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During the Civil War, enslavers bought and sold thousands of people, extending a traffic in humanity that had long underpinned American slavery. Despite the pressures of blockades, economic collapse, and unfolding emancipation, the slave trade survived to the war's end. This book provides a vivid look at life within the trade in slaves and tells the story of the wartime slave trade from the perspective of both participants in it and those subjected to it.
Sommario
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: "No Money, and No Confidence": Slave Commerce, Secession, and the Panic of 1860
- Chapter 2: The "Uncongenial Air of Freedom": Union Occupation and the Slave Trade
- Chapter 3: "Old Abe Is Not Feared in this Region": The Revival of Confederate Slave Commerce
- Chapter 4: "Negroes Will Bear Fabulous Prices": Inflation, Speculation, and the Confederate Future
- Chapter 5: "Liable to Be Sold at Any Moment": State-Making, Continuity, and the Slave Trade
- Chapter 6: Sold "Far Out of the Way of Lincoln": Emancipation and Counterrevolutionary Slave Commerce
- Chapter 7: "Broke...All Up": The Ends and Afterlives of the Wartime Slave Trade
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Info autore
Robert K.D. Colby is an Assistant Professor of History at the University of Mississippi. His research on the domestic slave trade has won multiple awards, including the Allan Nevins Prize of the Society of American Historians.
Riassunto
The Confederate States of America was born in defense of slavery and, after a four-year struggle to become an independent slaveholding republic, died as emancipation dawned. Between Fort Sumter to Appomattox, Confederates bought and sold thousands African American men, women, and children. These transactions in humanity made the internal slave trade a cornerstone of Confederate society, a bulwark of the Rebel economy, and a central part of the experience of the Civil War for all inhabiting the American South.
As An Unholy Traffic shows, slave trading helped Southerners survive and fight the Civil War, as well as to build the future for which they fought. They mitigated the crises the war spawned by buying and selling enslaved people, using this commerce to navigate food shortages, unsettled gender roles, the demands of military service, and other hardships on the homefront. Some Rebels speculated wildly in human property, investing in slaves to ward off inflation and to buy shares in the slaveholding nation they hoped to create. Others traded people to counter the advance of emancipation. Given its centrality to their nationhood, Confederates went to great lengths to prolong the slave trade, which, in turn, supported the Confederacy. For those held in slavery, the surviving slave trade dramatically shaped their pursuit of freedom, inserting a retrograde movement into some people's journeys toward liberty while inspiring others to make the risky decision to escape.
Offering an original perspective on the intersections of slavery, capitalism, the Civil War, and emancipation, Robert K.D. Colby illuminates the place of the peculiar institution within the Confederate mind, the ways in which it underpinned the CSA's war effort, and its impact on those attempting to seize their freedom.
Testo aggiuntivo
Colby's exhaustively researched and lucid book fills that void and provides fresh detail on and interpretation of the meaning of the domestic exchange of enslaved persons in the Confederate state. The author pays special attention to the importance of slave trading and slavery to Confederate nationalism. The ongoing domestic slave trade labor signified white Southerners' confidence in their cause and the active support of the state in preserving and expanding slaveholding.