined the side of the warring settlers and
offered freedom to every slave and servant who deserted his master and joined
Bacon in battle. Hundreds enthusiastically joined him in the
insurgency. When Bacon died suddenly, his supporters fled or surrendered;
some were recaptured, put in chains, and beaten or hanged. However,
because of the revolt, whites gained rights. Whippings were forbidden
without a formal judicial order.
By the early 1770s, the convict
trade was big business, more profitable than the black slave trade because
criminals were cheap. They could be sold for one third the price of
indentured servants. England's jails were being emptied into America on a
significant scale. Additionally, merchants who traded in convicts from
England and Ireland received a subsidy for every miscreant transported to
America. Up to a third of incoming convicts died from dysentery,
smallpox, typhoid, and freezing temperatures. Upon arrival, they were
advertised for sale, inspected, and taken away in chains by new masters.
Following the Revolutionary War, the
British continued to ship convict labor as "indentured servants" to
America. During that time, seven ships filled with prisoners made the
journey, and two successfully landed. In 1789, convict importation was
legally banned across the U.S. America would no longer be the dumping
ground for British criminals. It took another 30 years before the
indentured servant trade ended completely.
A well written and well researched
historical narrative, White Cargo does an excellent job of
elucidating a forgotten part of our colonial past by telling the story of
thousands of Britons who lived and died in bondage before African slaves were
transported to the New World.