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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64804 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64804)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of What Became of the Slaves on a Georgia
-Plantation?, by Q. K. Philander Doesticks
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: What Became of the Slaves on a Georgia Plantation?
- Great Auction Sale of Slaves, at Savannah, Georgia, March 2d &
- 3d, 1859
-
-Author: Q. K. Philander Doesticks
-
-Release Date: March 13, 2021 [eBook #64804]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Tim Lindell, Martin Pettit and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT BECAME OF THE SLAVES ON A
-GEORGIA PLANTATION? ***
-
-+-------------------------------------------------+
-|Transcriber's note: |
-| |
-|Obvious typographic errors have been corrected. |
-| |
-+-------------------------------------------------+
-
-
-
-
-WHAT BECAME OF THE SLAVES
-
-ON A
-
-GEORGIA PLANTATION?
-
-
-GREAT
-
-AUCTION SALE OF SLAVES,
-
-AT
-
-SAVANNAH, GEORGIA,
-
-MARCH 2d & 3d, 1859.
-
-A SEQUEL TO MRS. KEMBLE'S JOURNAL.
-
-
-1863.
-
-
-
-
-SALE OF SLAVES.
-
-
-The largest sale of human chattels that has been made in Star-Spangled
-America for several years, took place on Wednesday and Thursday of
-last week, at the Race-course near the City of Savannah, Georgia. The
-lot consisted of four hundred and thirty-six men, women, children
-and infants, being that half of the negro stock remaining on the old
-Major Butler plantations which fell to one of the two heirs to that
-estate. Major Butler, dying, left a property valued at more than a
-million of dollars, the major part of which was invested in rice and
-cotton plantations, and the slaves thereon, all of which immense
-fortune descended to two heirs, his sons, Mr. John A. Butler, sometime
-deceased, and Mr. Pierce M. Butler, still living, and resident in the
-City of Philadelphia, in the free State of Pennsylvania. Losses in the
-great crash of 1857-8, and other exigencies of business, have compelled
-the latter gentleman to realize on his Southern investments, that he
-may satisfy his pressing creditors. This necessity led to a partition
-of the negro stock on the Georgia plantations, between himself and
-the representative of the other heir, the widow of the late John A.
-Butler, and the negroes that were brought to the hammer last week
-were the property of Mr. Pierce M. Butler, of Philadelphia, and were
-in fact sold to pay Mr. Pierce M. Butler's debts. The creditors were
-represented by Gen. Cadwalader, while Mr. Butler was present in person,
-attended by his business agent, to attend to his own interests.
-
-The sale had been advertised largely for many weeks, though the name
-of Mr. Butler was not mentioned; and as the negroes were known to be
-a choice lot and very desirable property, the attendance of buyers
-was large. The breaking up of an old family estate is so uncommon
-an occurrence that the affair was regarded with unusual interest
-throughout the South. For several days before the sale every hotel
-in Savannah was crowded with negro speculators from North and South
-Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, Alabama, and Louisiana, who had been
-attracted hither by the prospects of making good bargains. Nothing
-was heard for days, in the barrooms and public rooms, but talk of
-the great sale; criticisms of the business affairs of Mr. Butler,
-and speculations as to the probable prices the stock would bring.
-The office of Joseph Bryan, the Negro Broker, who had the management
-of the sale, was thronged every day by eager inquirers in search of
-information, and by some who were anxious to buy, but were uncertain as
-to whether their securities would prove acceptable. Little parties were
-made up from the various hotels every day to visit the Race-course,
-distant some three miles from the city, to look over the chattels,
-discuss their points, and make memoranda for guidance on the day of
-sale. The buyers were generally of a rough breed, slangy, profane
-and bearish, being for the most part from the back river and swamp
-plantations, where the elegancies of polite life are not, perhaps,
-developed to their fullest extent. In fact, the humanities are sadly
-neglected by the petty tyrants of the rice-fields that border the great
-Dismal Swamp, their knowledge of the luxuries of our best society
-comprehending only revolvers and kindred delicacies.
-
-Your correspondent was present at an early date; but as he easily
-anticipated the touching welcome that would, at such a time, be
-officiously extended to a representative of _The Tribune_, and being
-a modest man withal, and not desiring to be the recipient of a public
-demonstration from the enthusiastic Southern population, who at times
-overdo their hospitality and their guests, he did not placard his
-mission and claim his honors. Although he kept his business in the
-back-ground, he made himself a prominent figure in the picture, and,
-wherever there was anything going on, there was he in the midst. At
-the sale might have been seen a busy individual, armed with pencil and
-catalogue, doing his little utmost to keep up all the appearance of a
-knowing buyer, pricing "likely nigger fellers," talking confidentially
-to the smartest ebon maids, chucking the round-eyed youngsters under
-the chin, making an occasional bid for a large family, (a low bid--so
-low that somebody always instantly raised him twenty-five dollars, when
-the busy man would ignominiously retreat,) and otherwise conducting
-himself like a rich planter, with forty thousand dollars where he could
-put his finger on it. This gentleman was much condoled with by some
-sympathizing persons, when the particularly fine lot on which he had
-fixed his eye was sold and lost to him forever, because he happened to
-be down stairs at lunch just at the interesting moment.
-
-
-WHERE THE NEGROES CAME FROM.
-
-The negroes came from two plantations, the one a rice plantation near
-Darien, in the State of Georgia, not far from the great Okefenokee
-Swamp, and the other a cotton plantation on the extreme northern point
-of St. Simon's Island, a little bit of an island in the Atlantic,
-cut off from Georgia mainland by a slender arm of the sea. Though
-the most of the stock had been accustomed only to rice and cotton
-planting, there were among them a number of very passable mechanics,
-who had been taught to do all the rougher sorts of mechanical work
-on the plantations. There were coopers, carpenters, shoemakers
-and blacksmiths, each one equal, in his various craft, to the
-ordinary requirements of a plantation; thus, the coopers could make
-rice-tierces, and possibly, on a pinch, rude tubs and buckets; the
-carpenter could do the rough carpentry about the negro-quarters; the
-shoemaker could make shoes of the fashion required for the slaves, and
-the blacksmith was adequate to the manufacture of hoes and similar
-simple tools, and to such trifling repairs in the blacksmithing way
-as did not require too refined a skill. Though probably no one of all
-these would be called a superior, or even an average workman, among
-the masters of the craft, their knowledge of these various trades sold
-in some cases for nearly as much as the man--that is, a man without
-a trade, who would be valued at $900, would readily bring $1,600 or
-$1,700 if he was a passable blacksmith or cooper.
-
-There were no light mulattoes in the whole lot of the Butler stock,
-and but very few that were even a shade removed from the original
-Congo blackness. They have been little defiled by the admixture of
-degenerate Anglo-Saxon blood, and, for the most part, could boast that
-they were of as pure a breed as the best blood of Spain--a point in
-their favor in the eyes of the buyer as well as physiologically, for
-too liberal an infusion of the blood of the dominant race brings a
-larger intelligence, a more vigorous brain, which, anon, grows restless
-under the yoke, and is prone to inquire into the definition of the word
-Liberty, and the meaning of the starry flag which waves, as you may
-have heard, o'er the land of the free. The pure-blooded negroes are
-much more docile and manageable than mulattoes, though less quick of
-comprehension, which makes them preferred by drivers, who can stimulate
-stupidity much easier than they can control intelligence by the lash.
-
-None of the Butler slaves have ever been sold before, but have been
-on these two plantations since they were born. Here have they lived
-their humble lives, and loved their simple loves; here were they born,
-and here have many of them had children born unto them; here had their
-parents lived before them, and are now resting in quiet graves on the
-old plantations that these unhappy ones are to see no more forever;
-here they left not only the well-known scenes dear to them from very
-baby-hood by a thousand fond memories, and homes as much loved by
-them, perhaps, as brighter homes by men of brighter faces; but all
-the clinging ties that bound them to living hearts were torn asunder,
-for but one-half of each of these two happy little communities was
-sent to the shambles, to be scattered to the four winds, and the other
-half was left behind. And who can tell how closely intertwined are the
-affections of a little band of four hundred persons, living isolated
-from all the world beside, from birth to middle age? Do they not
-naturally become one great family, each man a brother unto each?
-
-It is true they were sold "in families;" but let us see: a man and his
-wife were called a "family," their parents and kindred were not taken
-into account; the man and wife might be sold to the pine woods of North
-Carolina, their brothers and sisters be scattered through the cotton
-fields of Alabama and the rice swamps of Louisiana, while the parents
-might be left on the old plantation to wear out their weary lives in
-heavy grief, and lay their heads in far-off graves, over which their
-children might never weep. And no account could be taken of loves
-that were as yet unconsummated by marriage; and how many aching hearts
-have been divorced by this summary proceeding no man can ever know.
-And the separation is as utter, and is infinitely more hopeless, than
-that made by the Angel of Death, for then the loved ones are committed
-to the care of a merciful Deity; but in the other instance, to the
-tender mercies of a slave-driver. These dark-skinned unfortunates are
-perfectly unlettered, and could not communicate by writing even if they
-should know where to send their missives. And so to each other, and
-to the old familiar places of their youth, clung all their sympathies
-and affections, not less strong, perhaps, because they are so few. The
-blades of grass on all the Butler estates are outnumbered by the tears
-that are poured out in agony at the wreck that has been wrought in
-happy homes, and the crushing grief that has been laid on loving hearts.
-
-But, then, what business have "niggers" with tears? Besides, didn't
-Pierce Butler give them a silver dollar a-piece? which will appear
-in the sequel. And, sad as it is, it was all necessary, because a
-gentleman was not able to live on the beggarly pittance of half a
-million, and so must needs enter into speculations which turned out
-adversely.
-
-
-HOW THEY WERE TREATED IN SAVANNAH.
-
-The negroes were brought to Savannah in small lots, as many at a time
-as could be conveniently taken care of, the last of them reaching the
-city the Friday before the sale. They were consigned to the care of Mr.
-J. Bryan, Auctioneer and Negro Broker, who was to feed and keep them
-in condition until disposed of. Immediately on their arrival they were
-taken to the Race-course, and there quartered in the sheds erected for
-the accommodation of the horses and carriages of gentlemen attending
-the races. Into these sheds they were huddled pell-mell, without any
-more attention to their comfort than was necessary to prevent their
-becoming ill and unsaleable. Each "family" had one or more boxes or
-bundles, in which were stowed such scanty articles of their clothing as
-were not brought into immediate requisition, and their tin dishes and
-gourds for their food and drink.
-
-It is, perhaps, a fit tribute to large-handed munificence to say that,
-when the negro man was sold, there was no extra charge for the negro
-man's clothes; they went with the man, and were not charged in the
-bill. Nor is this altogether a contemptible idea, for many of them
-had worldly wealth, in the shape of clothing and other valuables, to
-the extent of perhaps four or five dollars; and had all these been
-taken strictly into the account, the sum total of the sale would have
-been increased, possibly, a thousand dollars. In the North, we do not
-necessarily sell the harness with the horse; why, in the South, should
-the clothes go with the negro?
-
-In these sheds were the chattels huddled together on the floor, there
-being no sign of bench or table. They eat and slept on the bare boards,
-their food being rice and beans, with occasionally a bit of bacon and
-corn bread. Their huge bundles were scattered over the floor, and
-thereon the slaves sat or reclined, when not restlessly moving about,
-or gathered into sorrowful groups, discussing the chances of their
-future fate. On the faces of all was an expression of heavy grief;
-some appeared to be resigned to the hard stroke of Fortune that had
-torn them from their homes, and were sadly trying to make the best
-of it; some sat brooding moodily over their sorrows, their chins
-resting on their hands, their eyes staring vacantly, and their bodies
-rocking to and fro, with a restless motion that was never stilled;
-few wept, the place was too public and the drivers too near, though
-some occasionally turned aside to give way to a few quiet tears.
-They were dressed in every possible variety of uncouth and fantastic
-garb, in every style and of every imaginable color; the texture of
-the garments was in all cases coarse, most of the men being clothed
-in the rough cloth that is made expressly for the slaves. The dresses
-assumed by the negro minstrels, when they give imitations of plantation
-character, are by no means exaggerated; they are, instead, weak and
-unable to come up to the original. There was every variety of hats,
-with every imaginable slouch; and there was every cut and style of
-coat and pantaloons, made with every conceivable ingenuity of misfit,
-and tossed on with a general appearance of perfect looseness that is
-perfectly indescribable, except to say that a Southern negro always
-looks as if he could shake his clothes off without taking his hands out
-of his pockets. The women, true to the feminine instinct, had made, in
-almost every case, some attempt at finery. All wore gorgeous turbans,
-generally manufactured in an instant out of a gay-colored handkerchief
-by a sudden and graceful twist of the fingers; though there was
-occasionally a more elaborate turban, a turban complex and mysterious,
-got up with care, and ornamented with a few beads or bright bits of
-ribbon. Their dresses were mostly coarse stuff, though there were some
-gaudy calicoes; a few had ear-rings, and one possessed the treasure
-of a string of yellow and blue beads. The little children were always
-better and more carefully dressed than the older ones, the parental
-pride coming out in the shape of a yellow cap pointed like a mitre, or
-a jacket with a strip of red broadcloth round the bottom. The children
-were of all sizes, the youngest being fifteen days old. The babies
-were generally good-natured; though when one would set up a yell, the
-complaint soon attacked the others, and a full chorus would be the
-result.
-
-The slaves remained at the Race-course, some of them for more than a
-week, and all of them for four days before the sale. They were brought
-in thus early that buyers who desired to inspect them might enjoy that
-privilege, although none of them were sold at private sale. For these
-preliminary days their shed was constantly visited by speculators.
-The negroes were examined with as little consideration as if they had
-been brutes indeed; the buyers pulling their mouths open to see their
-teeth, pinching their limbs to find how muscular they were, walking
-them up and down to detect any signs of lameness, making them stoop
-and bend in different ways that they might be certain there was no
-concealed rupture or wound; and in addition to all this treatment,
-asking them scores of questions relative to their qualifications and
-accomplishments. All these humiliations were submitted to without a
-murmur, and in some instances with good-natured cheerfulness--where the
-slave liked the appearance of the proposed buyer, and fancied that he
-might prove a kind "Mas'r."
-
-The following curiously sad scene is the type of a score of others that
-were there enacted:
-
-"Elisha," chattel No. 5 in the catalogue, had taken a fancy to a
-benevolent-looking middle-aged gentleman, who was inspecting the stock,
-and thus used his powers of persuasion to induce the benevolent man to
-purchase him, with his wife, boy and girl, Molly, Israel and Sevanda,
-chattels Nos. 6, 7 and 8. The earnestness with which the poor fellow
-pressed his suit, knowing, as he did, that perhaps the happiness of his
-whole life depended on his success, was touching, and the arguments he
-used most pathetic. He made no appeal to the feelings of the buyer; he
-rested no hope on his charity and kindness, but only strove to show how
-well worth his dollars were the bone and blood he was entreating him to
-buy.
-
-"Look at me, Mas'r; am prime rice planter; sho' you won't find a better
-man den me; no better on de whole plantation; not a bit old yet; do mo'
-work den ever; do carpenter work, too, little; better buy me, Mas'r;
-I'se be good sarvant, Mas'r. Molly, too, my wife, Sa, fus'rate rice
-hand; mos as good as me. Stan' out yer, Molly, and let the gen'lm'n
-see."
-
-Molly advances, with her hands crossed on her bosom, and makes a quick
-short curtsy, and stands mute, looking appealingly in the benevolent
-man's face. But Elisha talks all the faster.
-
-"Show mas'r yer arm, Molly--good arm dat, Mas'r--she do a heap of work
-mo' with dat arm yet. Let good Mas'r see yer teeth, Molly--see dat
-Mas'r, teeth all reg'lar, all good--she'm young gal yet. Come out yer,
-Israel, walk aroun' an' let the gen'lm'n see how spry you be"--
-
-Then, pointing to the three-year-old girl who stood with her chubby
-hand to her mouth, holding on to her mother's dress, and uncertain what
-to make of the strange scene.
-
-"Little Vardy's only a chile yet; make prime gal by-and-by. Better
-buy us, Mas'r, we'm fus' rate bargain"--and so on. But the benevolent
-gentleman found where he could drive a closer bargain, and so bought
-somebody else.
-
-Similar scenes were transacting all the while on every side--parents
-praising the strength and cleverness of their children, and showing
-off every muscle and sinew to the very best advantage, not with the
-excusable pride of other parents, but to make them the more desirable
-in the eyes of the man-buyer; and, on the other hand, children
-excusing and mitigating the age and inability of parents, that they
-might be more marketable and fall, if possible, into kind hands. Not
-unfrequently these representations, if borne out by the facts, secured
-a purchaser. The women never spoke to the white men unless spoken to,
-and then made the conference as short as possible. And not one of them
-all, during the whole time they were thus exposed to the rude questions
-of vulgar men, spoke the first unwomanly or indelicate word, or
-conducted herself in any regard otherwise than as a modest woman should
-do; their conversation and demeanor were quite as unexceptionable as
-they would have been had they been the highest ladies in the land, and
-through all the insults to which they were subjected they conducted
-themselves with the most perfect decorum and self-respect.
-
-The sentiment of the subjoined characteristic dialogue was heard more
-than once repeated:
-
-"Well, Colonel, I seen you looking sharp at Shoemaker Bill's Sally.
-Going to buy her?
-
-"Well, Major, I think not. Sally's a good, big, strapping gal, and can
-do a heap o' work; but it's five years since she had any children.
-_She's done breeding, I reckon._"
-
-In the intervals of more active labor, the discussion of the reopening
-of the slave trade was commenced, and the opinion seemed to generally
-prevail that its reëstablishment is a consummation devoutly to be
-wished, and one red-faced Major or General or Corporal clenched his
-remarks with the emphatic assertion that "We'll have all the niggers in
-Africa over here in three years--we won't leave enough for seed."
-
-
-THE SALE.
-
-The Race-course at Savannah is situated about three miles from the
-city, in a pleasant spot, nearly surrounded by woods. As it rained
-violently during the two days of the sale, the place was only
-accessible by carriages, and the result was, that few attended but
-actual buyers, who had come from long distances, and could not afford
-to lose the opportunity. If the affair had come off in Yankee land,
-there would have been a dozen omnibuses running constantly between
-the city and the Race-course, and some speculator would have bagged
-a nice little sum of money by the operation. But nothing of the kind
-was thought of here, and the only gainers were the livery stables, the
-owners of which had sufficient Yankeeism to charge double and treble
-prices.
-
-The conveniences for getting to the ground were so limited that there
-were not enough buyers to warrant the opening of the sale for an hour
-or two after the advertised time. They dropped in, however, a few at a
-time, and things began to look more encouragingly for the seller.
-
-The negroes looked more uncomfortable than ever; the close confinement
-in-doors for a number of days, and the drizzly, unpleasant weather,
-began to tell on their condition. They moved about more listlessly,
-and were fast losing the activity and springiness they had at first
-shown. This morning they were all gathered into the long room of the
-building erected as the "Grand Stand" of the Race-course, that they
-might be immediately under the eye of the buyers. The room was about
-a hundred feet long by twenty wide, and herein were crowded the poor
-creatures, with much of their baggage, awaiting their respective calls
-to step upon the block and be sold to the highest bidder. This morning
-Mr. Pierce Butler appeared among his people, speaking to each one, and
-being recognized with seeming pleasure by all. The men obsequiously
-pulled off their hats and made that indescribable sliding hitch with
-the foot which passes with a negro for a bow; and the women each
-dropped the quick curtsy, which they seldom vouchsafe to any other than
-their legitimate master and mistress. Occasionally, to a very old or
-favorite servant, Mr. Butler would extend his gloved hand, which mark
-of condescension was instantly hailed with grins of delight from all
-the sable witnesses.
-
-The room in which the sale actually took place immediately adjoined the
-room of the negroes, and communicated with it by two large doors. The
-sale room was open to the air on one side, commanding a view of the
-entire Course. A small platform was raised about two feet and a-half
-high, on which were placed the desks of the entry clerks, leaving room
-in front of them for the auctioneer and the goods.
-
-At about 11 o'clock the business men took their places, and announced
-that the sale would begin. Mr. Bryan, the Negro Broker, is a dapper
-little man, wearing spectacles and a yachting hat, sharp and sudden
-in his movements, and perhaps the least bit in the world obtrusively
-officious--as earnest in his language as he could be without actual
-swearing, though acting much as if he would like to swear a little
-at the critical moment; Mr. Bryan did not sell the goods, he merely
-superintended the operation, and saw that the entry clerks did their
-duty properly. The auctioneer proper was a Mr. Walsh, who deserves a
-word of description. In personal appearance he is the very opposite of
-Mr. Bryan, being careless in his dress instead of scrupulous, a large
-man instead of a little one, a fat man instead of a lean one, and a
-good-natured man instead of a fierce one. He is a rollicking old boy,
-with an eye ever on the look-out, and that never lets a bidding nod
-escape him; a hearty word for every bidder who cares for it, and plenty
-of jokes to let off when the business gets a little slack. Mr. Walsh
-has a florid complexion, not more so, perhaps, than is becoming, and
-possibly not more so than is natural in a whiskey country. Not only is
-his face red, but his skin has been taken off in spots by blisters of
-some sort, giving him a peely look; so that, taking his face all in
-all, the peeliness and the redness combined, he looks much as if he
-had been boiled in the same pot with a red cabbage.
-
-Mr. Walsh mounted the stand and announced the terms of the sale,
-"one-third cash, the remainder payable in two equal annual instalments,
-bearing interest from the day of sale, to be secured by approved
-mortgage and personal security, or approved acceptances in Savannah,
-Ga., or Charleston, S. C. Purchasers to pay for papers." The buyers,
-who were present to the number of about two hundred, clustered around
-the platform; while the negroes, who were not likely to be immediately
-wanted, gathered into sad groups in the back-ground, to watch the
-progress of the selling in which they were so sorrowfully interested.
-The wind howled outside, and through the open side of the building the
-driving rain came pouring in; the bar down stairs ceased for a short
-time its brisk trade; the buyers lit fresh cigars, got ready their
-catalogues and pencils, and the first lot of human chattels was led
-upon the stand, not by a white man, but by a sleek mulatto, himself a
-slave, and who seems to regard the selling of his brethren, in which he
-so glibly assists, as a capital joke. It had been announced that the
-negroes would be sold in "families," that is to say, a man would not
-be parted from his wife, or a mother from a very young child. There is
-perhaps as much policy as humanity in this arrangement, for thereby
-many aged and unserviceable people are disposed of, who otherwise would
-not find a ready sale.
-
-The first family brought out were announced on the catalogue as
-
-
- NAME. AGE. REMARKS.
- 1. George, 27 Prime Cotton Planter.
- 2. Sue, 26 Prime Rice Planter.
- 3. George, 6 Boy Child.
- 4. Harry, 2 Boy Child.
-
-
-The manner of buying was announced to be bidding a certain price
-a-piece for the whole lot. Thus, George and his family were started at
-$300, and were finally sold at $600 each, being $2,400 for the four. To
-get an idea of the relative value of each one, we must suppose George
-worth $1,200, Sue worth $900, Little George worth $200, and Harry worth
-$100. Owing, however, to some misapprehension on the part of the buyer,
-as to the manner of bidding, he did not take the family at this figure,
-and they were put up and sold again, on the second day, when they
-brought $620 each, or $2,480 for the whole--an advance of $80 over the
-first sale.
-
-Robert, and Luna his wife, who were announced as having "goitre,
-otherwise very prime," brought the round sum of $1,005 each. But that
-your readers may have an idea of the exact manner in which things
-are done, I append a couple of pages of the catalogue used on this
-occasion, which you can print verbatim:
-
-
- 99--Kate's John, aged 30; rice, prime man.
- 100--Betsey, 29; rice, unsound.
- 101--Kate, 6.
- 102--Violet, 3 months.
- Sold for $510 each.
- 103--Wooster, 45; rice hand, and fair mason.
- 104--Mary, 40; cotton hand.
- Sold for $300 each.
- 105--Commodore Bob, aged; rice hand.
- 106--Kate, aged; cotton.
- 107--Linda, 19; cotton, prime young woman.
- 108--Joe, 13; rice, prime boy.
- Sold for $600 each.
- 109--Bob, 30; rice.
- 110--Mary, 25; rice, prime woman.
- Sold for $1,135 each.
- 111--Anson, 49; rice--ruptured, one eye.
- 112--Violet, 55; rice hand.
- Sold for $250 each.
- 113--Allen Jeffrey, 46; rice hand and sawyer in steam mill.
- 114--Sikey, 43; rice hand.
- 115--Watty, 5; infirm legs.
- Sold for $520 each.
- 116--Rina, 18; rice, prime young woman.
- 117--Lena, 1.
- Sold for $645 each.
- 118--Pompey, 31; rice--lame in one foot.
- 119--Kitty, 30; rice, prime woman.
- 120--Pompey, Jr., 10; prime boy.
- 121--John, 7.
- 122--Noble, 1; boy.
- Sold for $580 each.
- 341--Goin, 39; rice hand.
- 342--Cassander, 35; cotton hand--has fits.
- 343--Emiline, 19; cotton, prime young woman.
- 344--Judy, 11; cotton, prime girl.
- Sold for $400 each.
- 345--Dorcas, 17; cotton, prime woman.
- 346--Joe, 3 months.
- Sold for $1,200 each.
- 347--Tom, 22; cotton hand. Sold for $1,260.
- 348--Judge Will, 55; rice hand. Sold for $325.
- 349--Lowden, 54; cotton hand.
- 350--Hagar, 50; cotton hand.
- 351--Lowden, 15; cotton, prime boy.
- 352--Silas, 13; cotton, prime boy.
- 353--Lettia, 11; cotton, prime girl.
- Sold for $300 each.
- 354--Fielding, 21; cotton, prime young man.
- 355--Abel, 19; cotton, prime young man.
- Sold for $1,295 each.
- 356--Smith's Bill, aged; sore leg.
- 357--Leah, 46; cotton hand.
- 358--Sally, 9.
- Withdrawn.
- 359--Adam, 24; rice, prime man.
- 360--Charlotte, 22; rice, prime woman.
- 361--Lesh, 1.
- Sold for $750 each.
- 362--Maria, 47; rice hand.
- 363--Luna, 22; rice, prime woman.
- 364--Clementina, 17; rice, prime young woman.
- Sold for $950 each.
- 365--Tom, 48; rice hand.
- 366--Harriet, 41; rice hand
- 367--Wanney, 19; rice hand, prime young man.
- 368--Deborah, 6.
- 369--Infant, 3 months.
- Sold for $700 each.
-
-
-It seems as if every shade of character capable of being implicated in
-the sale of human flesh and blood was represented among the buyers.
-There was the Georgia fast young man, with his pantaloons tucked into
-his boots, his velvet cap jauntily dragged over to one side, his cheek
-full of tobacco, which he bites from a huge plug, that resembles
-more than anything else an old bit of a rusty wagon tire, and who
-is altogether an animal of quite a different breed from your New
-York fast man. His ready revolver, or his convenient knife, is ready
-for instant use in case of a heated argument. White-neck-clothed,
-gold-spectacled, and silver-haired old men were there, resembling in
-appearance that noxious breed of sanctimonious deacons we have at the
-North, who are perpetually leaving documents at your door that you
-never read, and the business of whose mendicant life it is to eternally
-solicit subscriptions for charitable associations, of which they are
-treasurers. These gentry, with quiet step and subdued voice, moved
-carefully about among the live stock, ignoring, as a general rule, the
-men, but tormenting the women with questions which, when accidentally
-overheard by the disinterested spectator, bred in that spectator's
-mind an almost irresistible desire to knock somebody down. And then,
-all imaginable varieties of rough, backwoods rowdies, who began the
-day in a spirited manner, but who, as its hours progressed, and their
-practice at the bar became more prolific in results, waxed louder and
-talkier and more violent, were present, and added a characteristic
-feature to the assemblage. Those of your readers who have read "Uncle
-Tom,"--and who has not?--will remember, with peculiar feelings,
-Legree, the slave-driver and woman-whipper. That that character is not
-been overdrawn, or too highly colored, there is abundant testimony.
-Witness the subjoined dialogue: A party of men were conversing on the
-fruitful subject of managing refractory "niggers;" some were for severe
-whipping, some recommending branding, one or two advocated other modes
-of torture, but one huge brute of a man, who had not taken an active
-part in the discussion, save to assent, with approving nod, to any
-unusually barbarous proposition, at last broke his silence by saying,
-in an oracular way, "You may say what you like about managing niggers;
-I'm a driver myself, and I've had some experience, and I ought to know.
-You can manage ordinary niggers by lickin' 'em, and givin' 'em a taste
-of the hot iron once in awhile when they're extra ugly; but if a nigger
-really sets himself up against me, I can't never have any patience with
-him. I just get my pistol and shoot him right down; and that's the best
-way."
-
-And this brute was talking to gentlemen, and his remarks were listened
-to with attention, and his assertions assented to by more than one in
-the knot of listeners. But all this time the sale was going on, and
-the merry Mr. Walsh, with many a quip and jest, was beguiling the
-time when the bidding was slow. The expression on the faces of all who
-stepped on the block was always the same, and told of more anguish than
-it is in the power of words to express. Blighted homes, crushed hopes
-and broken hearts, was the sad story to be read in all the anxious
-faces. Some of them regarded the sale with perfect indifference, never
-making a motion, save to turn from one side to the other at the word
-of the dapper Mr. Bryan, that all the crowd might have a fair view of
-their proportions, and then, when the sale was accomplished, stepped
-down from the block without caring to cast even a look at the buyer,
-who now held all their happiness in his hands. Others, again, strained
-their eyes with eager glances from one buyer to another as the bidding
-went on, trying with earnest attention to follow the rapid voice of
-the auctioneer. Sometimes, two persons only would be bidding for the
-same chattel, all the others having resigned the contest, and then the
-poor creature on the block, conceiving an instantaneous preference for
-one of the buyers over the other, would regard the rivalry with the
-intensest interest, the expression of his face changing with every bid,
-settling into a half smile of joy if the favorite buyer persevered unto
-the end and secured the property, and settling down into a look of
-hopeless despair if the other won the victory.
-
-
-DAPHNEY'S BABY.
-
-The family of Primus, plantation carpenter, consisting of Daphney his
-wife, with her young babe, and Dido, a girl of three years old, were
-reached in due course of time. Daphney had a large shawl, which she
-kept carefully wrapped round her infant and herself. This unusual
-proceeding attracted much attention, and provoked many remarks, such as
-these:
-
-"What do you keep your nigger covered up for? Pull off her blanket."
-
-"What's the matter with the gal? Has she got the headache?"
-
-"What's the fault of the gal? Ain't she sound? Pull off her rags and
-let us see her."
-
-"Who's going to bid on that nigger, if you keep her covered up. Let's
-see her face."
-
-And a loud chorus of similar remarks, emphasized with profanity, and
-mingled with sayings too indecent and obscene to be even hinted at
-here, went up from the crowd of chivalrous Southern gentlemen.
-
-At last the auctioneer obtained a hearing long enough to explain that
-there was no attempt to practise any deception in the case--the parties
-were not to be wronged in any way; he had no desire to palm off on
-them an inferior article; but the truth of the matter was that Daphney
-had been confined only fifteen days ago, and he thought that on that
-account she was entitled to the slight indulgence of a blanket, to keep
-from herself and child the chill air and the driving rain.
-
-Will your lady readers look at the circumstances of this case? The day
-was the 2d day of March. Daphney's baby was born into the world on St.
-Valentine's happy day, the 14th of February.
-
-Since her confinement, Daphney had traveled from the plantation to
-Savannah, where she had been kept in a shed for six days. On the sixth
-or seventh day after her sickness, she had left her bed, taken a
-railroad journey across the country to the shambles, was there exposed
-for six days to the questionings and insults of the negro speculators,
-and then on the fifteenth day after her confinement was put up on the
-block, with her husband and her other child, and, with her new-born
-baby in her arms, sold to the highest bidder.
-
-It was very considerate of Daphney to be sick before the sale, for her
-wailing babe was worth to Mr. Butler all of a hundred dollars. The
-family sold for $625 a-piece, or $2,500 for the four.
-
-
-BOB AND MARY.
-
-This was a couple not quite a year married, and were down in the
-catalogue as "prime." They had no children yet; Mary, with a
-reprehensible lack of that tender interest in Mr. Butler's affairs that
-had been exhibited in so eminent a degree by Daphney, had disappointed
-that worthy man's expectations, and the baby as yet was not. But Bob
-and Mary sold for $1,135 a-piece, for all that.
-
-In another instance, Margaret, the wife of Doctor George, who was
-confined on February 16, though the name of herself and family were
-inserted in the catalogue, did not come to the sale, and consequently,
-they were not disposed of at all. As Margaret's baby was fully four
-days old at the time she was required to start on her journey to
-Savannah, we can only look at her refusal to go as a most culpable
-instance of perversity. Margaret should be whipped, and branded, and
-otherwise kindly admonished of her great sin in thus disappointing the
-reasonable expectations of so kind a master. But Mr. Butler bore with
-her in a truly Christian spirit, and uttered no reproach--in public
-at least. It was the more unkind of Margaret, too, because there were
-six in the family who would have brought probably $4,000, and all were
-detained from the sale by the contumacy of misguided Margaret.
-
-While on the subject of babies, it may be mentioned that Amity, chattel
-No. 316, wife of Prince, chattel No. 315, had testified her earnest
-desire to contribute all in her power to the worldly wealth of her
-master by bringing into the world at one time chattles Nos. 317 and
-318, being a fine pair of twin boys, just a year old. It is not in
-evidence that Amity received from her master any testimonial of his
-appreciating her good behavior on this occasion, but it is certain
-that she brought a great price, the four, Prince, Amity and the twins
-selling for $670 a-piece, being a total of $2,680.
-
-Many other babies, of all ages of baby-hood, were sold, but there was
-nothing particularly interesting about them. There were some thirty
-babies in the lot; they are esteemed worth to the master a hundred
-dollars the day they are born, and to increase in value at the rate of
-a hundred dollars a year till they are sixteen or seventeen years old,
-at which age they bring the best prices.
-
-
-THE LOVE STORY OF JEFFREY AND DORCAS.
-
-Jeffrey, chattel No. 319, marked as a "prime cotton hand," aged 23
-years, was put up. Jeffrey being a likely lad, the competition was
-high. The first bid was $1,100, and he was finally sold for $1,310.
-Jeffrey was sold alone; he had no incumbrance in the shape of an aged
-father or mother, who must necessarily be sold with him; nor had he
-any children, for Jeffrey was not married. But Jeffrey, chattel No.
-319, being human in his affections, had dared to cherish a love for
-Dorcas, chattel No. 278; and Dorcas, not having the fear of her master
-before her eyes, had given her heart to Jeffrey. Whether what followed
-was a just retribution on Jeffrey and Dorcas, for daring to take such
-liberties with their master's property as to exchange hearts, or
-whether it only goes to prove that with black as with white the saying
-holds, that "the course of true love never did run smooth," cannot now
-be told. Certain it is that these two lovers were not to realize the
-consummation of their hopes in happy wedlock. Jeffrey and Dorcas had
-told their loves, had exchanged their simple vows, and were betrothed,
-each to the other as dear, and each by the other as fondly beloved as
-though their skins had been of fairer color. And who shall say that, in
-the sight of Heaven and all holy angels, these two humble hearts were
-not as closely wedded as any two of the prouder race that call them
-slaves?
-
-Be that as it may, Jeffrey was sold. He finds out his new master;
-and, hat in hand, the big tears standing in his eyes, and his voice
-trembling with emotion, he stands before that master and tells his
-simple story, praying that his betrothed may be bought with him. Though
-his voice trembles, there is no embarrassment in his manner; his fears
-have killed all the bashfulness that would naturally attend such a
-recital to a stranger, and before unsympathizing witnesses; he feels
-that he is pleading for the happiness of her he loves, as well as for
-his own, and his tale is told in a frank and manly way.
-
-"I loves Dorcas, young Mas'r; I loves her well an' true; she says she
-loves me, and I know she does; de good Lord knows I loves her better
-than I loves any one in de wide world--never can love another woman
-half so well. Please buy Dorcas, Mas'r. We're be good sarvants to you
-long as we live. We're be married right soon, young Mas'r, and de
-chillun will be healthy and strong, Mas'r, and dey'll be good sarvants,
-too. Please buy Dorcas, young Mas'r. We loves each other a heap--do,
-really true, Mas'r."
-
-Jeffrey then remembers that no loves and hopes of his are to enter into
-the bargain at all, but in the earnestness of his love he has forgotten
-to base his plea on other ground till now, when he bethinks him and
-continues, with his voice not trembling now, save with eagerness to
-prove how worthy of many dollars is the maiden of his heart:
-
-"Young Mas'r, Dorcas prime woman--A1 woman, sa. Tall gal, sir; long
-arms, strong, healthy, and can do a heap of work in a day. She is one
-of de best rice hands on de whole plantation; worth $1,200 easy, Mas'r,
-an' fus'rate bargain at that."
-
-The man seems touched by Jeffrey's last remarks, and bids him fetch out
-his "gal, and let's see what she looks like."
-
-Jeffrey goes into the long room, and presently returns with
-Dorcas, looking very sad and self-possessed, without a particle of
-embarrassment at the trying position in which she is placed. She makes
-the accustomed curtsy, and stands meekly with her hands clasped across
-her bosom, waiting the result. The buyer regards her with a critical
-eye, and growls in a low voice that the "gal has good p'ints." Then
-he goes on to a more minute and careful examination of her working
-abilities. He turns her around, makes her stoop, and walk; and then he
-takes off her turban to look at her head that no wound or disease be
-concealed by the gay handkerchief; he looks at her teeth, and feels
-of her arms, and at last announces himself pleased with the result of
-his observations, whereat Jeffrey, who has stood near, trembling with
-eager hope, is overjoyed, and he smiles for the first time. The buyer
-then crowns Jeffrey's happiness by making a promise that he will buy
-her, if the price isn't run up too high. And the two lovers step aside
-and congratulate each other on their good fortune. But Dorcas is not
-to be sold till the next day, and there are twenty-four long hours of
-feverish expectation.
-
-Early next morning is Jeffrey alert, and, hat in hand, encouraged to
-unusual freedom by the greatness of the stake for which he plays, he
-addresses every buyer, and of all who will listen he begs the boon of a
-word to be spoken to his new master to encourage him to buy Dorcas. And
-all the long morning he speaks in his homely way with all who know him,
-that they will intercede to save his sweetheart from being sold away
-from him forever. No one has the heart to deny a word of promise and
-encouragement to the poor fellow, and, joyous with so much kindness,
-his hopes and spirits gradually rise until he feels almost certain that
-the wish of heart will be accomplished. And Dorcas, too, is smiling,
-for is not Jeffrey's happiness her own?
-
-At last comes the trying moment, and Dorcas steps up on the stand.
-
-But now a most unexpected feature in the drama is for the first time
-unmasked: _Dorcas is not to be sold alone_, but with a family of four
-others. Full of dismay, Jeffrey looks to his master, who shakes his
-head, for, although he might be induced to buy Dorcas alone, he has no
-use for the rest of the family. Jeffrey reads his doom in his master's
-look, and turns away, the tears streaming down his honest face.
-
-So Dorcas is sold, and her toiling life is to be spent in the cotton
-fields of South Carolina, while Jeffrey goes to the rice plantation of
-the Great Swamp.
-
-And to-morrow, Jeffrey and Dorcas are to say their tearful farewell,
-and go their separate ways in life, to meet no more as mortal beings.
-
-But didn't Mr. Pierce Butler give them a silver dollar a-piece? Who
-shall say there is no magnanimity in slave-owners?
-
-In another hour I see Dorcas in the long room, sitting motionless as a
-statue, with her head covered with a shawl. And I see Jeffrey, who goes
-to his new master, pulls off his hat and says: "I'se very much obliged,
-Mas'r, to you for tryin' to help me. I knows you would have done it if
-you could--thank you, Mas'r--thank you--but--its--berry--hard"--and
-here the poor fellow breaks down entirely and walks away, covering his
-face with his battered hat, and sobbing like a very child.
-
-He is soon surrounded by a group of his colored friends, who, with an
-instinctive delicacy most unlooked for, stand quiet, and with uncovered
-heads, about him.
-
-Anson and Violet, chattels Nos. 111 and 112, were sold for $250 each,
-both being old, and Anson being down in the catalogue as "ruptured and
-as having one eye." Violet was sold as being sick. Her disease was
-probably consumption, which supposition gave rise to the following
-feeling conversation between two buyers:
-
-"Cheap gal, that, Major!"
-
-"Don't think so. They may talk about her being sick; it's no easy
-sickness she's got. She's got consumption, and the man that buys her'll
-have to be a doctrin' her all the time, and she'll die in less than
-three months. I won't have anything to do with her--don't want any half
-dead niggers about me."
-
-
-THE MARKET VALUE OF AN EYE.
-
-Guy, chattel No. 419, "a prime young man," sold for $1,280, being
-without blemish; his age was twenty years, and he was altogether a
-fine article. His next-door neighbor, Andrew, chattel No. 420, was his
-very counterpart in all marketable points, in size, age, skill, and
-everything save that he had lost his right eye. Andrew sold for only
-$1,040, from which we argue that the market value of the right eye in
-the Southern country is $240.
-
-
-AN UNEXPECTED MARRIAGE.
-
-When the family of Mingo, consisting of his wife, two sons and a
-daughter, was called for, it was announced by the auctioneer that
-chattel No. 322, Dembo, the eldest son, aged 20, had the evening before
-procured the services of a minister, and been joined in wedlock to
-chattel No. 404, Frances, and that he should be compelled to put up
-the bride and groom in one lot. They were called up, and, as was to be
-expected, their appearance was the signal for a volley of coarse jokes
-from the auctioneer, and of ribald remarks from the surrounding crowd.
-The newly-married pair bore it bravely, although one refined gentleman
-took hold of Frances's lips and pulled them apart, to see her age.
-
-This sort of thing it is that makes Northern blood boil, and Northern
-fists clench with a laudable desire to hit somebody. It was almost too
-much for endurance to stand and see those brutal slave-drivers pushing
-the women about, pulling their lips apart with their not too cleanly
-hands, and committing many another indecent act, while the husbands,
-fathers and brothers of those women were compelled to witness these
-things, without the power to resent the outrage.
-
-Dembo and Frances were at last struck off for $1,320 each, and went to
-spend their honey-moon on a cotton plantation in Alabama.
-
-
-THE CASE OF JOSHUA'S MOLLY.
-
-The auctioneer brought up Joshua's Molly and family. He announced that
-Molly insisted that she was lame in her left foot, and perversely would
-walk lame, although for his part, he did not believe a word of it. He
-had caused her to be examined by an eminent physician in Savannah,
-which medical light had declared that Joshua's Molly was not lame, but
-was only shamming. However, the gentlemen must judge for themselves and
-bid accordingly. So Molly was put through her paces, and compelled to
-trot up and down along the stage, to go up and down the steps, and to
-exercise her feet in various ways, but always with the same result, the
-left foot _would_ be lame. She was finally sold for $695.
-
-Whether she really was lame or not no one knows but herself, but
-it must be remembered that to a slave a lameness, or anything that
-decreases his market value, is a thing to be rejoiced over. A man in
-the prime of life, worth $1,600 or thereabouts, can have little hope
-of ever being able, by any little savings of his own, to purchase his
-liberty. But let him have a rupture, or lose a limb, or sustain any
-other injury that renders him of much less service to his owner, and
-reduces his value to $300 or $400, and he may hope to accumulate that
-sum, and eventually to purchase his liberty. Freedom without health is
-infinitely sweeter than health without freedom.
-
-And so the Great Sale went on for two long days, during which time
-there were sold 429 men, women and children. There were 436 announced
-to be sold, but a few were detained on the plantations by sickness.
-
-At the close of the sale, on the last day, several baskets of champagne
-were produced, and all were invited to partake, the wine being at the
-expense of the broker, Mr. Bryan.
-
-The total amount of the sale foots up $303,850--the proceeds of the
-first day being $161,480, and of the second day $142,370.
-
-The highest sum paid for any one family was given for Sally Walker and
-her five children, who were mostly grown up. The price was $6,180.
-
-The highest price paid for a single man was $1,750, which was given for
-William, a "fair carpenter and caulker."
-
-The highest price paid for a woman was $1,250, which was given for
-Jane, "cotton hand and house servant."
-
-The lowest price paid was for Anson and Violet, a gray-haired couple,
-each having numbered more than fifty years; they brought but $250
-a-piece.
-
-
-MR. PIERCE BUTLER GIVES HIS PEOPLE A DOLLAR A-PIECE.
-
-Leaving the Race buildings, where the scenes we have described took
-place, a crowd of negroes were seen gathered eagerly about a white man.
-That man was Pierce M. Butler, of the free City of Philadelphia, who
-was solacing the wounded hearts of the people he had sold from their
-firesides and their homes, by doling out to them small change at the
-rate of a dollar a-head. To every negro he had sold, who presented his
-claim for the paltry pittance, he gave the munificent stipend of one
-whole dollar, in specie; he being provided with two canvas bags of 25
-cent pieces, fresh from the mint, to give an additional glitter to his
-generosity.
-
-And now come the scenes of the last partings--of the final separations
-of those who were akin, or who had been such dear friends from youth
-that no ties of kindred could bind them closer--of those who were all
-in all to each other, and for whose bleeding hearts there shall be
-no earthly comfort--the parting of parents and children, of brother
-from brother, and the rending of sister from a sister's bosom; and O!
-hardest, cruellest of all, the tearing asunder of loving hearts, wedded
-in all save the one ceremony of the Church--these scenes pass all
-description; it is not meet for pen to meddle with tears so holy.
-
-As the last family stepped down from the block, the rain ceased, for
-the first time in four days, the clouds broke away, and the soft
-sunlight fell on the scene. The unhappy slaves had many of them been
-already removed, and others were now departing with their new masters.
-
-That night, not a steamer left that Southern port, not a train of cars
-sped away from that cruel city, that did not bear each its own sad
-burden of those unhappy ones, whose only crime is that they are not
-strong and wise. Some of them maimed and wounded, some scarred and
-gashed, by accident, or by the hand of ruthless drivers--all sad and
-sorrowful as human hearts can be.
-
-But the stars shone out as brightly as if such things had never been,
-the blushing fruit-trees poured their fragrance on the evening air, and
-the scene was as calmly sweet and quiet as if Man had never marred the
-glorious beauties of Earth by deeds of cruelty and wrong.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT BECAME OF THE SLAVES ON A
-GEORGIA PLANTATION? ***
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
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- </title>
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of What Became of the Slaves on a Georgia Plantation?, by Q. K. Philander Doesticks</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
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-<table style='min-width:0; padding:0; margin-left:0; border-collapse:collapse'>
- <tr><td>Title:</td><td>What Became of the Slaves on a Georgia Plantation?</td></tr>
- <tr><td></td><td>Great Auction Sale of Slaves, at Savannah, Georgia, March 2d & 3d, 1859</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Q. K. Philander Doesticks</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: March 13, 2021 [eBook #64804]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Tim Lindell, Martin Pettit and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT BECAME OF THE SLAVES ON A GEORGIA PLANTATION? ***</div>
-
-<div class="mynote"><p class="center">Transcriber's Note:<br /><br />
-Obvious typographic errors have been corrected.<br /></p></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="center"><img src="images/title.jpg" alt="title page" /></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>WHAT BECAME OF THE SLAVES</h1>
-
-<p class="bold space-above">ON A</p>
-
-<p class="bold2 space-above">GEORGIA PLANTATION?</p>
-
-<hr class="smler" />
-
-<p class="bold space-above">GREAT</p>
-
-<p class="bold2 space-above">AUCTION SALE OF SLAVES,</p>
-
-<p class="bold space-above">AT</p>
-
-<p class="bold2 space-above">SAVANNAH, GEORGIA,</p>
-
-<p class="bold space-above">MARCH 2d &amp; 3d, 1859.</p>
-
-<p class="bold space-above">A SEQUEL TO MRS. KEMBLE'S JOURNAL.</p>
-
-<hr class="smler" />
-
-<p class="bold space-above">1863.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>SALE OF SLAVES.</h2>
-
-<div class="center"><img src="images/line.jpg" alt="line" /></div>
-
-<p>The largest sale of human chattels that has been made in Star-Spangled
-America for several years, took place on Wednesday and
-Thursday of last week, at the Race-course near the City of Savannah,
-Georgia. The lot consisted of four hundred and thirty-six
-men, women, children and infants, being that half of the negro
-stock remaining on the old Major Butler plantations which fell to
-one of the two heirs to that estate. Major Butler, dying, left a
-property valued at more than a million of dollars, the major part
-of which was invested in rice and cotton plantations, and the slaves
-thereon, all of which immense fortune descended to two heirs, his
-sons, Mr. John A. Butler, sometime deceased, and Mr. Pierce M.
-Butler, still living, and resident in the City of Philadelphia, in the
-free State of Pennsylvania. Losses in the great crash of 1857-8,
-and other exigencies of business, have compelled the latter gentleman
-to realize on his Southern investments, that he may satisfy his
-pressing creditors. This necessity led to a partition of the negro
-stock on the Georgia plantations, between himself and the representative
-of the other heir, the widow of the late John A. Butler,
-and the negroes that were brought to the hammer last week were
-the property of Mr. Pierce M. Butler, of Philadelphia, and were in
-fact sold to pay Mr. Pierce M. Butler's debts. The creditors were
-represented by Gen. Cadwalader, while Mr. Butler was present in
-person, attended by his business agent, to attend to his own
-interests.</p>
-
-<p>The sale had been advertised largely for many weeks, though the
-name of Mr. Butler was not mentioned; and as the negroes were
-known to be a choice lot and very desirable property, the attendance
-of buyers was large. The breaking up of an old family estate
-is so uncommon an occurrence that the affair was regarded with
-unusual interest throughout the South. For several days before
-the sale every hotel in Savannah was crowded with negro speculators
-from North and South Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, Alabama,
-and Louisiana, who had been attracted hither by the prospects of
-making good bargains. Nothing was heard for days, in the barrooms
-and public rooms, but talk of the great sale; criticisms of the
-business affairs of Mr. Butler, and speculations as to the probable
-prices the stock would bring. The office of Joseph Bryan, the
-Negro Broker, who had the management of the sale, was thronged
-every day by eager inquirers in search of information, and by some
-who were anxious to buy, but were uncertain as to whether their
-securities would prove acceptable. Little parties were made up
-from the various hotels every day to visit the Race-course, distant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
-some three miles from the city, to look over the chattels, discuss
-their points, and make memoranda for guidance on the day of sale.
-The buyers were generally of a rough breed, slangy, profane and
-bearish, being for the most part from the back river and swamp
-plantations, where the elegancies of polite life are not, perhaps,
-developed to their fullest extent. In fact, the humanities are sadly
-neglected by the petty tyrants of the rice-fields that border the
-great Dismal Swamp, their knowledge of the luxuries of our best
-society comprehending only revolvers and kindred delicacies.</p>
-
-<p>Your correspondent was present at an early date; but as he
-easily anticipated the touching welcome that would, at such a
-time, be officiously extended to a representative of <i>The Tribune</i>,
-and being a modest man withal, and not desiring to be the recipient
-of a public demonstration from the enthusiastic Southern population,
-who at times overdo their hospitality and their guests, he did
-not placard his mission and claim his honors. Although he kept
-his business in the back-ground, he made himself a prominent figure
-in the picture, and, wherever there was anything going on, there
-was he in the midst. At the sale might have been seen a busy individual,
-armed with pencil and catalogue, doing his little utmost to
-keep up all the appearance of a knowing buyer, pricing "likely nigger
-fellers," talking confidentially to the smartest ebon maids,
-chucking the round-eyed youngsters under the chin, making an
-occasional bid for a large family, (a low bid&mdash;so low that somebody
-always instantly raised him twenty-five dollars, when the busy man
-would ignominiously retreat,) and otherwise conducting himself like
-a rich planter, with forty thousand dollars where he could put his
-finger on it. This gentleman was much condoled with by some
-sympathizing persons, when the particularly fine lot on which he
-had fixed his eye was sold and lost to him forever, because he happened
-to be down stairs at lunch just at the interesting moment.</p>
-
-<h3>WHERE THE NEGROES CAME FROM.</h3>
-
-<p>The negroes came from two plantations, the one a rice plantation
-near Darien, in the State of Georgia, not far from the great Okefenokee
-Swamp, and the other a cotton plantation on the extreme
-northern point of St. Simon's Island, a little bit of an island in the
-Atlantic, cut off from Georgia mainland by a slender arm of the sea.
-Though the most of the stock had been accustomed only to rice and
-cotton planting, there were among them a number of very passable
-mechanics, who had been taught to do all the rougher sorts of
-mechanical work on the plantations. There were coopers, carpenters,
-shoemakers and blacksmiths, each one equal, in his various
-craft, to the ordinary requirements of a plantation; thus, the coopers
-could make rice-tierces, and possibly, on a pinch, rude tubs and
-buckets; the carpenter could do the rough carpentry about the
-negro-quarters; the shoemaker could make shoes of the fashion
-required for the slaves, and the blacksmith was adequate to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
-manufacture of hoes and similar simple tools, and to such trifling
-repairs in the blacksmithing way as did not require too refined a
-skill. Though probably no one of all these would be called a superior,
-or even an average workman, among the masters of the craft,
-their knowledge of these various trades sold in some cases for nearly
-as much as the man&mdash;that is, a man without a trade, who would be
-valued at $900, would readily bring $1,600 or $1,700 if he was a
-passable blacksmith or cooper.</p>
-
-<p>There were no light mulattoes in the whole lot of the Butler
-stock, and but very few that were even a shade removed from the
-original Congo blackness. They have been little defiled by the admixture
-of degenerate Anglo-Saxon blood, and, for the most part, could
-boast that they were of as pure a breed as the best blood of Spain&mdash;a
-point in their favor in the eyes of the buyer as well as physiologically,
-for too liberal an infusion of the blood of the dominant race
-brings a larger intelligence, a more vigorous brain, which, anon,
-grows restless under the yoke, and is prone to inquire into the definition
-of the word Liberty, and the meaning of the starry flag which
-waves, as you may have heard, o'er the land of the free. The pure-blooded
-negroes are much more docile and manageable than mulattoes,
-though less quick of comprehension, which makes them preferred
-by drivers, who can stimulate stupidity much easier than they can
-control intelligence by the lash.</p>
-
-<p>None of the Butler slaves have ever been sold before, but have
-been on these two plantations since they were born. Here have
-they lived their humble lives, and loved their simple loves; here were
-they born, and here have many of them had children born unto
-them; here had their parents lived before them, and are now resting
-in quiet graves on the old plantations that these unhappy ones
-are to see no more forever; here they left not only the well-known
-scenes dear to them from very baby-hood by a thousand fond memories,
-and homes as much loved by them, perhaps, as brighter homes
-by men of brighter faces; but all the clinging ties that bound them
-to living hearts were torn asunder, for but one-half of each of
-these two happy little communities was sent to the shambles, to be
-scattered to the four winds, and the other half was left behind.
-And who can tell how closely intertwined are the affections of a little
-band of four hundred persons, living isolated from all the world
-beside, from birth to middle age? Do they not naturally become
-one great family, each man a brother unto each?</p>
-
-<p>It is true they were sold "in families;" but let us see: a man
-and his wife were called a "family," their parents and kindred
-were not taken into account; the man and wife might be sold to
-the pine woods of North Carolina, their brothers and sisters be scattered
-through the cotton fields of Alabama and the rice swamps of
-Louisiana, while the parents might be left on the old plantation to
-wear out their weary lives in heavy grief, and lay their heads in
-far-off graves, over which their children might never weep. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
-no account could be taken of loves that were as yet unconsummated
-by marriage; and how many aching hearts have been
-divorced by this summary proceeding no man can ever know.
-And the separation is as utter, and is infinitely more hopeless, than
-that made by the Angel of Death, for then the loved ones are committed
-to the care of a merciful Deity; but in the other instance,
-to the tender mercies of a slave-driver. These dark-skinned unfortunates
-are perfectly unlettered, and could not communicate by
-writing even if they should know where to send their missives.
-And so to each other, and to the old familiar places of their youth,
-clung all their sympathies and affections, not less strong, perhaps,
-because they are so few. The blades of grass on all the Butler
-estates are outnumbered by the tears that are poured out in agony
-at the wreck that has been wrought in happy homes, and the crushing
-grief that has been laid on loving hearts.</p>
-
-<p>But, then, what business have "niggers" with tears? Besides,
-didn't Pierce Butler give them a silver dollar a-piece? which will
-appear in the sequel. And, sad as it is, it was all necessary, because
-a gentleman was not able to live on the beggarly pittance of
-half a million, and so must needs enter into speculations which
-turned out adversely.</p>
-
-<h3>HOW THEY WERE TREATED IN SAVANNAH.</h3>
-
-<p>The negroes were brought to Savannah in small lots, as many at
-a time as could be conveniently taken care of, the last of them
-reaching the city the Friday before the sale. They were consigned
-to the care of Mr. J. Bryan, Auctioneer and Negro Broker, who
-was to feed and keep them in condition until disposed of. Immediately
-on their arrival they were taken to the Race-course, and
-there quartered in the sheds erected for the accommodation of the
-horses and carriages of gentlemen attending the races. Into these
-sheds they were huddled pell-mell, without any more attention to
-their comfort than was necessary to prevent their becoming ill and
-unsaleable. Each "family" had one or more boxes or bundles, in
-which were stowed such scanty articles of their clothing as were
-not brought into immediate requisition, and their tin dishes and
-gourds for their food and drink.</p>
-
-<p>It is, perhaps, a fit tribute to large-handed munificence to say
-that, when the negro man was sold, there was no extra charge for
-the negro man's clothes; they went with the man, and were not
-charged in the bill. Nor is this altogether a contemptible idea,
-for many of them had worldly wealth, in the shape of clothing and
-other valuables, to the extent of perhaps four or five dollars; and
-had all these been taken strictly into the account, the sum total of
-the sale would have been increased, possibly, a thousand dollars.
-In the North, we do not necessarily sell the harness with the horse;
-why, in the South, should the clothes go with the negro?</p>
-
-<p>In these sheds were the chattels huddled together on the floor,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
-there being no sign of bench or table. They eat and slept on the
-bare boards, their food being rice and beans, with occasionally a
-bit of bacon and corn bread. Their huge bundles were scattered
-over the floor, and thereon the slaves sat or reclined, when not
-restlessly moving about, or gathered into sorrowful groups, discussing
-the chances of their future fate. On the faces of all was an
-expression of heavy grief; some appeared to be resigned to the
-hard stroke of Fortune that had torn them from their homes, and
-were sadly trying to make the best of it; some sat brooding moodily
-over their sorrows, their chins resting on their hands, their eyes
-staring vacantly, and their bodies rocking to and fro, with a restless
-motion that was never stilled; few wept, the place was too
-public and the drivers too near, though some occasionally turned
-aside to give way to a few quiet tears. They were dressed in
-every possible variety of uncouth and fantastic garb, in every style
-and of every imaginable color; the texture of the garments was in
-all cases coarse, most of the men being clothed in the rough cloth
-that is made expressly for the slaves. The dresses assumed by the
-negro minstrels, when they give imitations of plantation character,
-are by no means exaggerated; they are, instead, weak and unable
-to come up to the original. There was every variety of hats, with
-every imaginable slouch; and there was every cut and style of
-coat and pantaloons, made with every conceivable ingenuity of
-misfit, and tossed on with a general appearance of perfect looseness
-that is perfectly indescribable, except to say that a Southern negro
-always looks as if he could shake his clothes off without taking his
-hands out of his pockets. The women, true to the feminine instinct,
-had made, in almost every case, some attempt at finery. All wore
-gorgeous turbans, generally manufactured in an instant out of a
-gay-colored handkerchief by a sudden and graceful twist of the
-fingers; though there was occasionally a more elaborate turban, a
-turban complex and mysterious, got up with care, and ornamented
-with a few beads or bright bits of ribbon. Their dresses were
-mostly coarse stuff, though there were some gaudy calicoes; a few
-had ear-rings, and one possessed the treasure of a string of yellow
-and blue beads. The little children were always better and more
-carefully dressed than the older ones, the parental pride coming
-out in the shape of a yellow cap pointed like a mitre, or a jacket
-with a strip of red broadcloth round the bottom. The children
-were of all sizes, the youngest being fifteen days old. The babies
-were generally good-natured; though when one would set up a
-yell, the complaint soon attacked the others, and a full chorus
-would be the result.</p>
-
-<p>The slaves remained at the Race-course, some of them for more
-than a week, and all of them for four days before the sale. They
-were brought in thus early that buyers who desired to inspect them
-might enjoy that privilege, although none of them were sold at private
-sale. For these preliminary days their shed was constantly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
-visited by speculators. The negroes were examined with as little
-consideration as if they had been brutes indeed; the buyers pulling
-their mouths open to see their teeth, pinching their limbs to
-find how muscular they were, walking them up and down to detect
-any signs of lameness, making them stoop and bend in different
-ways that they might be certain there was no concealed rupture or
-wound; and in addition to all this treatment, asking them scores of
-questions relative to their qualifications and accomplishments. All
-these humiliations were submitted to without a murmur, and in
-some instances with good-natured cheerfulness&mdash;where the slave
-liked the appearance of the proposed buyer, and fancied that he
-might prove a kind "Mas'r."</p>
-
-<p>The following curiously sad scene is the type of a score of others
-that were there enacted:</p>
-
-<p>"Elisha," chattel No. 5 in the catalogue, had taken a fancy to a
-benevolent-looking middle-aged gentleman, who was inspecting the
-stock, and thus used his powers of persuasion to induce the benevolent
-man to purchase him, with his wife, boy and girl, Molly, Israel
-and Sevanda, chattels Nos. 6, 7 and 8. The earnestness with
-which the poor fellow pressed his suit, knowing, as he did, that
-perhaps the happiness of his whole life depended on his success,
-was touching, and the arguments he used most pathetic. He made
-no appeal to the feelings of the buyer; he rested no hope on his
-charity and kindness, but only strove to show how well worth his
-dollars were the bone and blood he was entreating him to buy.</p>
-
-<p>"Look at me, Mas'r; am prime rice planter; sho' you won't find
-a better man den me; no better on de whole plantation; not a bit
-old yet; do mo' work den ever; do carpenter work, too, little;
-better buy me, Mas'r; I'se be good sarvant, Mas'r. Molly, too, my
-wife, Sa, fus'rate rice hand; mos as good as me. Stan' out yer,
-Molly, and let the gen'lm'n see."</p>
-
-<p>Molly advances, with her hands crossed on her bosom, and makes
-a quick short curtsy, and stands mute, looking appealingly in the
-benevolent man's face. But Elisha talks all the faster.</p>
-
-<p>"Show mas'r yer arm, Molly&mdash;good arm dat, Mas'r&mdash;she do a
-heap of work mo' with dat arm yet. Let good Mas'r see yer teeth,
-Molly&mdash;see dat Mas'r, teeth all reg'lar, all good&mdash;she'm young gal
-yet. Come out yer, Israel, walk aroun' an' let the gen'lm'n see
-how spry you be"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Then, pointing to the three-year-old girl who stood with her chubby
-hand to her mouth, holding on to her mother's dress, and uncertain
-what to make of the strange scene.</p>
-
-<p>"Little Vardy's only a chile yet; make prime gal by-and-by.
-Better buy us, Mas'r, we'm fus' rate bargain"&mdash;and so on. But
-the benevolent gentleman found where he could drive a closer bargain,
-and so bought somebody else.</p>
-
-<p>Similar scenes were transacting all the while on every side&mdash;parents
-praising the strength and cleverness of their children, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
-showing off every muscle and sinew to the very best advantage, not
-with the excusable pride of other parents, but to make them the
-more desirable in the eyes of the man-buyer; and, on the other
-hand, children excusing and mitigating the age and inability of
-parents, that they might be more marketable and fall, if possible,
-into kind hands. Not unfrequently these representations, if borne
-out by the facts, secured a purchaser. The women never spoke to
-the white men unless spoken to, and then made the conference as
-short as possible. And not one of them all, during the whole time
-they were thus exposed to the rude questions of vulgar men, spoke
-the first unwomanly or indelicate word, or conducted herself in any
-regard otherwise than as a modest woman should do; their conversation
-and demeanor were quite as unexceptionable as they would
-have been had they been the highest ladies in the land, and through
-all the insults to which they were subjected they conducted themselves
-with the most perfect decorum and self-respect.</p>
-
-<p>The sentiment of the subjoined characteristic dialogue was heard
-more than once repeated:</p>
-
-<p>"Well, Colonel, I seen you looking sharp at Shoemaker Bill's
-Sally. Going to buy her?</p>
-
-<p>"Well, Major, I think not. Sally's a good, big, strapping gal,
-and can do a heap o' work; but it's five years since she had any
-children. <i>She's done breeding, I reckon.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>In the intervals of more active labor, the discussion of the reopening
-of the slave trade was commenced, and the opinion seemed
-to generally prevail that its reëstablishment is a consummation
-devoutly to be wished, and one red-faced Major or General or Corporal
-clenched his remarks with the emphatic assertion that "We'll
-have all the niggers in Africa over here in three years&mdash;we won't
-leave enough for seed."</p>
-
-<h3>THE SALE.</h3>
-
-<p>The Race-course at Savannah is situated about three miles from
-the city, in a pleasant spot, nearly surrounded by woods. As it
-rained violently during the two days of the sale, the place was only
-accessible by carriages, and the result was, that few attended but
-actual buyers, who had come from long distances, and could not
-afford to lose the opportunity. If the affair had come off in Yankee
-land, there would have been a dozen omnibuses running constantly
-between the city and the Race-course, and some speculator would
-have bagged a nice little sum of money by the operation. But
-nothing of the kind was thought of here, and the only gainers were
-the livery stables, the owners of which had sufficient Yankeeism to
-charge double and treble prices.</p>
-
-<p>The conveniences for getting to the ground were so limited that
-there were not enough buyers to warrant the opening of the sale
-for an hour or two after the advertised time. They dropped in,
-however, a few at a time, and things began to look more encouragingly
-for the seller.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p>
-<p>The negroes looked more uncomfortable than ever; the close confinement
-in-doors for a number of days, and the drizzly, unpleasant
-weather, began to tell on their condition. They moved about more
-listlessly, and were fast losing the activity and springiness they had
-at first shown. This morning they were all gathered into the long
-room of the building erected as the "Grand Stand" of the Race-course,
-that they might be immediately under the eye of the buyers.
-The room was about a hundred feet long by twenty wide, and herein
-were crowded the poor creatures, with much of their baggage,
-awaiting their respective calls to step upon the block and be sold
-to the highest bidder. This morning Mr. Pierce Butler appeared
-among his people, speaking to each one, and being recognized with
-seeming pleasure by all. The men obsequiously pulled off their
-hats and made that indescribable sliding hitch with the foot which
-passes with a negro for a bow; and the women each dropped the
-quick curtsy, which they seldom vouchsafe to any other than their
-legitimate master and mistress. Occasionally, to a very old or
-favorite servant, Mr. Butler would extend his gloved hand, which
-mark of condescension was instantly hailed with grins of delight
-from all the sable witnesses.</p>
-
-<p>The room in which the sale actually took place immediately adjoined
-the room of the negroes, and communicated with it by two
-large doors. The sale room was open to the air on one side, commanding
-a view of the entire Course. A small platform was raised
-about two feet and a-half high, on which were placed the desks of
-the entry clerks, leaving room in front of them for the auctioneer
-and the goods.</p>
-
-<p>At about 11 o'clock the business men took their places, and announced
-that the sale would begin. Mr. Bryan, the Negro Broker,
-is a dapper little man, wearing spectacles and a yachting hat, sharp
-and sudden in his movements, and perhaps the least bit in the world
-obtrusively officious&mdash;as earnest in his language as he could be without
-actual swearing, though acting much as if he would like to
-swear a little at the critical moment; Mr. Bryan did not sell the
-goods, he merely superintended the operation, and saw that the
-entry clerks did their duty properly. The auctioneer proper was a
-Mr. Walsh, who deserves a word of description. In personal appearance
-he is the very opposite of Mr. Bryan, being careless in
-his dress instead of scrupulous, a large man instead of a little one,
-a fat man instead of a lean one, and a good-natured man instead of
-a fierce one. He is a rollicking old boy, with an eye ever on the
-look-out, and that never lets a bidding nod escape him; a hearty
-word for every bidder who cares for it, and plenty of jokes to let off
-when the business gets a little slack. Mr. Walsh has a florid complexion,
-not more so, perhaps, than is becoming, and possibly not
-more so than is natural in a whiskey country. Not only is his face
-red, but his skin has been taken off in spots by blisters of some sort,
-giving him a peely look; so that, taking his face all in all, the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>peeliness
-and the redness combined, he looks much as if he had been
-boiled in the same pot with a red cabbage.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Walsh mounted the stand and announced the terms of the
-sale, "one-third cash, the remainder payable in two equal annual
-instalments, bearing interest from the day of sale, to be secured by
-approved mortgage and personal security, or approved acceptances
-in Savannah, Ga., or Charleston, S. C. Purchasers to pay for
-papers." The buyers, who were present to the number of about
-two hundred, clustered around the platform; while the negroes, who
-were not likely to be immediately wanted, gathered into sad groups
-in the back-ground, to watch the progress of the selling in which
-they were so sorrowfully interested. The wind howled outside, and
-through the open side of the building the driving rain came pouring
-in; the bar down stairs ceased for a short time its brisk trade; the
-buyers lit fresh cigars, got ready their catalogues and pencils, and
-the first lot of human chattels was led upon the stand, not by a
-white man, but by a sleek mulatto, himself a slave, and who seems
-to regard the selling of his brethren, in which he so glibly assists,
-as a capital joke. It had been announced that the negroes would
-be sold in "families," that is to say, a man would not be parted
-from his wife, or a mother from a very young child. There is perhaps
-as much policy as humanity in this arrangement, for thereby
-many aged and unserviceable people are disposed of, who otherwise
-would not find a ready sale.</p>
-
-<p>The first family brought out were announced on the catalogue as</p>
-
-<table summary="first family brought out">
- <tr>
- <td class="center">NAME.</td>
- <td class="center">AGE.</td>
- <td class="center">REMARKS.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="left">1. George,<span class="s3">&nbsp;</span></td>
- <td class="center">27</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="s3">&nbsp;</span>Prime Cotton Planter.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="left">2. Sue,</td>
- <td class="center">26</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="s3">&nbsp;</span>Prime Rice Planter.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="left">3. George,</td>
- <td class="center">6</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="s3">&nbsp;</span>Boy Child.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="left">4. Harry,</td>
- <td class="center">2</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="s3">&nbsp;</span>Boy Child.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>The manner of buying was announced to be bidding a certain
-price a-piece for the whole lot. Thus, George and his family were
-started at $300, and were finally sold at $600 each, being $2,400
-for the four. To get an idea of the relative value of each one, we
-must suppose George worth $1,200, Sue worth $900, Little George
-worth $200, and Harry worth $100. Owing, however, to some misapprehension
-on the part of the buyer, as to the manner of bidding,
-he did not take the family at this figure, and they were put up and
-sold again, on the second day, when they brought $620 each, or
-$2,480 for the whole&mdash;an advance of $80 over the first sale.</p>
-
-<p>Robert, and Luna his wife, who were announced as having
-"goitre, otherwise very prime," brought the round sum of $1,005
-each. But that your readers may have an idea of the exact manner
-in which things are done, I append a couple of pages of the
-catalogue used on this occasion, which you can print verbatim:</p>
-
-<blockquote><p>
-<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">99&mdash;Kate's John, aged 30; rice, prime man.</span><br />
-100&mdash;Betsey, 29; rice, unsound.<br />
-101&mdash;Kate, 6.<br />
-102&mdash;Violet, 3 months.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $510 each.</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>103&mdash;Wooster, 45; rice hand, and fair mason.<br />
-104&mdash;Mary, 40; cotton hand.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $300 each.</span><br />
-105&mdash;Commodore Bob, aged; rice hand.<br />
-106&mdash;Kate, aged; cotton.<br />
-107&mdash;Linda, 19; cotton, prime young woman.<br />
-108&mdash;Joe, 13; rice, prime boy.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $600 each.</span><br />
-109&mdash;Bob, 30; rice.<br />
-110&mdash;Mary, 25; rice, prime woman.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $1,135 each.</span><br />
-111&mdash;Anson, 49; rice&mdash;ruptured, one eye.<br />
-112&mdash;Violet, 55; rice hand.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $250 each.</span><br />
-113&mdash;Allen Jeffrey, 46; rice hand and sawyer in steam mill.<br />
-114&mdash;Sikey, 43; rice hand.<br />
-115&mdash;Watty, 5; infirm legs.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $520 each.</span><br />
-116&mdash;Rina, 18; rice, prime young woman.<br />
-117&mdash;Lena, 1.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $645 each.</span><br />
-118&mdash;Pompey, 31; rice&mdash;lame in one foot.<br />
-119&mdash;Kitty, 30; rice, prime woman.<br />
-120&mdash;Pompey, Jr., 10; prime boy.<br />
-121&mdash;John, 7.<br />
-122&mdash;Noble, 1; boy.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $580 each.</span><br />
-341&mdash;Goin, 39; rice hand.<br />
-342&mdash;Cassander, 35; cotton hand&mdash;has fits.<br />
-343&mdash;Emiline, 19; cotton, prime young woman.<br />
-344&mdash;Judy, 11; cotton, prime girl.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $400 each.</span><br />
-345&mdash;Dorcas, 17; cotton, prime woman.<br />
-346&mdash;Joe, 3 months.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $1,200 each.</span><br />
-347&mdash;Tom, 22; cotton hand. Sold for $1,260.<br />
-348&mdash;Judge Will, 55; rice hand. Sold for $325.<br />
-349&mdash;Lowden, 54; cotton hand.<br />
-350&mdash;Hagar, 50; cotton hand.<br />
-351&mdash;Lowden, 15; cotton, prime boy.<br />
-352&mdash;Silas, 13; cotton, prime boy.<br />
-353&mdash;Lettia, 11; cotton, prime girl.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $300 each.</span><br />
-354&mdash;Fielding, 21; cotton, prime young man.<br />
-355&mdash;Abel, 19; cotton, prime young man.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $1,295 each.</span><br />
-356&mdash;Smith's Bill, aged; sore leg.<br />
-357&mdash;Leah, 46; cotton hand.<br />
-358&mdash;Sally, 9.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Withdrawn.</span><br />
-359&mdash;Adam, 24; rice, prime man.<br />
-360&mdash;Charlotte, 22; rice, prime woman.<br />
-361&mdash;Lesh, 1.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $750 each.</span><br />
-362&mdash;Maria, 47; rice hand.<br />
-363&mdash;Luna, 22; rice, prime woman.<br />
-364&mdash;Clementina, 17; rice, prime young woman.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $950 each.</span><br />
-365&mdash;Tom, 48; rice hand.<br />
-366&mdash;Harriet, 41; rice hand<br />
-367&mdash;Wanney, 19; rice hand, prime young man.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>368&mdash;Deborah, 6.<br />
-369&mdash;Infant, 3 months.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sold for $700 each.</span><br />
-</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>It seems as if every shade of character capable of being implicated
-in the sale of human flesh and blood was represented among
-the buyers. There was the Georgia fast young man, with his pantaloons
-tucked into his boots, his velvet cap jauntily dragged over to
-one side, his cheek full of tobacco, which he bites from a huge plug,
-that resembles more than anything else an old bit of a rusty wagon
-tire, and who is altogether an animal of quite a different breed from
-your New York fast man. His ready revolver, or his convenient
-knife, is ready for instant use in case of a heated argument. White-neck-clothed,
-gold-spectacled, and silver-haired old men were there,
-resembling in appearance that noxious breed of sanctimonious deacons
-we have at the North, who are perpetually leaving documents
-at your door that you never read, and the business of whose mendicant
-life it is to eternally solicit subscriptions for charitable associations,
-of which they are treasurers. These gentry, with quiet step
-and subdued voice, moved carefully about among the live stock,
-ignoring, as a general rule, the men, but tormenting the women
-with questions which, when accidentally overheard by the disinterested
-spectator, bred in that spectator's mind an almost irresistible
-desire to knock somebody down. And then, all imaginable varieties
-of rough, backwoods rowdies, who began the day in a spirited
-manner, but who, as its hours progressed, and their practice at the
-bar became more prolific in results, waxed louder and talkier and
-more violent, were present, and added a characteristic feature to
-the assemblage. Those of your readers who have read "Uncle
-Tom,"&mdash;and who has not?&mdash;will remember, with peculiar feelings,
-Legree, the slave-driver and woman-whipper. That that character
-is not been overdrawn, or too highly colored, there is abundant
-testimony. Witness the subjoined dialogue: A party of men were
-conversing on the fruitful subject of managing refractory "niggers;"
-some were for severe whipping, some recommending branding, one
-or two advocated other modes of torture, but one huge brute of a
-man, who had not taken an active part in the discussion, save to
-assent, with approving nod, to any unusually barbarous proposition,
-at last broke his silence by saying, in an oracular way, "You may
-say what you like about managing niggers; I'm a driver myself,
-and I've had some experience, and I ought to know. You can manage
-ordinary niggers by lickin' 'em, and givin' 'em a taste of the
-hot iron once in awhile when they're extra ugly; but if a nigger
-really sets himself up against me, I can't never have any patience
-with him. I just get my pistol and shoot him right down; and
-that's the best way."</p>
-
-<p>And this brute was talking to gentlemen, and his remarks were
-listened to with attention, and his assertions assented to by more
-than one in the knot of listeners. But all this time the sale was
-going on, and the merry Mr. Walsh, with many a quip and jest, was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
-beguiling the time when the bidding was slow. The expression on
-the faces of all who stepped on the block was always the same, and
-told of more anguish than it is in the power of words to express.
-Blighted homes, crushed hopes and broken hearts, was the sad story
-to be read in all the anxious faces. Some of them regarded the
-sale with perfect indifference, never making a motion, save to turn
-from one side to the other at the word of the dapper Mr. Bryan,
-that all the crowd might have a fair view of their proportions, and
-then, when the sale was accomplished, stepped down from the block
-without caring to cast even a look at the buyer, who now held all
-their happiness in his hands. Others, again, strained their eyes
-with eager glances from one buyer to another as the bidding went
-on, trying with earnest attention to follow the rapid voice of the
-auctioneer. Sometimes, two persons only would be bidding for the
-same chattel, all the others having resigned the contest, and then
-the poor creature on the block, conceiving an instantaneous preference
-for one of the buyers over the other, would regard the rivalry
-with the intensest interest, the expression of his face changing with
-every bid, settling into a half smile of joy if the favorite buyer persevered
-unto the end and secured the property, and settling down
-into a look of hopeless despair if the other won the victory.</p>
-
-<h3>DAPHNEY'S BABY.</h3>
-
-<p>The family of Primus, plantation carpenter, consisting of Daphney
-his wife, with her young babe, and Dido, a girl of three years
-old, were reached in due course of time. Daphney had a large
-shawl, which she kept carefully wrapped round her infant and herself.
-This unusual proceeding attracted much attention, and provoked
-many remarks, such as these:</p>
-
-<p>"What do you keep your nigger covered up for? Pull off her
-blanket."</p>
-
-<p>"What's the matter with the gal? Has she got the headache?"</p>
-
-<p>"What's the fault of the gal? Ain't she sound? Pull off her
-rags and let us see her."</p>
-
-<p>"Who's going to bid on that nigger, if you keep her covered
-up. Let's see her face."</p>
-
-<p>And a loud chorus of similar remarks, emphasized with profanity,
-and mingled with sayings too indecent and obscene to be even
-hinted at here, went up from the crowd of chivalrous Southern
-gentlemen.</p>
-
-<p>At last the auctioneer obtained a hearing long enough to explain
-that there was no attempt to practise any deception in the case&mdash;the
-parties were not to be wronged in any way; he had no desire
-to palm off on them an inferior article; but the truth of the matter
-was that Daphney had been confined only fifteen days ago, and he
-thought that on that account she was entitled to the slight indulgence
-of a blanket, to keep from herself and child the chill air and
-the driving rain.</p>
-
-<p>Will your lady readers look at the circumstances of this case?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
-The day was the 2d day of March. Daphney's baby was born into
-the world on St. Valentine's happy day, the 14th of February.</p>
-
-<p>Since her confinement, Daphney had traveled from the plantation
-to Savannah, where she had been kept in a shed for six days.
-On the sixth or seventh day after her sickness, she had left her
-bed, taken a railroad journey across the country to the shambles,
-was there exposed for six days to the questionings and insults of
-the negro speculators, and then on the fifteenth day after her
-confinement was put up on the block, with her husband and her
-other child, and, with her new-born baby in her arms, sold to the
-highest bidder.</p>
-
-<p>It was very considerate of Daphney to be sick before the sale,
-for her wailing babe was worth to Mr. Butler all of a hundred
-dollars. The family sold for $625 a-piece, or $2,500 for the four.</p>
-
-<h3>BOB AND MARY.</h3>
-
-<p>This was a couple not quite a year married, and were down in
-the catalogue as "prime." They had no children yet; Mary,
-with a reprehensible lack of that tender interest in Mr. Butler's
-affairs that had been exhibited in so eminent a degree by Daphney,
-had disappointed that worthy man's expectations, and the baby as
-yet was not. But Bob and Mary sold for $1,135 a-piece, for all
-that.</p>
-
-<p>In another instance, Margaret, the wife of Doctor George, who
-was confined on February 16, though the name of herself and
-family were inserted in the catalogue, did not come to the sale,
-and consequently, they were not disposed of at all. As Margaret's
-baby was fully four days old at the time she was required to start
-on her journey to Savannah, we can only look at her refusal to go
-as a most culpable instance of perversity. Margaret should be
-whipped, and branded, and otherwise kindly admonished of her
-great sin in thus disappointing the reasonable expectations of so
-kind a master. But Mr. Butler bore with her in a truly Christian
-spirit, and uttered no reproach&mdash;in public at least. It was the
-more unkind of Margaret, too, because there were six in the family
-who would have brought probably $4,000, and all were detained
-from the sale by the contumacy of misguided Margaret.</p>
-
-<p>While on the subject of babies, it may be mentioned that Amity,
-chattel No. 316, wife of Prince, chattel No. 315, had testified her
-earnest desire to contribute all in her power to the worldly wealth
-of her master by bringing into the world at one time chattles Nos.
-317 and 318, being a fine pair of twin boys, just a year old. It is
-not in evidence that Amity received from her master any testimonial
-of his appreciating her good behavior on this occasion, but
-it is certain that she brought a great price, the four, Prince, Amity
-and the twins selling for $670 a-piece, being a total of $2,680.</p>
-
-<p>Many other babies, of all ages of baby-hood, were sold, but there
-was nothing particularly interesting about them. There were some
-thirty babies in the lot; they are esteemed worth to the master a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
-hundred dollars the day they are born, and to increase in value at
-the rate of a hundred dollars a year till they are sixteen or seventeen
-years old, at which age they bring the best prices.</p>
-
-<h3>THE LOVE STORY OF JEFFREY AND DORCAS.</h3>
-
-<p>Jeffrey, chattel No. 319, marked as a "prime cotton hand,"
-aged 23 years, was put up. Jeffrey being a likely lad, the competition
-was high. The first bid was $1,100, and he was finally sold
-for $1,310. Jeffrey was sold alone; he had no incumbrance in the
-shape of an aged father or mother, who must necessarily be sold
-with him; nor had he any children, for Jeffrey was not married.
-But Jeffrey, chattel No. 319, being human in his affections, had
-dared to cherish a love for Dorcas, chattel No. 278; and Dorcas,
-not having the fear of her master before her eyes, had given her
-heart to Jeffrey. Whether what followed was a just retribution on
-Jeffrey and Dorcas, for daring to take such liberties with their
-master's property as to exchange hearts, or whether it only goes to
-prove that with black as with white the saying holds, that "the
-course of true love never did run smooth," cannot now be told.
-Certain it is that these two lovers were not to realize the consummation
-of their hopes in happy wedlock. Jeffrey and Dorcas had
-told their loves, had exchanged their simple vows, and were betrothed,
-each to the other as dear, and each by the other as fondly
-beloved as though their skins had been of fairer color. And who
-shall say that, in the sight of Heaven and all holy angels, these
-two humble hearts were not as closely wedded as any two of the
-prouder race that call them slaves?</p>
-
-<p>Be that as it may, Jeffrey was sold. He finds out his new master;
-and, hat in hand, the big tears standing in his eyes, and his
-voice trembling with emotion, he stands before that master and
-tells his simple story, praying that his betrothed may be bought
-with him. Though his voice trembles, there is no embarrassment
-in his manner; his fears have killed all the bashfulness that would
-naturally attend such a recital to a stranger, and before unsympathizing
-witnesses; he feels that he is pleading for the happiness of
-her he loves, as well as for his own, and his tale is told in a frank
-and manly way.</p>
-
-<p>"I loves Dorcas, young Mas'r; I loves her well an' true; she
-says she loves me, and I know she does; de good Lord knows I
-loves her better than I loves any one in de wide world&mdash;never can
-love another woman half so well. Please buy Dorcas, Mas'r.
-We're be good sarvants to you long as we live. We're be married
-right soon, young Mas'r, and de chillun will be healthy and strong,
-Mas'r, and dey'll be good sarvants, too. Please buy Dorcas, young
-Mas'r. We loves each other a heap&mdash;do, really true, Mas'r."</p>
-
-<p>Jeffrey then remembers that no loves and hopes of his are to enter
-into the bargain at all, but in the earnestness of his love he has
-forgotten to base his plea on other ground till now, when he bethinks
-him and continues, with his voice not trembling now, save with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
-eagerness to prove how worthy of many dollars is the maiden of his
-heart:</p>
-
-<p>"Young Mas'r, Dorcas prime woman&mdash;A1 woman, sa. Tall
-gal, sir; long arms, strong, healthy, and can do a heap of work in
-a day. She is one of de best rice hands on de whole plantation;
-worth $1,200 easy, Mas'r, an' fus'rate bargain at that."</p>
-
-<p>The man seems touched by Jeffrey's last remarks, and bids him
-fetch out his "gal, and let's see what she looks like."</p>
-
-<p>Jeffrey goes into the long room, and presently returns with Dorcas,
-looking very sad and self-possessed, without a particle of embarrassment
-at the trying position in which she is placed. She makes
-the accustomed curtsy, and stands meekly with her hands clasped
-across her bosom, waiting the result. The buyer regards her with
-a critical eye, and growls in a low voice that the "gal has good
-p'ints." Then he goes on to a more minute and careful examination
-of her working abilities. He turns her around, makes her
-stoop, and walk; and then he takes off her turban to look at her
-head that no wound or disease be concealed by the gay handkerchief;
-he looks at her teeth, and feels of her arms, and at last announces
-himself pleased with the result of his observations, whereat
-Jeffrey, who has stood near, trembling with eager hope, is overjoyed,
-and he smiles for the first time. The buyer then crowns
-Jeffrey's happiness by making a promise that he will buy her, if
-the price isn't run up too high. And the two lovers step aside and
-congratulate each other on their good fortune. But Dorcas is not
-to be sold till the next day, and there are twenty-four long hours of
-feverish expectation.</p>
-
-<p>Early next morning is Jeffrey alert, and, hat in hand, encouraged
-to unusual freedom by the greatness of the stake for which he plays,
-he addresses every buyer, and of all who will listen he begs the boon
-of a word to be spoken to his new master to encourage him to buy
-Dorcas. And all the long morning he speaks in his homely way with
-all who know him, that they will intercede to save his sweetheart
-from being sold away from him forever. No one has the heart to
-deny a word of promise and encouragement to the poor fellow, and,
-joyous with so much kindness, his hopes and spirits gradually rise
-until he feels almost certain that the wish of heart will be accomplished.
-And Dorcas, too, is smiling, for is not Jeffrey's happiness
-her own?</p>
-
-<p>At last comes the trying moment, and Dorcas steps up on the
-stand.</p>
-
-<p>But now a most unexpected feature in the drama is for the first
-time unmasked: <i>Dorcas is not to be sold alone</i>, but with a family of
-four others. Full of dismay, Jeffrey looks to his master, who
-shakes his head, for, although he might be induced to buy Dorcas
-alone, he has no use for the rest of the family. Jeffrey reads his
-doom in his master's look, and turns away, the tears streaming
-down his honest face.</p>
-
-<p>So Dorcas is sold, and her toiling life is to be spent in the cotton<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
-fields of South Carolina, while Jeffrey goes to the rice plantation of
-the Great Swamp.</p>
-
-<p>And to-morrow, Jeffrey and Dorcas are to say their tearful farewell,
-and go their separate ways in life, to meet no more as mortal
-beings.</p>
-
-<p>But didn't Mr. Pierce Butler give them a silver dollar a-piece?
-Who shall say there is no magnanimity in slave-owners?</p>
-
-<p>In another hour I see Dorcas in the long room, sitting motionless
-as a statue, with her head covered with a shawl. And I see Jeffrey,
-who goes to his new master, pulls off his hat and says: "I'se very
-much obliged, Mas'r, to you for tryin' to help me. I knows you
-would have done it if you could&mdash;thank you, Mas'r&mdash;thank you&mdash;but&mdash;its&mdash;berry&mdash;hard"&mdash;and
-here the poor fellow breaks down
-entirely and walks away, covering his face with his battered hat,
-and sobbing like a very child.</p>
-
-<p>He is soon surrounded by a group of his colored friends, who,
-with an instinctive delicacy most unlooked for, stand quiet, and
-with uncovered heads, about him.</p>
-
-<p>Anson and Violet, chattels Nos. 111 and 112, were sold for $250
-each, both being old, and Anson being down in the catalogue as
-"ruptured and as having one eye." Violet was sold as being sick.
-Her disease was probably consumption, which supposition gave rise
-to the following feeling conversation between two buyers:</p>
-
-<p>"Cheap gal, that, Major!"</p>
-
-<p>"Don't think so. They may talk about her being sick; it's no
-easy sickness she's got. She's got consumption, and the man that
-buys her'll have to be a doctrin' her all the time, and she'll die in
-less than three months. I won't have anything to do with her&mdash;don't
-want any half dead niggers about me."</p>
-
-<h3>THE MARKET VALUE OF AN EYE.</h3>
-
-<p>Guy, chattel No. 419, "a prime young man," sold for $1,280,
-being without blemish; his age was twenty years, and he was altogether
-a fine article. His next-door neighbor, Andrew, chattel No.
-420, was his very counterpart in all marketable points, in size, age,
-skill, and everything save that he had lost his right eye. Andrew
-sold for only $1,040, from which we argue that the market value of
-the right eye in the Southern country is $240.</p>
-
-<h3>AN UNEXPECTED MARRIAGE.</h3>
-
-<p>When the family of Mingo, consisting of his wife, two sons and a
-daughter, was called for, it was announced by the auctioneer that
-chattel No. 322, Dembo, the eldest son, aged 20, had the evening
-before procured the services of a minister, and been joined in wedlock
-to chattel No. 404, Frances, and that he should be compelled
-to put up the bride and groom in one lot. They were called up,
-and, as was to be expected, their appearance was the signal for a
-volley of coarse jokes from the auctioneer, and of ribald remarks
-from the surrounding crowd. The newly-married pair bore it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
-bravely, although one refined gentleman took hold of Frances's
-lips and pulled them apart, to see her age.</p>
-
-<p>This sort of thing it is that makes Northern blood boil, and
-Northern fists clench with a laudable desire to hit somebody. It
-was almost too much for endurance to stand and see those brutal
-slave-drivers pushing the women about, pulling their lips apart with
-their not too cleanly hands, and committing many another indecent
-act, while the husbands, fathers and brothers of those women were
-compelled to witness these things, without the power to resent
-the outrage.</p>
-
-<p>Dembo and Frances were at last struck off for $1,320 each, and
-went to spend their honey-moon on a cotton plantation in Alabama.</p>
-
-<h3>THE CASE OF JOSHUA'S MOLLY.</h3>
-
-<p>The auctioneer brought up Joshua's Molly and family. He
-announced that Molly insisted that she was lame in her left foot,
-and perversely would walk lame, although for his part, he did not
-believe a word of it. He had caused her to be examined by an
-eminent physician in Savannah, which medical light had declared
-that Joshua's Molly was not lame, but was only shamming. However,
-the gentlemen must judge for themselves and bid accordingly.
-So Molly was put through her paces, and compelled to trot up and
-down along the stage, to go up and down the steps, and to exercise
-her feet in various ways, but always with the same result, the left
-foot <i>would</i> be lame. She was finally sold for $695.</p>
-
-<p>Whether she really was lame or not no one knows but herself,
-but it must be remembered that to a slave a lameness, or anything
-that decreases his market value, is a thing to be rejoiced over. A
-man in the prime of life, worth $1,600 or thereabouts, can have
-little hope of ever being able, by any little savings of his own, to
-purchase his liberty. But let him have a rupture, or lose a limb,
-or sustain any other injury that renders him of much less service
-to his owner, and reduces his value to $300 or $400, and he may
-hope to accumulate that sum, and eventually to purchase his
-liberty. Freedom without health is infinitely sweeter than health
-without freedom.</p>
-
-<p>And so the Great Sale went on for two long days, during which
-time there were sold 429 men, women and children. There were
-436 announced to be sold, but a few were detained on the plantations
-by sickness.</p>
-
-<p>At the close of the sale, on the last day, several baskets of champagne
-were produced, and all were invited to partake, the wine
-being at the expense of the broker, Mr. Bryan.</p>
-
-<p>The total amount of the sale foots up $303,850&mdash;the proceeds
-of the first day being $161,480, and of the second day $142,370.</p>
-
-<p>The highest sum paid for any one family was given for Sally
-Walker and her five children, who were mostly grown up. The
-price was $6,180.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span></p>
-<p>The highest price paid for a single man was $1,750, which was
-given for William, a "fair carpenter and caulker."</p>
-
-<p>The highest price paid for a woman was $1,250, which was given
-for Jane, "cotton hand and house servant."</p>
-
-<p>The lowest price paid was for Anson and Violet, a gray-haired
-couple, each having numbered more than fifty years; they brought
-but $250 a-piece.</p>
-
-<h3>MR. PIERCE BUTLER GIVES HIS PEOPLE A DOLLAR A-PIECE.</h3>
-
-<p>Leaving the Race buildings, where the scenes we have described
-took place, a crowd of negroes were seen gathered eagerly about a
-white man. That man was Pierce M. Butler, of the free City of
-Philadelphia, who was solacing the wounded hearts of the people he
-had sold from their firesides and their homes, by doling out to them
-small change at the rate of a dollar a-head. To every negro he had
-sold, who presented his claim for the paltry pittance, he gave the
-munificent stipend of one whole dollar, in specie; he being provided
-with two canvas bags of 25 cent pieces, fresh from the mint, to give
-an additional glitter to his generosity.</p>
-
-<p>And now come the scenes of the last partings&mdash;of the final separations
-of those who were akin, or who had been such dear friends
-from youth that no ties of kindred could bind them closer&mdash;of those
-who were all in all to each other, and for whose bleeding hearts
-there shall be no earthly comfort&mdash;the parting of parents and children,
-of brother from brother, and the rending of sister from a sister's
-bosom; and O! hardest, cruellest of all, the tearing asunder
-of loving hearts, wedded in all save the one ceremony of the Church&mdash;these
-scenes pass all description; it is not meet for pen to meddle
-with tears so holy.</p>
-
-<p>As the last family stepped down from the block, the rain ceased,
-for the first time in four days, the clouds broke away, and the soft
-sunlight fell on the scene. The unhappy slaves had many of them
-been already removed, and others were now departing with their
-new masters.</p>
-
-<p>That night, not a steamer left that Southern port, not a train of
-cars sped away from that cruel city, that did not bear each its own
-sad burden of those unhappy ones, whose only crime is that they are
-not strong and wise. Some of them maimed and wounded, some
-scarred and gashed, by accident, or by the hand of ruthless drivers&mdash;all
-sad and sorrowful as human hearts can be.</p>
-
-<p>But the stars shone out as brightly as if such things had never
-been, the blushing fruit-trees poured their fragrance on the evening
-air, and the scene was as calmly sweet and quiet as if Man had
-never marred the glorious beauties of Earth by deeds of cruelty
-and wrong.</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT BECAME OF THE SLAVES ON A GEORGIA PLANTATION? ***</div>
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