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The Material Culture of Slave Resistance
By Douglas R. Egerton
Professor of History, Le Moyne College
 
One reason to study the material culture of any society is to draw a richer image of what everyday life was like in years past. For example, the elaborate buttons and elegant buckles excavated at Poplar Forest, one of Thomas Jefferson’s plantations, suggest that some slaves had access to the larger market. In the same way, ask your students to use Solomon’s trial record to re-create slave life away from the quarters. What did enslaved Virginians do on their day off? To what extent did Sunday morning religious services slip comfortably into recreational activities? How did potential rebels like Gabriel use these leisure moments to recruit followers? A few astute students may even notice who is absent from this document. How often do women appear as incipient rebels in these depositions? In addressing that question, they will be using what historians call negative evidence: observing the peculiar absence of something one expects to find in a document but does not.

Other sorts of artifacts can help students contextualize slave rebelliousness. Herbert Aptheker, who has done more than any other scholar to rescue the enslaved from the insidious myth of docility, famously said that, “Slavery was the cause of slave rebellions.” At bottom, that is certainly true. Yet that blunt statement does little to explain why large-scale slave conspiracies were more prevalent in some parts of the Americas than in others, or why slave rebellions were virtually absent from the English mainland colonies in the seventeenth century, but quite common in the eighteenth. Most of all, it says little about the type of person who instigated slave revolts.

For an answer to that, return briefly to Solomon’s trial. One does not have to be Sherlock Holmes to deduce what Gabriel and Solomon did for a living, since their followers were to meet at the “Blacksmith Shop in the Woods.” But ask your students to explain what Gabriel’s soldiers planned to use as weapons. This may take some investigation, since a scythe is hardly a common farm implement today. Yet as plantation blacksmiths, artisans like Gabriel and Solomon worked with materials like scythes all the time, so reshaping long scythes into short but deadly swords was literally all in a day’s work. Moreover, although the vast majority of slaves in the Old South were illiterate—specialists guess that only five percent of slaves could read—the vast majority of enslaved artisans (and drivers) could read, albeit with some difficulty, and were able to sign their names.

"A.W." to "deer frind," 20 September 1800, courtesy of the Library of Virginia

Also, since most students, even those in college, tend to conflate slavery with cotton, this document serves as a powerful reminder that black workers performed every task imaginable. As Donald R. Wright reminds us, the cotton kingdom existed only in the last four decades of the 250 years that Africans and their descendants were enslaved in what is now the United States. And with one notable exception—Nat Turner—the men who led slave conspiracies were not field hands and they did not harvest cotton.

Artifacts like hammers, anvils, and carpentry tools tell their own stories, since they were the instruments slave laborers used to build the urban South. Yet these artifacts also hide part of their past, for they were not only used by black hands to forge the elegant ironwork gates still seen today in Charleston, but were themselves crafted by black hands. Slaves were rarely allowed to acquire property beyond the odd table or chair, but as these tools suggest, one form of privilege that was often passed down to the next generation was a skill (and one that in some cases was brought from Africa). In the Southern states, the sons of craftsmen became craftsmen, and often the daughters of domestics became domestics. Certainly urban slaves enjoyed better material conditions than field hands, since few masters wished shabbily dressed domestics to open their doors or prepare their food. “City air makes free,” medieval peasants once said, and African Americans in North America did not disagree. “A city slave is almost a freeman, compared with a slave on a plantation,” Frederick Douglass observed, and it is no accident that several historians have erroneously identified Gabriel as a freeman.

The metal “slave” or “free Negro” badges that cities like Charleston required black artisans to purchase are striking artifacts. But the artifacts that perhaps best illustrate the tendency of skilled, urban bondmen to plot for their freedom are two buildings -- the Charleston Workhouse and the City Jail, built on Magazine Street in 1768 and 1802, respectively. The Workhouse, formally known as the House of Correction, was an imposing brick structure that symbolized public control in the crowded city. Although it collapsed following an earthquake in the late nineteenth century, the boarded-up Jail, which shared its architectural style, yet stands as a monument to white fears of the state’s black majority (click here for a picture of the Old Jail building). The Workhouse “whipping room,” constructed of double walls filled with sand to muffle the screams of inmates, housed a crane, “on which a cord with two nooses runs over pullies.” The warden chained the feet of slaves to bolts in the floor, and then hoisted the crane until their bodies were “stretched out as much as possible.” Slaves took the beating, but masters paid a price too: Each visit to the Workhouse cost twenty-five cents.

Seen today, even in a small picture, the Charleston Jail, with its broken battlements and Bastille-like entrance, is a terrifying artifact of a not-too-distant past. Artifacts like clay pipes and wooden bowls may tell us much about how enslaved Americans spent their off hours, but crueler artifacts—shackles, slave badges, and the Workhouse itself—remind us just what those who risked their lives in the cause of liberty were up against.

For more information about the New York African Burial Ground, Gabriel's Rebellion, and other sources for material culture, visit our Additional Resources Page.




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