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America’s Capitalism Has Embraced White Slaves as Well as Black
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JAMESTOWN: CONVICT WIVES.
A female convict, transported from an English prison to Jamestown, Virginia, as an indentured servant, sold for a wife to a male settler for 100 pounds of tobacco. Wood engraving, 19th century.
Sarah Jones wrote yesterday about Victoria Secret model Cameron Russell and white privilege. This is a significant issue because the Republican Party’s entire political orientation is as much about imposing heterodoxy in religion as it is in gender and, especially, ethnicity. White privilege is as old as the United States (and older) after all, and its impending loss has shattered the heart of conservative thinking.
All their thought is bent upon it, as Gandalf once said about the ring of the dark lord Sauron. And like Sauron, they will stop at nothing to get it back. Without white privilege, they cannot bind all the pluralistic threads of America into a nation ruled by white male Evangelicals – a reproduction of the nation they imagine once existed before that nasty revolution ruined everything for the rich white guys who owned other guys, gals, and kids.
And this white privilege goes beyond mere color to include socioeconomic status. A little known fact about Colonial America relates to how white privilege also created a class of white slaves: indentured servants as they were called. Indentured servitude was a cruel institution, one that originated on these shores in Virginia in 1620. It was not abolished until 1917 and “continued to exist in mainland North America at least until the fourth decade of the nineteenth century.”[1]
As one author put it, “For the first two centuries of the history of British North America, one word best characterizes the status of the vast majority of immigrants – servitude.” He goes on to say that “from the founding of Jamestown until the Revolution, nearly three-fourths of all immigrants to the thirteen colonies arrived in some condition of unfreedom.”[2] These days we tend to associate America with freedom, but that was far from the case. As Aaron S. Fogleman writes, “Before 1776, for most arrivals, coming to America meant a curtailment of freedom.”[3]
The Revolution meant freedom, first and foremost, to wealthy landowners, and also to merchants, craftsmen, and shopkeepers. Only grudgingly has it meant freedom for others.
And when we think about unfreedom, we generally think about black slavery, America’s “peculiar institution.” But in our history books as in our imaginations, indentured servitude gets short shrift, as do the economic underpinnings of both types of servitude. The economics still work against freedom, with some modern innovations. If the original tea party, cheered on by merchants, dumped British tea into Boston Harbor, the modern version, funded by rich corporations, throws American rights – your rights - under the bus. The result is that while corporations become people, people do not.
Everyone has heard about Australia and its convicts, but the same is true of America. Author Kevin Philips, in his book 1775 (2012) points out that Dr. Samuel Johnson, “a high Tory, famously called Americas ‘a race of convicts.’” According to Philips, some 50,000 British convicts were transported to America, but “during the first three quarters of the eighteenth century, roughly 307,400 white immigrants arrived in the thirteen colonies.” Just 49.3 percent of these were free. A staggering 33.7 percent were indentured servants.[4] George Washington owned twelve white people, along with his black slaves. He was worried about both running off to the British.[5] In Philadelphia, where Thomas Jefferson and others talked about the inalienable rights of man, an indentured servant market thrived.[6]
What was indentured servitude like? Bad. “Indentured servants were rarely well treated. They could go to court in most colonies, but sometimes their effort only wound up extending the term of their indenture.” Philips cites author Gordon S. Wood:”in the colonies, servitude was a much harsher, more brutal and more humiliating status than it was in England.” One British officer, Phillips relates, estimated that half of convict servants were dead within seven years. In Virginia, there was no real distinction between how convicts and indentured servants were treated. “In practical terms,” we are told, “purchasers often treated white indentured servants and convicts more or less similarly.”[7] It was bad enough for adults, but children could be indentured for periods of 15 years and kidnapping children was not a felony in England until 1814.[8] Thus some of the early settlers of the New World were children stolen from their parents in the Old.[9]
As one scholar has observed, “the English Government allowed the crime of kidnapping to flourish without serious restraint”[10]
Indentured servants were essentially slaves for the duration of their terms of servitude and could be bought and sold at their “owner’s” whim.[11] Their sale has been compared to that of horses and cows at a market or fair.[12] One scholar notes “a newspaper advertisement for ‘an estate to be sold in the province of Maryland’ in 1660 which described it as ‘stocked with servants, cattle, horses, and mares, sheep and swine.”[13]
The legal status of indentured servants in the colonies was “chattel” – literally property. [14] “Servants could be bought and sold and this was not just the transfer of labour rights but of alienable property.”[15] As Phillips relates, “even their unexpired terms were property, willable to heirs” and “this definition persisted during the Revolution, because most courts tried to keep a ‘property’ label on enlisted servants, to uphold owners’ rights to reimbursement for loss of service.”[16]
Indentured servitude has been called “proto-slavery”[17] and a form of feudalism.[18] “Ironically,” says Phillips, “black slaves, selling for roughly three times as much, often got better treatment because they were a lifetime investment. With indentured servants, an employer’s optimal return lay in obtaining as much sweat and output as possible over four, five, or seven years.”[19]
None of this downplays the reality or cruelty of black slavery. It is, rather, another example of privileged attitudes that reduce classes of people, whether based on skin color, socioeconomic status, gender, or sexual preference, to second-class status. We can’t even add “citizen” since they lacked the right to own property or to vote. Government run by the rich, who lack no concern for the welfare of those beneath them, is never to be desired.
Though today we focus mostly on slavery, it is forgotten that in the early days of colonial America, it was indentured servants who provided the needed agriculture labor, only to be replaced later by black slaves. “This transition from servants to slaves…occurred at different times in these regions [West Indies, the Chesapeake, South Carolina, and Georgia], and at different rates.”[20]
There is every reason to believe that modern conservatism is not greatly disturbed by the idea of returning to a master/servant paradigm, which, after all, has its English roots in economic disparity. The abolition rather than the broadening of rights is everywhere in evidence in right-wing rhetoric. Hand in hand with the shrinking Republican tent is a shrinking concept of equality and rights. These are accompanied by a corresponding shrinkage of white numbers as a percentage of the population.
In the end, we would see a return to debtor’s prisons and pre-Revolution social conditions with a broad underclass ruled by a predominantly white Christian upper-class. Women would lose the voting franchise (along with their reproductive rights) and would be beat on a whim by any male; children would be put back to work, and immigrants would be laborers, slaving nearly without rights for their white masters in a sort of American apartheid. The Republican dream would undo the very liberal American Revolution, which was never the dream of conservatives in the first place. It is no wonder they hate the Constitution, the Revolution’s shining symbol, so very much.
Image from: immigrationmuseum.wikispa…
[1] David W. Galenson, “The Rise and Fall of Indentured Servitude in the Americas: An Economic Analysis. The Journal of Economic History 44 (1984), 1-26.
[2] Aaron S. Fogleman, “From Slaves, Convicts, and Servants to Free Passengers: The Transformation of Immigration in the Era of the American Revolution.” The Journal of American History 85 (1998), 43-76.
[3] Fogleman (1998), 43.
[4] Kevin Phillips, 1775: A Good Year for Revolution. (New York, NY: 2012), 191.
[5] Phillips (2012), 364.
[6] Robert O. Heavner, “Indentured Servitude: The Philadelphia Market, 1771-1773. The Journal of Economic History 38 (1978), 701-713.
[7] Phillips (2012), 366.
[8] John Waering, “Preventative and Punitive Regulation in Seventeenth-Century Social Policy: Conflicts of Interests and the Failure to Make ‘Stealing and Transporting Children, and Other Persons’ a Felony, 1645-73. Social History 27 (2002), 288-308.
[9] Waering (2002), 291.
[10] Abbot Emerson Smith, “Indentured Servants: New Light on some of America’s “First” Families. The Journal of Economic History 2 (1942), 40-53.
[11] Phillips (2012), 192.
[12] Phillips (2012), 366.
[13] Waering (2002), 290.
[14] Phillips (2012), 365.
[15] Waering (2002), 290 n 15.
[16] Phillips (2012), 365.
[17] Hilary McD. Beckles. “Plantation Production and White ‘Proto-Slavery’: White Indentured Servants and the Colonisation of the English West Indies, 1624-1645. The Americas 41 (1985), 21-45.
[18] Rona S. Weiss, “Primitive Accumulation in the United States: the Interaction between Capitalist and Noncapitalist Class Relations in Seventeenth-Century Massachusetts. The Journal of Economic History 42 (1982), 77-82. Weiss defines feudalism “as a particular class relation and form of surplus appropriation by way of rents,” and Kahana (2007) says that “the very words master and servant evoke images of a feudal system, where a fief (feodum) was literally a form of property recognized at law”: Jeffrey S. Kahana, Master and Servant in the Early Republic, 1780-1830. Journal of the Early Republic 20 (2000), 27-57.
[19] Phillips (2012), 366.
[20] Galenson (1984), 10.
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Reynardine
Feb. 24th, 2013 at 5:37 pm
I have seen so much slavery apologetics in the dextrosphere that I think the following:
A. First, most of the middle class must be plunged into poverty. This is already largely accomplished.
B. Then, it must be made impossible for the poor to survive. By “othering” the poor– pretending they are all icky dark people, immoral women, immigrants, not ril uhMericuhns, etc, poor whites can be enlisted.
C. Now, corporate America comes to the rescue. They keep some kind of roof over your head, some kind of nourishment in your stomach, in return for an indenture for your useful life. No longer useful? Too bad.
MrsGunka
Feb. 24th, 2013 at 7:06 pm
By wiping out SS, Medicare, Medicaid it would wipe out the old, sick, and weak the fastest, leaving the young and strong and uneducated to do their work and fight their wars. Ever have a sinking feeling? Wake up America. We are smarter than them!
djchefron(Moderator)
Feb. 24th, 2013 at 7:35 pm
Was watching Roots the other day and the overseer said something that had ME thinking.I’m paraphrasing but he said this ‘When I first came I was just like the slaves as an indentured servant had no rights nothing.But at the end of mt service I was free.Now the difference between me and them even if you free the slaves they will always be black”
Now today is not if you are black or white but how much green you have.So I find it funny and perplexing when I debate the so called base of republicans that they argue on behalf of the rich while their services are cut.They say we have to cut entitlements to do something about the deficit.As Joe Biden might say “Malarkey”The only entitlement that needs reforming is the inbred belief of the 0.1% that they are entitled to 99.9% of the wealth and 100% of the power.
So now they have poor and middle class whites fighting against their own interest because of a sense of white entitlement they feel.And the funny thing about the middle class, is even if you aren’t middle class, you’re either frontin’ you are or are dreaming of the day you will be, so the middle class rhetoric resonates.Well I got news for them.Welcome to my world.Indentured Servitude
Shiva(Moderator)
Feb. 24th, 2013 at 7:43 pm
Its too bad republicans dont understand the roots of their DNA comes from the area around Kenya
From the same mother the whites in congress have over 170,000 years ago.
djchefron(Moderator)
Feb. 24th, 2013 at 7:57 pm
You know you done effed up now.History and evolution?
imageshack.us/a/img832/70...
Shiva(Moderator)
Feb. 24th, 2013 at 8:14 pm
Boy now there was a dysfunctional family
Cindy
Feb. 25th, 2013 at 9:00 am
Superb point made, especially the Roots bit. I ask my American friends all the time: don’t you see what’s happening right now to your futures? I moved to England in 1996 at 26 and came back in 2012 to help with my mother’s care – and the CHANGES that have occurred in that time made me weep…people actually talking about cutting teachers’ pensions but not taking the investment banking CEOs to task for the credit crisis. Ivan Boesky and Michael Milken went to jail for junk bonds in the ’80s – but they were nothing in comparison to the meltdown we’re still in. What is it about American culture that disallows the obvious to be seen from within but not from without? It’s like the boiling-water-frog story: too many Yanks have been in the pot while it was just warm and don’t realise they are being cooked alive right ever loving now.
djchefron(Moderator)
Feb. 25th, 2013 at 9:06 am
I hate to say it but if they are in a house on fire with the “others”,they will let it burn with them in it just so the “others”wont receive any help.
Cindy
Feb. 25th, 2013 at 9:31 am
Clearly you’re right – shame that’s true.
Anne
Feb. 24th, 2013 at 10:05 pm
The white supremacy and entitlement so many poor white Americans fight for does not work in their economic interests. That’s because although they don’t benefit from it, they are used as tools in the divide-and-conquer strategies by race, class, gender, religion, and sexual orientation by the likes of the Koch brothers and their lackeys. It’s become increasingly clear over the years that if one is not among the rich, they are fair game to the heartless efforts of the Koch brothers to marginalize and economically subjugate all of us.
Shiva(Moderator)
Feb. 24th, 2013 at 10:13 pm
Today’s capitalism is colorless. It is made up of non-competition corporations that collude instead of compete. Low paid people who in time will not be able to buy the products. It doesnt care if you are mexican, white or black. Those supporting getting rid of unions think they are favored. They will lose all the unions fought to get for them and they will be part of the slave market
But be happy, they want this for the world.
SinghX
Feb. 25th, 2013 at 11:53 am
And then, there’s the Downton Abbey remark made by Varney over at F & F as to what a bunch of “good guys” the rich are and how the wee-folks of the town love them dearly…sigh…if only Americans would do the same, we’d all know our place and die with the certainty that Lord and Lady of the Track Mansion was pleased with our servitude…especially when they if they didn’t pay into SS, medical, 401K…
djchefron(Moderator)
Feb. 25th, 2013 at 5:10 pm
Eric Cantor will propose Federal Law that Ends Overtime Pay for hourly workers
Full text: Eric Cantor’s ‘Make Life Work’ speech
www.washingtonpost.com/bl...
Any questions
Shiva(Moderator)
Feb. 25th, 2013 at 5:23 pm
Make life work? While someone is cutting your pay? Once again we have a situation where whatever the Congress decides is going to hurt the people and never the Congress. It’s out-of-control
djchefron(Moderator)
Feb. 25th, 2013 at 5:32 pm
But don’t tell our resident apologist that.We the people must suffer.So what if you don’t have fair wages you lucky to have a job.I detest them more than the bought and paid for ALEC sponsored congress.At least congress is getting paid.The apologist are just like a crack whore.Let me blow you for a nickel bag.And I apologize for insulting crack whores.
Shiva(Moderator)
Feb. 25th, 2013 at 5:55 pm
Therres much more then cutting overtime there. Try on cutting our healthcare, voucher systems for schools. He wants the US torn down
Inez
Feb. 25th, 2013 at 11:04 pm
Hope he makes that statement over and over again as a testment to his power over the 99%. The more he will be OUT OF OFFICE one way or another.
Janet Androsac
Feb. 25th, 2013 at 11:00 pm
Again Shiva I agree with you. The repub. & the Gop are blind to their own greed. They like lording over us all like they are kings or something.Looking down their hateful noses at everyone who’s not millionares like them. Sicking they are!It’s just unthinkable what they will sink to to fatten up their own bank accounts!
robyn ryan
Feb. 26th, 2013 at 12:13 am
20 years ago, they capped COLA for military retirees, claiming they would have a second career and pension. 20 years later, I curse the day I joined the military. My ‘deferred compensation’ is smaller now than it was 18 years ago.