American History Hit - The Long Death of Slavery
Episode Date: June 19, 2023We celebrate abolition - in the United States during the Civil War and on Juneteenth, in Haiti after the revolution, and in the British Empire in 1833. Yet, over the approximately 100 years in whic...h there were various moments of emancipation, these processes often provided failed pathways to justice for people who had been enslaved.Kris Manjapra joins Dan Snow on our sister podcast, Dan Snow's History Hit, to unearth disturbing truths about the Age of Emancipations, 1780-1880. They discuss examples of emancipations across the Americas, Europe and Africa where Black people were dispossessed by the very moves that were meant to free them.Produced by Hannah Ward. Edited by Dougal Patmore.Discover the past on History Hit with ad-free original podcasts and documentaries released weekly presented by world renowned historians like Dan Snow, James Holland, Mary Beard and more.Get 50% off your first 3 months with code AMERICANHISTORY. Download the app on your smart TV or in the app store or sign up at historyhit.com/subscribeYou can take part in our listener survey here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hello, it's Don Wilden here for American History Hit. Welcome. It's Juneteenth here in the United States,
our national holiday commemorating the final end of the Institution of Slavery in America.
In January 1863, the Emancipation Proclamation had freed millions of enslaved souls across the South,
on paper at least. The fuller reality of freedom, of course, wouldn't come until Union victory.
And even then, there were places in the country where slavery still existed. In Texas,
over a quarter of a million enslaved people waited more than two years until 1865,
and two months after Lee surrendered at Appomattox,
when 2,000 Union troops arrived in Galveston to announce their freedom by executive decree.
June 19th, 1865, Juneteenth, it was called.
And to mark this day, we've pulled an episode out of the archive of our sister podcast, Dan Snow's history hit,
about the end of the institution of slavery and its stubborn refusal to go quietly into
night. Dan is joined by Chris Mangapra, Professor, author, and historian to find out about the age
of emancipations across the Americas, Europe and Africa. Enjoy.
Chris, thank you so much, go on the pod. It's great to be here. I'm so happy to have this chance
to talk with you, Dan. Here's a big question. What do we mean when we talk about emancipation?
Yeah, great question. So emancipation is the process of freeing enslaved people from slavery at a basic
level. Interestingly, the term itself comes from the Latin word, which means to let free from the
hand. And this was used in the ancient times. What's interesting about this, though, is who was
letting the enslaved free from their hand, right? It was obviously the slave owners. And so this is
actually where studying emancipations becomes both a little more complicated and also interesting
because we realized that emancipations took place on the terms of the slave owners, not on the
terms of the enslaved, because it was the letting free of the enslaved from the hands of those who
owned them. That's the way the whole process was framed. What I like about your work is you can
chart, there are various emancipatory moments, aren't there, in the Atlantic world, I guess we could
say, from the late 18th century onwards. But let's talk a little bit. Let's talk about the US,
the American colonies under British rule, pre-independence. Give me the sense of the scale of slavery
and its importance in that colonial economy. Yeah, absolutely.
So by the time that we come to the end of the 18th century, slavery, especially spreading across the U.S. South, is one of the largest sources of wealth for the emerging U.S. nation.
And amongst these people, mostly located in the South, we have, of course, slavery as the institution, the way that the sugar and the cotton, mostly the cotton in the U.S. context is being produced.
there's a smaller group of enslaved people.
We're talking here tens of thousands who are located in the U.S. north.
And it is those communities that would see the first emancipations.
In fact, the first emancipations of the modern world taking place beginning in the city of
Philadelphia, for example, in 1780.
And then we see this process, the gradual emancipation spreading to New York and Connecticut,
Rhode Island, over the coming decades.
Are those kind of economic, are they based on ideas?
Is it something legal changing?
What's going on?
Why does that start?
Yeah, a great question.
Definitely a complicated question to answer
because ideas are definitely part of the story.
Abolitionist ideas, anti-slavery ideas,
are part of the story.
Philadelphia is the heart of the Quakers in the United States,
a dissenting religious group that migrated over
in the 1600s from Britain.
and Quakers had from the 1600s onwards a very strong anti-slavery ideology or imagination as part of their faith.
So Quaker Philadelphia is where we see this first emancipation taking place.
But the deeper source, I think, of emancipations probably has to do with a famous argument made by Eric Williams back in the 1940s.
He wrote a book called Capitalism and Slavery.
And he looked to the economy as the key to explain why emancipation,
emancipations were beginning around this time. And fundamentally what we're seeing,
there's been a lot of argument about the quote-unquote Williams thesis, but there's something
about it that holds, which is that around this time we have the Industrial Revolution
taking place, we have the rise of free markets, the rise of free trader ideology, here
we come again, with new ideas that are emerging. We have the end of an old world, the beginning
of a new, the beginning of republicanism. Slavery was increasingly part of an old world economy,
and people were moving to a new world economy.
And so there is this deeper kind of economic logic to why slavery was ending,
especially in the sites where republicanism was its strongest,
therefore in the US North at this time.
And we then get the American Revolution,
the American Revolution, which was like one of the greatest emancipatory moments
since that point in the history of North America,
because of all the formerly enslaved people that were able to fight for the
British during that war. So I've got quite a kind of difficult idea, I guess, for many. Talk to me
about that moment. Yeah, fascinating. So in some ways, you know, the very first emancipations were what
we might call war emancipations. By the way, long before we come to the 1770s moment, you know,
the American Revolution beginning 1775, we have something called the manumissions that take place.
So slave owners could individually free enslaved people, if they will, as part of slave codes
going back for hundreds of years.
Emancipation in specific is when enslaved people start to be freed on mass as a group,
generally by the state.
And the first time that this begins to happen is in the context of the war.
You know, the Revolutionary War, 7-10 to 75 to 1783,
in which we have on the British side,
the British offering large numbers of enslaved people on the fringes of the 13 colonies,
meaning more in the south in areas like Virginia and the Carolinas,
they're offering them the opportunity for freedom
in exchange for their loyalty in fighting against the American rebels at that time.
And so this is an opportunity that many black people
in places like Virginia and Carolina take up,
and they win their freedom,
and large numbers of them are then transported to Nova Scotia
by the 1780s and then into the 1790s,
and then there's a very interesting history of what then happens.
Many of them end up in Sierra Leone.
We can also note, though, that this mode of war emancipation sets a template
because during the war of 1812, it happens again.
In other words, emancipation being offered as a kind of benefit
or as a kind of carrot to gain troops, especially black troops,
in the context of these wars, specifically between America and the United Kingdom.
And if you were able to get yourself to British lines, as it were, to a British held,
would you become free by a simple mechanism, or is it only if you then would sign up to fight?
There were terms. There were terms for the freedom. And you would be free if you signed up to fight.
And furthermore, what the content of the freedom, in fact, involved, remained unknown, right?
And to me, this is the crux of what I call as the failure of emancipation.
Freeing the enslaved is certainly a process of ending a past institution, the institution of slavery in which that enslaved person lived.
But where emancipations almost to the emancipation then failed was in thinking through what then would be the condition of that enslaved person, that formerly enslaved person afterwards.
And so just beginning with that concrete case, what happens with these war emancipated enslaved people,
the majority of them, approximately 6 to 7,000, are relocated to Nova Scotia, but they are then consigned to basically a condition of abandonment, right?
There are no opportunities for them there.
They are confronting the Nova Scotian settlers who are quite confrontational and don't necessarily want these new black settlers to be moving in.
There are no state services.
There is no fundamentally, there is no compensation.
no capital investment, if we might say, using that language today, to help the enslaved to form a new life.
And that kind of process of being emancipated into abandonment is what we see replicating over and over again
in this long history of emancipations, which begin around this time, the 1780s, but then continue
for a whole century and more really culminating in the 1880s, Brazil, but then emancipations continue
into, in fact, the 20th century in parts of Africa.
There were no 40 acres and a mule buddy for people, right?
Well, it's interesting because by the time that we get to what happens in the U.S.
South after 1865, you know, people are looking at history.
You know, they had their historical imagination too.
They knew the history that was coming before.
And so we have people like Sherman, General Sherman,
and folks who were consulting with him,
including the black communities who he was consulting with,
who were saying, let's actually have,
land. And there was a process that lasted for a number of months of redistributing land to
enslave people before, of course, it was shut down by the president, by President Johnson
at that time. Before we come to the US, so or later history, talks about Haiti, because
this emancipation process in Haiti is so interesting. We obviously, we haven't got time to
go into the whole revolution here. But the bit that you taught me, it was it way later, like a
generation later in the 1820s. Like, Haiti had to try and buy its way back in.
to global marketplace and global community, you might call it now,
by paying a ton of money to the former enslavers in France.
Yeah, exactly.
That's right, Dan.
You know how I said at the beginning that we change our understanding of emancipation
when we recognize that it always entailed this process of freeing the slave
from the hands of the slave owner on the terms of the enslaver.
That is the key to how emancipations worked.
they were done in the interest of the enslavers.
This case in Haiti shows this very logic of emancipation,
but kind of blown up at a national and international level.
Like you just mentioned, we have the Haitian Revolution,
which takes place in the 1790s through all the way up to 1805, 1806.
In that context, the Haitian people, in fact, are not emancipated.
They simply declare their freedom.
We might say they stole their freedom from the French,
very, very heroically. The French state then spent the coming two decades asserting their power
over the Haitian people, asserting their right over the Haitian people to have what the
French would have considered, did consider to be a just emancipation process. And for them,
a just emancipation, a proper emancipation process required that the Haitian people had to
pay a compensation, a reparations, to the French state.
for the loss that was represented by their revolutionary action of transforming Sandomang into Haiti.
And so concretely what we have is that the French state in about 1825 demands this reparations payment,
what was called the indemnity, from Haiti.
And Haiti ends up having to pay the indemnity over the coming decades,
but even more than that all the way up to 1947 because they had to take out loans in order to do so.
So we have a state paying another state reparations.
In today's understanding, we would see this as reparations being paid the wrong way from the enslaved to the enslavers.
And in fact, that happens to be the way that the reparations for slavery have always been paid.
When there have been compensations, they've always gone in that direction from the enslaved to the enslavers.
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Right, so we should talk about the classic in Britain,
which is the Brits like to celebrate 1807
when the British Empire abolished a slave trade,
but you are still allowed to own enslaved human beings
much later for a generation or two,
and then tell me about the big government bailout.
It's unbelievable.
Yes, right.
Yeah, it was about three years ago now
that I chanced across a reference online,
It was in a treasury document that not only mentioned the fact that we had this huge cash payment
that was offered to the slave owners of the British Empire, a total of about 44,000 slave owners
distributed between Britain and the plantation colonies received cash payouts that we knew.
And we knew also the amount that that totaled at the time, 20 million pounds.
If you go by the proportion of GNP that it was represented in the day, it would be.
about 200 or 250 billion pounds today. So a huge amount. But what this document showed that I chanced
upon was that, in fact, it took the British state 180 years to pay off that loan. The British state
took out a loan in order to have the funds to pay the 44,000 accounts at the time of emancipation.
And because that amount was so large, it took 180 years of basically the British taxpayers
footing the bill for that, and that debt legacy only ended in 2015.
And so, you know, that's the story of the British slave owner compensation.
It was the largest slave owner compensation made ever in the world.
But you might say even more significantly, it set a standard.
After the British made their compensation in this mode, we call it the compensated emancipation
scheme.
We have the French Empire doing the same, the Dutch, the Danish, the Swedish.
This becomes the standard for how to...
emancipate enslaved people and compensate slave owners during this period from the 1830s through to the 1860s.
The new model would be set during the American Civil War beginning in 1861.
Well, let's touch on the American Civil War at the end. People will know, of course,
about the Emancipation Proclamation by President Lincoln. Again, this is a far more complicated
story, isn't it? Talk me through this great wave of emancipation. Sure. I mean, what's interesting to me
about so much of this story is how much these different emancipations were part of each other's
history. So so far we've started in the 1780s, now we're into the 1860s. As these different
emancipatory moments were cresting, they set new precedents. And those precedents were then
studied and often implemented or modified by state officials, policymakers later on. So in this case,
we know that President Lincoln, who led the North and eventually as the Civil War increasingly
became a war over slavery, who continued to insist over time from 1861 to 1865, we see his
policies and his stance is changing, to insist that this war would be a war to free the enslaved people.
But what's interesting is when we look back at his earlier career, he was fascinated by the
British compensated emancipations. He studied them very carefully. He in fact was a proponent of
compensated emancipation and he enacted compensated emancipation as a test case in Washington, D.C.,
in 1862, and he wanted to do it elsewhere, but there wasn't enough political will to do that at the time.
By the time that the war continues, it's clear that a compensated emancipation, the goal of which,
by the way, is to keep everyone happy, you know, to keep the different kinds of political elites,
to give everybody a little bit of the pie. It was clear that the war was not going to allow that,
that there would be a pitched battle over slavery, that the South wanted a slavery empire.
And in that context, there was a quick move from the policy of the compensated emancipation
to that of a total emancipation, which then is what was enacted beginning in 1865.
But here there is a complication, which is that from the very beginnings of this new form
of American revolutionary emancipation, you could say that the point.
was in the remedy here too. The remedies were the Reconstruction Acts. You know, we have the 13th
Amendment, the 14th, the 15th Amendment. These were all being passed. When we read those amendments,
we see that at a legal and policy level, yes, enslaved people were being given freedom,
were being even black men, for example, were being enfranchised. But at the same time,
often in the second articles of these same amendments, there was some constraint on the quality
are the level of freedom that the ex-inslave people would have.
They were simultaneously being included, but also subordinated,
within the very texts of these reconstructions.
And that, at a policy level, served the interests of the plantation elites.
So many of us have watched the 13th, a wonderful documentary about the origin of the prison
industrial complex.
And we could argue, I do argue, that the origins in some ways of Jim Crow segregation policies,
of, you know, American anti-blackness are actually rooted in these reconstruction acts
because they, like the previous emancipations before them, could not bring themselves to fully,
number one, incorporate and enfranchise black people, that did not happen.
And number two, to actually engage the formerly enslaved in conversation around what proper reparations
should look like. So kind of one big takeaway for me is if we want to redress a historical problem,
we have to engage the groups who have been most harmed by the problem. They have to be at the
table to talk about what solutions can look like. And therein, I think, we see where probably one
of the great failings of emancipations had been historically in the 19th century, that the ex-inslaved
were excluded from those conversations. They were not included. And so the emancipations that were enacted
were not done with their imagination at work.
And the freedom that was granted, therefore, looked very different
and was quite constrained.
They weren't just not included.
They were ghettoized, sidelined, geographically isolated,
denied access to services.
The whole works.
Turns out it wasn't a great idea.
So when you talk about compensated emancipation,
I keep thinking, I had compensation, of course,
to the people who were grotesquely enslaved.
Oh, no, no, of course.
We're talking about compensation to the people who owned human,
beings, of course. So let's move from compensation to reparation. Let's finish the conversation
there. This is history, the stories you're telling, matter, not just for those of us with a
fascination for the past, but for everybody who is interested in where we're going. How important do you
think conversations around reparation are now? I think that's probably the reason why I felt so urgently
the need to write this book, because Hillary Beckles, one of the great reparation leaders of the Caribbean,
likes to say, and I believe his view, that the 21st century is the century for the reparations for
slavery. This is the moment. This is the time. And we see reparations at the headlines of national
discussions, not just in the United Kingdom, but also in the United States and in the Caribbean.
And I think we're going to see that continuing. But when we hear this term reparations,
I think it's actually very helpful for us to also hear in the background,
the word emancipations, failed emancipations, to put the contemporary discussions around reparations
within that historical context, that what reparations are fundamentally about today is addressing
unfinished business from the time that slavery's ended in the past. That unfinished business,
those unfinished ends, they still haunt us today. Now, to talk about this in a more concrete
manner, I think it's actually really impressive, inspiring, I think is the better word, to recognize
that the reparations movements that are living today
actually draw on a very, very, very long legacy.
And that legacy goes back, you know, at least 250 years
because in the aftermath of every single failed emancipation of the past,
there has been a reparations movement,
generally led by the black community.
And what have these reparations movements wanted?
Well, you know, if we look at them comparatively across time,
there kind of is a set of common demands.
Proper access to education, access to land,
and access to the ability to grow and accumulate generational wealth for the community,
security for the community, access to the vote and to equitable political representation.
These are the core demands that inspired reparations in the past
and that continue to inspire reparations today.
And what's interesting to me is in that list that I just gave,
I didn't mention cash compensation.
Certainly, cash compensation is an essential part of the mix.
It's an element of what reparations means.
But this long history of reparations that we have and that we're drawing on,
it's actually more like a set of requests, a set of demands that we need to attend to
in order to address this long history of inequity and of the ongoing legacies of slavery.
And fundamentally, those does.
demands have to do with creating the opportunity for the black community to build community wealth.
And the black community has across the United Kingdom, the United States, the Caribbean,
and also we could talk about Africa and the effect of colonialism and emancipations across Africa.
Black communities across the Atlantic have not been in a position to build community wealth
because the history of slavery was not properly ended.
and that's what reparations are here to address today, I think, in a very urgent way.
Chris, thank you very much, bud.
What's the last name of the book again?
It's called The Black Ghost of Empire.
Thank you very much indeed.
Absolutely. It's great to be here, Dan.
Thanks for listening to this episode of American History Hit.
I hope you enjoyed it.
Please don't forget to like, review, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.
I'll see you next time.
