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Text source George
P. Rawick, The
American Slave: A Composite
Autobiography
(Westport, Conn.,
1972) Ark. Narr., Vol. 8, 175- 179.; electronic
version placed
on-line by Stephen Mintz at the University of
Houston
Henry Blake-Freedman
"After Freedom, We Worked on
Shares"
Henry
Blake was born into slavery in Little Rock, Arkansas, and
was approximately 80 years old when he was interviewed by
the Works Progress Administration. Blake describes the
system of sharecropping that emerged in the South after
Reconstruction. Since the Freedmen did not own their own
land, and because they were opposed to working for wages for
their old masters, sharecropping emerged as the alternative
to slave labor. Sharecropping provided labor for the white
land owners, and it gave the Freedmen some measure of
autonomy since they did not work in gangs or directly under
the white landowners' supervision. It was a system, however,
that led to extreme abuses by the white landowners who took
advantage of the Freedmen.
After
freedom, we worked on shares a while. Then, we rented. When
we worked on shares, we couldn't make nothing- - just
overalls, and something to eat. Half went to the white man,
and you would destroy your half, if you weren't careful. A
man that didn't know how to count would always lose. He
might lose anyhow. The white folks didn't give no itemized
statements. No, you just had to owe so much. No matter how
good account you kept, you had to go by their account, and-
- now, brother, I'm telling you the truth about this- - it's
been that way for a long time. You had to take the white
man's words and notes on everything. Anything you wanted you
could get, if you were a good hand. If you didn't make no
money, that's all right; they would advance you more. But
you better not try to leave and get caught. They'd keep you
in debt. They were sharp. Christmas come, you could take up
twenty dollars in somethin'- to- eat and much as you wanted
in whiskey. You could buy a gallon of whiskey- - anything
that kept you a slave. Because he was always right and you
were always wrong, if there was a difference. If there was
an argument, he would get mad and there would be a shooting
take place.
Source: The American Slave: A
Composite Autobiography
African Americans argue for land
Francis
Cardozo
Frederick
Douglass
Louisiana
Freedmen
Melton
Linton
The
National Freedmen
Baley
Wyat
Sea
Islanders
History 122
Reconstruction
HIST
122 Syllabus
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