Of the Quest of the Golden Fleece
But the Brute said in his breast,
“Till the mills I grind have ceased,
The riches shall be dust of dust, dry ashes be the
feast!
“On the strong and cunning
few
Cynic favors I will strew;
I will stuff their maw with overplus until their spirit
dies;
From the patient and the low
I will take the joys they know;
They shall hunger after vanities
and still an-hungered go.
Madness shall be on the people, ghastly jealousies
arise;
Brother’s blood shall cry on brother up the
dead and empty skies.
William VAUGHN MOODY.
Have you ever seen a cotton-field
white with harvest,—its golden fleece hovering
above the black earth like a silvery cloud edged with
dark green, its bold white signals waving like the
foam of billows from Carolina to Texas across that
Black and human Sea? I have sometimes half suspected
that here the winged ram Chrysomallus left that Fleece
after which Jason and his Argonauts went vaguely wandering
into the shadowy East three thousand years ago; and
certainly one might frame a pretty and not far-fetched
analogy of witchery and dragons’ teeth, and
blood and armed men, between the ancient and the modern
quest of the Golden Fleece in the Black Sea.
And now the golden fleece is found;
not only found, but, in its birthplace, woven.
For the hum of the cotton-mills is the newest and
most significant thing in the New South to-day.
All through the Carolinas and Georgia, away down to
Mexico, rise these gaunt red buildings, bare and homely,
and yet so busy and noisy withal that they scarce
seem to belong to the slow and sleepy land.
Perhaps they sprang from drag-ons’ teeth.
So the Cotton Kingdom still lives; the world still
bows beneath her sceptre. Even the markets that
once defied the parvenu have crept one by one across
the seas, and then slowly and reluctantly, but surely,
have started toward the Black Belt.
To be sure, there are those who wag
their heads knowingly and tell us that the capital
of the Cotton Kingdom has moved from the Black to
the White Belt,—that the Negro of to-day
raises not more than half of the cotton crop.
Such men forget that the cotton crop has doubled,
and more than doubled, since the era of slavery, and
that, even granting their con-tention, the Negro
is still supreme in a Cotton Kingdom larger than that
on which the Confederacy builded its hopes.
So the Negro forms to-day one of the chief figures
in a great world-industry; and this, for its own sake,
and in the light of historic interest, makes the field-hands
of the cotton country worth studying.
We seldom study the condition of the
Negro to-day hon-estly and carefully. It is
so much easier to assume that we know it all.
Or perhaps, having already reached conclusions in
our own minds, we are loth to have them disturbed by
facts. And yet how little we really know of these
millions,—of their daily lives and longings,
of their homely joys and sorrows, of their real shortcomings
and the meaning of their crimes! All this we
can only learn by intimate contact with the masses,
and not by wholesale arguments covering millions separate
in time and space, and differing widely in training
and culture. To-day, then, my reader, let us
turn our faces to the Black Belt of Georgia and seek
simply to know the condition of the black farm-laborers
of one county there.
Here in 1890 lived ten thousand Negroes
and two thousand whites. The country is rich,
yet the people are poor. The keynote of the
Black Belt is debt; not commercial credit, but debt
in the sense of continued inability on the part of
the mass of the population to make income cover expense.
This is the direct heritage of the South from the
wasteful econo-mies of the slave regime; but it was
emphasized and brought to a crisis by the Emancipation
of the slaves. In 1860, Dougherty County had
six thousand slaves, worth at least two and a half
millions of dollars; its farms were estimated at three
millions,—making five and a half millions
of property, the value of which depended largely on
the slave system, and on the speculative demand for
land once marvellously rich but already partially
devitalized by careless and exhaustive cul-ture.
The war then meant a financial crash; in place of
the five and a half millions of 1860, there remained
in 1870 only farms valued at less than two millions.
With this came in-creased competition in cotton
culture from the rich lands of Texas; a steady fall
in the normal price of cotton followed, from about
fourteen cents a pound in 1860 until it reached four
cents in 1898. Such a financial revolution was
it that involved the owners of the cotton-belt in
debt. And if things went ill with the master,
how fared it with the man?
The plantations of Dougherty County
in slavery days were not as imposing and aristocratic
as those of Virginia. The Big House was smaller
and usually one-storied, and sat very near the slave
cabins. Sometimes these cabins stretched off
on either side like wings; sometimes only on one side,
forming a double row, or edging the road that turned
into the plantation from the main thoroughfare.
The form and disposition of the laborers’ cabins
throughout the Black Belt is to-day the same as in
slavery days. Some live in the self-same cabins,
others in cabins rebuilt on the sites of the old.
All are sprinkled in little groups over the face
of the land, centering about some dilapidated Big
House where the head-tenant or agent lives.
The general character and arrangement of these dwellings
remains on the whole unaltered. There were in
the county, outside the corporate town of Albany,
about fifteen hundred Negro families in 1898.
Out of all these, only a single family occupied a
house with seven rooms; only fourteen have five rooms
or more. The mass live in one- and two-room homes.
The size and arrangements of a people’s
homes are no unfair index of their condition.
If, then, we inquire more carefully into these Negro
homes, we find much that is unsatisfactory.
All over the face of the land is the one-room cabin,—now
standing in the shadow of the Big House, now staring
at the dusty road, now rising dark and sombre amid
the green of the cotton-fields. It is nearly
always old and bare, built of rough boards, and neither
plastered nor ceiled. Light and ventilation
are supplied by the single door and by the square
hole in the wall with its wooden shutter. There
is no glass, porch, or ornamentation without.
Within is a fireplace, black and smoky, and usually
unsteady with age. A bed or two, a table, a
wooden chest, and a few chairs compose the furniture;
while a stray show-bill or a newspaper makes up the
decorations for the walls. Now and then one may
find such a cabin kept scrupulously neat, with merry
steaming fireplaces and hospitable door; but the majority
are dirty and dilapidated, smelling of eating and
sleeping, poorly venti-lated, and anything but homes.
Above all, the cabins are crowded.
We have come to associ-ate crowding with homes in
cities almost exclusively. This is primarily
because we have so little accurate knowledge of country
life. Here in Dougherty County one may find families
of eight and ten occupying one or two rooms, and for
every ten rooms of house accommodation for the Negroes
there are twenty-five persons. The worst tenement
abominations of New York do not have above twenty-two
persons for every ten rooms. Of course, one
small, close room in a city, without a yard, is in
many respects worse than the larger single country
room. In other respects it is better; it has
glass windows, a decent chimney, and a trustworthy
floor. The single great advantage of the Negro
peasant is that he may spend most of his life outside
his hovel, in the open fields.
There are four chief causes of these
wretched homes: First, long custom born of slavery
has assigned such homes to Negroes; white laborers
would be offered better accommoda-tions, and might,
for that and similar reasons, give better work.
Secondly, the Negroes, used to such accommodations,
do not as a rule demand better; they do not know what
better houses mean. Thirdly, the landlords as
a class have not yet come to realize that it is a
good business investment to raise the standard of
living among labor by slow and judicious methods;
that a Negro laborer who demands three rooms and fifty
cents a day would give more efficient work and leave
a larger profit than a discouraged toiler herding
his family in one room and working for thirty cents.
Lastly, among such conditions of life there are few
incentives to make the laborer become a better farmer.
If he is ambitious, he moves to town or tries other
labor; as a tenant-farmer his outlook is almost hopeless,
and following it as a makeshift, he takes the house
that is given him without protest.
In such homes, then, these Negro peasants
live. The fami-lies are both small and large;
there are many single tenants, —widows
and bachelors, and remnants of broken groups.
The system of labor and the size of the houses both
tend to the breaking up of family groups: the
grown children go away as contract hands or migrate
to town, the sister goes into service; and so one
finds many families with hosts of babies, and many
newly married couples, but comparatively few families
with half-grown and grown sons and daughters.
The average size of Negro families has undoubtedly
decreased since the war, primarily from economic stress.
In Russia over a third of the bridegrooms and over
half the brides are under twenty; the same was true
of the antebellum Negroes. To-day, however,
very few of the boys and less than a fifth of the
Negro girls under twenty are married. The young
men marry between the ages of twenty-five and thirty-five;
the young women between twenty and thirty. Such
postponement is due to the difficulty of earning sufficient
to rear and support a family; and it undoubtedly leads,
in the country districts, to sexual immorality.
The form of this immorality, however, is very seldom
that of prostitution, and less fre-quently that of
illegitimacy than one would imagine. Rather,
it takes the form of separation and desertion after
a family group has been formed. The number of
separated persons is thirty-five to the thousand,—a
very large number. It would of course be unfair
to compare this number with divorce statistics, for
many of these separated women are in reality widowed,
were the truth known, and in other cases the separation
is not permanent. Nevertheless, here lies the
seat of greatest moral danger. There is little
or no prostitution among these Negroes, and over three-fourths
of the families, as found by house-to-house investigation,
deserve to be classed as decent people with considerable
regard for female chastity. To be sure, the
ideas of the mass would not suit New England, and
there are many loose habits and notions. Yet
the rate of illegitimacy is undoubtedly lower than
in Austria or Italy, and the women as a class are
modest. The plague-spot in sexual relations
is easy marriage and easy separation. This
is no sudden development, nor the fruit of Emancipa-tion.
It is the plain heritage from slavery. In those
days Sam, with his master’s consent, “took
up” with Mary. No cere-mony was necessary,
and in the busy life of the great planta-tions of
the Black Belt it was usually dispensed with.
If now the master needed Sam’s work in another
plantation or in another part of the same plantation,
or if he took a notion to sell the slave, Sam’s
married life with Mary was usually unceremoniously
broken, and then it was clearly to the mas-ter’s
interest to have both of them take new mates.
This widespread custom of two centuries has not been
eradicated in thirty years. To-day Sam’s
grandson “takes up” with a woman without
license or ceremony; they live together de-cently
and honestly, and are, to all intents and purposes,
man and wife. Sometimes these unions are never
broken until death; but in too many cases family quarrels,
a roving spirit, a rival suitor, or perhaps more frequently
the hopeless battle to support a family, lead to separation,
and a broken house-hold is the result. The
Negro church has done much to stop this practice,
and now most marriage ceremonies are per-formed by
the pastors. Nevertheless, the evil is still
deep seated, and only a general raising of the standard
of living will finally cure it.
Looking now at the county black population
as a whole, it is fair to characterize it as poor
and ignorant. Perhaps ten per cent compose the
well-to-do and the best of the laborers, while at
least nine per cent are thoroughly lewd and vicious.
The rest, over eighty per cent, are poor and ignorant,
fairly honest and well meaning, plodding, and to a
degree shiftless, with some but not great sexual looseness.
Such class lines are by no means fixed; they vary,
one might almost say, with the price of cotton.
The degree of ignorance cannot easily be expressed.
We may say, for instance, that nearly two-thirds
of them cannot read or write. This but partially
expresses the fact. They are ignorant of the
world about them, of modern economic organization,
of the function of government, of individual worth
and possibilities,—of nearly all those things
which slavery in self-defence had to keep them from
learning. Much that the white boy imbibes from
his earliest social atmosphere forms the puzzling
problems of the black boy’s mature years.
America is not another word for Opportunity to all
her sons.
It is easy for us to lose ourselves
in details in endeavoring to grasp and comprehend
the real condition of a mass of human beings.
We often forget that each unit in the mass is a throbbing
human soul. Ignorant it may be, and poverty stricken,
black and curious in limb and ways and thought; and
yet it loves and hates, it toils and tires, it laughs
and weeps its bitter tears, and looks in vague and
awful longing at the grim horizon of its life,—all
this, even as you and I. These black thousands are
not in reality lazy; they are improvident and careless;
they insist on breaking the monotony of toil with a
glimpse at the great town-world on Saturday; they have
their loafers and their rascals; but the great mass
of them work continuously and faithfully for a return,
and under circum-stances that would call forth equal
voluntary effort from few if any other modern laboring
class. Over eighty-eight per cent of them—men,
women, and children—are farmers. Indeed,
this is almost the only industry. Most of the
children get their schooling after the “crops
are laid by,” and very few there are that stay
in school after the spring work has begun.
Child-labor is to be found here in some of its worst
phases, as fostering ignorance and stunting physical
development. With the grown men of the county
there is little variety in work: thirteen hundred
are farmers, and two hundred are laborers, teamsters,
etc., including twenty-four artisans, ten merchants,
twenty-one preachers, and four teachers. This
narrowness of life reaches its maximum among the women:
thirteen hundred and fifty of these are farm laborers,
one hundred are servants and washerwomen, leaving
sixty-five housewives, eight teach-ers, and six seamstresses.
Among this people there is no leisure
class. We often forget that in the United States
over half the youth and adults are not in the world
earning incomes, but are making homes, learn-ing
of the world, or resting after the heat of the strife.
But here ninety-six per cent are toiling; no one
with leisure to turn the bare and cheerless cabin
into a home, no old folks to sit beside the fire and
hand down traditions of the past; little of careless
happy childhood and dreaming youth. The dull
mo-notony of daily toil is broken only by the gayety
of the thoughtless and the Saturday trip to town.
The toil, like all farm toil, is monotonous, and
here there are little machinery and few tools to relieve
its burdensome drudgery. But with all this,
it is work in the pure open air, and this is something
in a day when fresh air is scarce.
The land on the whole is still fertile,
despite long abuse. For nine or ten months
in succession the crops will come if asked: garden
vegetables in April, grain in May, melons in June
and July, hay in August, sweet potatoes in September,
and cotton from then to Christmas. And yet on
two-thirds of the land there is but one crop, and
that leaves the toilers in debt. Why is this?
Away down the Baysan road, where the
broad flat fields are flanked by great oak forests,
is a plantation; many thou-sands of acres it used
to run, here and there, and beyond the great wood.
Thirteen hundred human beings here obeyed the call
of one,—were his in body, and largely in
soul. One of them lives there yet,—a
short, stocky man, his dull-brown face seamed and
drawn, and his tightly curled hair gray-white.
The crops? Just tolerable, he said; just tolerable.
Get-ting on? No—he wasn’t
getting on at all. Smith of Albany “furnishes”
him, and his rent is eight hundred pounds of cotton.
Can’t make anything at that. Why didn’t
he buy land! Humph! Takes money to buy
land. And he turns away. Free! The
most piteous thing amid all the black ruin of war-time,
amid the broken fortunes of the masters, the blighted
hopes of mothers and maidens, and the fall of an empire,—the
most piteous thing amid all this was the black freedman
who threw down his hoe because the world called him
free. What did such a mockery of freedom mean?
Not a cent of money, not an inch of land, not a mouthful
of victuals,—not even owner-ship of the
rags on his back. Free! On Saturday, once
or twice a month, the old master, before the war,
used to dole out bacon and meal to his Negroes.
And after the first flush of freedom wore off, and
his true helplessness dawned on the freedman, he came
back and picked up his hoe, and old master still doled
out his bacon and meal. The legal form of service
was theoretically far different; in practice, task-work
or “cropping” was substituted for daily
toil in gangs; and the slave gradually became a metayer,
or tenant on shares, in name, but a laborer with indeterminate
wages in fact.
Still the price of cotton fell, and
gradually the landlords deserted their plantations,
and the reign of the merchant began. The merchant
of the Black Belt is a curious institution,—part
banker, part landlord, part banker, and part despot.
His store, which used most frequently to stand at
the cross-roads and be-come the centre of a weekly
village, has now moved to town; and thither the Negro
tenant follows him. The merchant keeps everything,—clothes
and shoes, coffee and sugar, pork and meal, canned
and dried goods, wagons and ploughs, seed and fertilizer,—and
what he has not in stock he can give you an order
for at the store across the way. Here, then,
comes the ten-ant, Sam Scott, after he has contracted
with some absent land-lord’s agent for hiring
forty acres of land; he fingers his hat nervously
until the merchant finishes his morning chat with
Colonel Saunders, and calls out, “Well, Sam,
what do you want?” Sam wants him to “furnish”
him,—i.e., to advance him food and clothing
for the year, and perhaps seed and tools, until his
crop is raised and sold. If Sam seems a favorable
subject, he and the merchant go to a lawyer, and Sam
executes a chattel mortgage on his mule and wagon
in return for seed and a week’s rations.
As soon as the green cotton-leaves appear above the
ground, another mortgage is given on the “crop.”
Every Saturday, or at longer intervals, Sam calls
upon the merchant for his “rations”; a
family of five usually gets about thirty pounds of
fat side-pork and a couple of bushels of cornmeal a
month. Besides this, clothing and shoes must
be furnished; if Sam or his family is sick, there
are orders on the druggist and doctor; if the mule
wants shoeing, an order on the black-smith, etc.
If Sam is a hard worker and crops promise well, he
is often encouraged to buy more,—sugar,
extra clothes, perhaps a buggy. But he is seldom
encouraged to save. When cotton rose to ten
cents last fall, the shrewd merchants of Dougherty
County sold a thousand buggies in one season, mostly
to black men.
The security offered for such transactions—a
crop and chattel mortgage—may at first
seem slight. And, indeed, the merchants tell
many a true tale of shiftlessness and cheating; of
cotton picked at night, mules disappearing, and tenants
absconding. But on the whole the merchant of
the Black Belt is the most prosperous man in the section.
So skilfully and so closely has he drawn the bonds
of the law about the tenant, that the black man has
often simply to choose between pau-perism and crime;
he “waives” all homestead exemptions in
his contract; he cannot touch his own mortgaged crop,
which the laws put almost in the full control of the
land-owner and of the merchant. When the crop
is growing the merchant watches it like a hawk; as
soon as it is ready for market he takes possession
of it, sells it, pays the landowner his rent, subtracts
his bill for supplies, and if, as sometimes happens,
there is anything left, he hands it over to the black
serf for his Christmas celebration.
The direct result of this system is
an all-cotton scheme of agriculture and the continued
bankruptcy of the tenant. The currency of the
Black Belt is cotton. It is a crop always salable
for ready money, not usually subject to great yearly
fluctuations in price, and one which the Negroes know
how to raise. The landlord therefore demands
his rent in cotton, and the merchant will accept mortgages
on no other crop. There is no use asking the
black tenant, then, to diversify his crops,—he
cannot under this system. Moreover, the system
is bound to bankrupt the tenant. I remember
once meeting a little one-mule wagon on the River
road. A young black fellow sat in it driving
listlessly, his elbows on his knees. His dark-faced
wife sat beside him, stolid, silent.
“Hello!” cried my driver,—he
has a most imprudent way of addressing these people,
though they seem used to it, —“what
have you got there?”
“Meat and meal,” answered
the man, stopping. The meat lay uncovered in
the bottom of the wagon,—a great thin side
of fat pork covered with salt; the meal was in a white
bushel bag.
“What did you pay for that meat?”
“Ten cents a pound.”
It could have been bought for six or seven cents
cash.
“And the meal?”
“Two dollars.” One
dollar and ten cents is the cash price in town.
Here was a man paying five dollars for goods which
he could have bought for three dollars cash, and raised
for one dollar or one dollar and a half.
Yet it is not wholly his fault.
The Negro farmer started behind,—started
in debt. This was not his choosing, but the
crime of this happy-go-lucky nation which goes blundering
along with its Reconstruction tragedies, its Spanish
war inter-ludes and Philippine matinees, just as
though God really were dead. Once in debt, it
is no easy matter for a whole race to emerge.
In the year of low-priced cotton,
1898, out of three hun-dred tenant families one hundred
and seventy-five ended their year’s work in
debt to the extent of fourteen thousand dollars; fifty
cleared nothing, and the remaining seventy-five made
a total profit of sixteen hundred dollars. The
net indebtedness of the black tenant families of the
whole county must have been at least sixty thousand
dollars. In a more prosperous year the situation
is far better; but on the average the majority of
tenants end the year even, or in debt, which means
that they work for board and clothes. Such an
economic organiza-tion is radically wrong.
Whose is the blame?
The underlying causes of this situation
are complicated but discernible. And one of
the chief, outside the carelessness of the nation
in letting the slave start with nothing, is the widespread
opinion among the merchants and employers of the Black
Belt that only by the slavery of debt can the Negro
be kept at work. Without doubt, some pressure
was necessary at the beginning of the free-labor system
to keep the listless and lazy at work; and even to-day
the mass of the Negro laborers need stricter guardianship
than most Northern labor-ers. Behind this honest
and widespread opinion dishonesty and cheating of
the ignorant laborers have a good chance to take refuge.
And to all this must be added the obvious fact that
a slave ancestry and a system of unrequited toil has
not improved the efficiency or temper of the mass
of black laborers. Nor is this peculiar to Sambo;
it has in history been just as true of John and Hans,
of Jacques and Pat, of all ground-down peasantries.
Such is the situation of the mass of the Negroes
in the Black Belt to-day; and they are thinking about
it. Crime, and a cheap and dangerous socialism,
are the inevitable results of this pondering.
I see now that ragged black man sitting on a log,
aimlessly whittling a stick. He muttered to
me with the murmur of many ages, when he said:
“White man sit down whole year; Nigger work day
and night and make crop; Nigger hardly gits bread
and meat; white man sittin’ down gits all.
It’s wrong.” And what do the better
classes of Negroes do to improve their situation?
One of two things: if any way possible, they
buy land; if not, they migrate to town. Just
as centuries ago it was no easy thing for the serf
to escape into the freedom of town-life, even so to-day
there are hindrances laid in the way of county laborers.
In considerable parts of all the Gulf States, and
especially in Mississippi, Louisiana, and Arkansas,
the Negroes on the plantations in the back-country
districts are still held at forced labor practically
without wages. Especially is this true in districts
where the farmers are composed of the more ignorant
class of poor whites, and the Negroes are beyond the
reach of schools and intercourse with their advancing
fellows. If such a peon should run away, the
sheriff, elected by white suf-frage, can usually
be depended on to catch the fugitive, return him,
and ask no questions. If he escape to another
county, a charge of petty thieving, easily true, can
be depended upon to secure his return. Even
if some unduly officious person insist upon a trial,
neighborly comity will probably make his con-viction
sure, and then the labor due the county can easily
be bought by the master. Such a system is impossible
in the more civilized parts of the South, or near
the large towns and cities; but in those vast stretches
of land beyond the telegraph and the newspaper the
spirit of the Thirteenth Amendment is sadly broken.
This represents the lowest economic depths of the
black American peasant; and in a study of the rise
and condition of the Negro freeholder we must trace
his economic progress from the modern serfdom.
Even in the better-ordered country
districts of the South the free movement of agricultural
laborers is hindered by the migration-agent laws.
The “Associated Press” recently in-formed
the world of the arrest of a young white man in Southern
Georgia who represented the “Atlantic Naval Sup-plies
Company,” and who “was caught in the act
of enticing hands from the turpentine farm of Mr.
John Greer.” The crime for which this
young man was arrested is taxed five hundred dollars
for each county in which the employment agent proposes
to gather laborers for work outside the State.
Thus the Negroes’ ignorance of the labor-market
outside his own vicinity is increased rather than
diminished by the laws of nearly every Southern State.
Similar to such measures is the unwritten
law of the back districts and small towns of the South,
that the character of all Negroes unknown to the mass
of the community must be vouched for by some white
man. This is really a revival of the old Roman
idea of the patron under whose protection the new-made
freedman was put. In many instances this system
has been of great good to the Negro, and very often
under the protection and guidance of the former master’s
family, or other white friends, the freedman progressed
in wealth and morality. But the same system
has in other cases resulted in the refusal of whole
communities to recognize the right of a Negro to change
his habitation and to be master of his own fortunes.
A black stranger in Baker County, Georgia, for instance,
is liable to be stopped anywhere on the public highway
and made to state his business to the satisfaction
of any white interrogator. If he fails to give
a suitable answer, or seems too independent or “sassy,”
he may be arrested or summarily driven away.
Thus it is that in the country districts
of the South, by written or unwritten law, peonage,
hindrances to the migra-tion of labor, and a system
of white patronage exists over large areas.
Besides this, the chance for lawless oppression and
illegal exactions is vastly greater in the country
than in the city, and nearly all the more serious
race disturbances of the last decade have arisen from
disputes in the count be-tween master and man,—as,
for instance, the Sam Hose affair. As a result
of such a situation, there arose, first, the Black
Belt; and, second, the Migration to Town. The
Black Belt was not, as many assumed, a movement toward
fields of labor under more genial climatic conditions;
it was primarily a huddling for self-protection,—a
massing of the black popu-lation for mutual defence
in order to secure the peace and tranquillity necessary
to economic advance. This movement took place
between Emancipation and 1880, and only par-tially
accomplished the desired results. The rush to
town since 1880 is the counter-movement of men disappointed
in the economic opportunities of the Black Belt.
In Dougherty County, Georgia, one
can see easily the results of this experiment in huddling
for protection. Only ten per cent of the adult
population was born in the county, and yet the blacks
outnumber the whites four or five to one. There
is undoubtedly a security to the blacks in their very
numbers,—a personal freedom from arbitrary
treatment, which makes hun-dreds of laborers cling
to Dougherty in spite of low wages and economic distress.
But a change is coming, and slowly but surely even
here the agricultural laborers are drifting to town
and leaving the broad acres behind. Why is this?
Why do not the Negroes become land-owners, and build
up the black landed peasantry, which has for a generation
and more been the dream of philanthropist and statesman?
To the car-window sociologist, to
the man who seeks to understand and know the South
by devoting the few leisure hours of a holiday trip
to unravelling the snarl of centuries,—to
such men very often the whole trouble with the black
field-hand may be summed up by Aunt Ophelia’s
word, “Shift-less!” They have noted
repeatedly scenes like one I saw last summer.
We were riding along the highroad to town at the
close of a long hot day. A couple of young black
fellows passed us in a muleteam, with several bushels
of loose corn in the ear. One was driving, listlessly
bent forward, his elbows on his knees,—a
happy-go-lucky, careless picture of irrespon-sibility.
The other was fast asleep in the bottom of the wagon.
As we passed we noticed an ear of corn fall from
the wagon. They never saw it,—not
they. A rod farther on we noted another ear
on the ground; and between that creeping mule and
town we counted twenty-six ears of corn. Shiftless?
Yes, the personification of shiftlessness.
And yet follow those boys: they are not lazy;
to-morrow morning they’ll be up with the sun;
they work hard when they do work, and they work willingly.
They have no sordid, selfish, money-getting ways,
but rather a fine disdain for mere cash. They’ll
loaf before your face and work behind your back with
good-natured honesty. They’ll steal a
watermelon, and hand you back your lost purse intact.
Their great defect as laborers lies in their lack
of incentive beyond the mere pleasure of physical exer-tion.
They are careless because they have not found that
it pays to be careful; they are improvident because
the im-provident ones of their acquaintance get on
about as well as the provident. Above all, they
cannot see why they should take unusual pains to make
the white man’s land better, or to fatten his
mule, or save his corn. On the other hand, the
white land-owner argues that any attempt to improve
these laborers by increased responsibility, or higher
wages, or better homes, or land of their own, would
be sure to result in failure. He shows his Northern
visitor the scarred and wretched land; the ruined
mansions, the worn-out soil and mortgaged acres, and
says, This is Negro freedom!
Now it happens that both master and
man have just enough argument on their respective
sides to make it difficult for them to understand
each other. The Negro dimly personifies in the
white man all his ills and misfortunes; if he is poor,
it is because the white man seizes the fruit of his
toil; if he is ignorant, it is because the white man
gives him neither time nor facilities to learn; and,
indeed, if any misfortune happens to him, it is because
of some hidden machinations of “white folks.”
On the other hand, the masters and the masters’
sons have never been able to see why the Negro, instead
of settling down to he day-laborers for bread and
clothes, are infected with a silly desire to rise
in the world, and why they are sulky, dissatisfied,
and careless, where their fathers were happy and dumb
and faithful. “Why, you niggers have an
easier time than I do,” said a puzzled Albany
merchant to his black customer. “Yes,”
he replied, “and so does yo’ hogs.”
Taking, then, the dissatisfied and
shiftless field-hand as a starting-point, let us inquire
how the black thousands of Dougherty have struggled
from him up toward their ideal, and what that ideal
is. All social struggle is evidenced by the
rise, first of economic, then of social classes, among
a homo-geneous population. To-day the following
economic classes are plainly differentiated among
these Negroes.
A “submerged tenth” of
croppers, with a few paupers; forty per cent who are
metayers and thirty-nine per cent of semi-metayers
and wage-laborers. There are left five per cent
of money-renters and six per cent of freeholders,—the
“Up-per Ten” of the land. The croppers
are entirely without capital, even in the limited
sense of food or money to keep them from seed-time
to harvest. All they furnish is their labor;
the land-owner furnishes land, stock, tools, seed,
and house; and at the end of the year the laborer
gets from a third to a half of the crop. Out
of his share, however, comes pay and interest for
food and clothing advanced him during the year.
Thus we have a laborer without capital and without
wages, and an employer whose capital is largely his
employ-ees’ wages. It is an unsatisfactory
arrangement, both for hirer and hired, and is usually
in vogue on poor land with hard-pressed owners.
Above the croppers come the great
mass of the black population who work the land on
their own responsibility, paying rent in cotton and
supported by the crop-mortgage system. After
the war this system was attractive to the freedmen
on account of its larger freedom and its possibility
for making a surplus. But with the carrying
out of the crop-lien system, the deterioration of
the land, and the slavery of debt, the position of
the metayers has sunk to a dead level of practi-cally
unrewarded toil. Formerly all tenants had some
capital, and often considerable; but absentee landlordism,
rising rack-rent, and failing cotton have stripped
them well-nigh of all, and probably not over half
of them to-day own their mules. The change
from cropper to tenant was accomplished by fixing
the rent. If, now, the rent fixed was reasonable,
this was an incentive to the tenant to strive.
On the other hand, if the rent was too high, or if
the land deteriorated, the result was to discourage
and check the efforts of the black peas-antry.
There is no doubt that the latter case is true; that
in Dougherty County every economic advantage of the
price of cotton in market and of the strivings of
the tenant has been taken advantage of by the landlords
and merchants, and swallowed up in rent and interest.
If cotton rose in price, the rent rose even higher;
if cotton fell, the rent remained or followed reluctantly.
If the tenant worked hard and raised a large crop,
his rent was raised the next year; if that year the
crop failed, his corn was confiscated and his mule
sold for debt. There were, of course, exceptions
to this,—cases of personal kindness and
forbearance; but in the vast majority of cases the
rule was to extract the uttermost farthing from the
mass of the black farm laborers.
The average metayer pays from twenty
to thirty per cent of his crop in rent. The
result of such rack-rent can only be evil,—abuse
and neglect of the soil, deterioration in the character
of the laborers, and a widespread sense of injustice.
“Wherever the country is poor,” cried
Arthur Young, “it is in the hands of metayers,”
and “their condition is more wretched than that
of day-laborers.” He was talking of Italy
a century ago; but he might have been talking of Dougherty
County to-day. And especially is that true to-day
which he declares was true in France before the Revolution:
“The metayers are considered as little better
than menial servants, removable at pleasure, and obliged
to conform in all things to the will of the landlords.”
On this low plane half the black population of Dougherty
County—perhaps more than half the black
millions of this land—are to-day struggling.
A degree above these we may place
those laborers who receive money wages for their work.
Some receive a house with perhaps a garden-spot;
then supplies of food and cloth-ing are advanced,
and certain fixed wages are given at the end of the
year, varying from thirty to sixty dollars, out of
which the supplies must be paid for, with interest.
About eighteen per cent of the population belong
to this class of semi-metayers, while twenty-two per
cent are laborers paid by the month or year, and are
either “furnished” by their own savings
or perhaps more usually by some merchant who takes
his chances of payment. Such laborers receive
from thirty-five to fifty cents a day during the working
season. They are usually young unmarried persons,
some being women; and when they marry they sink to
the class of metayers, or, more seldom, become renters.
The renters for fixed money rentals
are the first of the emerging classes, and form five
per cent of the families. The sole advantage
of this small class is their freedom to choose their
crops, and the increased responsibility which comes
through having money transactions. While some
of the rent-ers differ little in condition from the
metayers, yet on the whole they are more intelligent
and responsible persons, and are the ones who eventually
become land-owners. Their bet-ter character
and greater shrewdness enable them to gain, perhaps
to demand, better terms in rents; rented farms, vary-ing
from forty to a hundred acres, bear an average rental
of about fifty-four dollars a year. The men
who conduct such farms do not long remain renters;
either they sink to meta-yers, or with a successful
series of harvests rise to be land-owners.
In 1870 the tax-books of Dougherty
report no Negroes as landholders. If there were
any such at that time,—and there may have
been a few,—their land was probably held
in the name of some white patron,—a method
not uncommon during slavery. In 1875 ownership
of land had begun with seven hundred and fifty acres;
ten years later this had in-creased to over sixty-five
hundred acres, to nine thousand acres in 1890 and
ten thousand in 1900. The total assessed property
has in this same period risen from eighty thousand
dollars in 1875 to two hundred and forty thousand dollars
in 1900.
Two circumstances complicate this
development and make it in some respects difficult
to be sure of the real tendencies; they are the panic
of 1893, and the low price of cotton in 1898.
Besides this, the system of assessing property in
the country districts of Georgia is somewhat antiquated
and of uncertain statistical value; there are no assessors,
and each man makes a sworn return to a tax-receiver.
Thus public opinion plays a large part, and the returns
vary strangely from year to year. Certainly
these figures show the small amount of accumulated
capital among the Negroes, and the conse-quent large
dependence of their property on temporary pros-perity.
They have little to tide over a few years of economic
depression, and are at the mercy of the cotton-market
far more than the whites. And thus the land-owners,
despite their marvellous efforts, are really a transient
class, continually being depleted by those who fall
back into the class of renters or metayers, and augmented
by newcomers from the masses. Of one hundred
land-owners in 1898, half had bought their land since
1893, a fourth between 1890 and 1893, a fifth between
1884 and 1890, and the rest between 1870 and 1884.
In all, one hundred and eighty-five Negroes have
owned land in this county since 1875.
If all the black land-owners who had
ever held land here had kept it or left it in the
hands of black men, the Negroes would have owned nearer
thirty thousand acres than the fifteen thousand they
now hold. And yet these fifteen thou-sand acres
are a creditable showing,—a proof of no
little weight of the worth and ability of the Negro
people. If they had been given an economic start
at Emancipation, if they had been in an enlightened
and rich community which really desired their best
good, then we might perhaps call such a result small
or even insignificant. But for a few thousand
poor ignorant field-hands, in the face of poverty,
a falling market, and social stress, to save and capitalize
two hundred thousand dollars in a generation has meant
a tremendous effort. The rise of a nation, the
pressing forward of a social class, means a bitter
struggle, a hard and soul-sickening battle with the
world such as few of the more favored classes know
or appreciate.
Out of the hard economic conditions
of this portion of the Black Belt, only six per cent
of the population have suc-ceeded in emerging into
peasant proprietorship; and these are not all firmly
fixed, but grow and shrink in number with the wavering
of the cotton-market. Fully ninety-four per cent
have struggled for land and failed, and half of them
sit in hopeless serfdom. For these there is
one other avenue of escape toward which they have
turned in increasing numbers, namely, mi-gration
to town. A glance at the distribution of land
among the black owners curiously reveals this fact.
In 1898 the holdings were as follows: Under
forty acres, forty-nine fami-lies; forty to two hundred
and fifty acres, seventeen families; two hundred and
fifty to one thousand acres, thirteen fami-lies;
one thousand or more acres, two families. Now
in 1890 there were forty-four holdings, but only nine
of these were under forty acres. The great increase
of holdings, then, has come in the buying of small
homesteads near town, where their owners really share
in the town life; this is a part of the rush to town.
And for every land-owner who has thus hurried away
from the narrow and hard conditions of country life,
how many field-hands, how many tenants, how many ruined
renters, have joined that long procession? Is
it not strange compensation? The sin of the
country districts is visited on the town, and the
social sores of city life to-day may, here in Dougherty
County, and perhaps in many places near and far, look
for their final healing without the city walls.