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re: Watching Roots and its making me sick

Posted on 2/18/13 at 10:01 am to
Posted by Archie Bengal Bunker
Member since Jun 2008
15520 posts
Posted on 2/18/13 at 10:01 am to
quote:

but it'd be ok to sprinkle in a few good stories


Even the "good stories" don't take away from the barbarity that was slavery.


https://www.cnn.com/2013/02/17/opinion/greene-slave-narrative/index.html?iid=article_sidebar

quote:

who recalled being sold at auction, of seeing brothers and sisters led away in chains


quote:

Mary Armstrong, 91 and living in Houston when she was interviewed, said the person who owned her family was "so mean he never would sell the man and woman and (children) to the same one. He'd sell the man here and the woman there and if (there were children) he'd sell them someplace else."


quote:

"I belonged to Madison Pace in slavery time," she said. She had a brother whose first name was Washington, she said, but he was "sold away." Their mother "cried a lot about it."


quote:

Stearlin Arnwine, who was 94 and living near Jacksonville, Texas, when he was interviewed, said he would see slaves on the auction block, stripped to the waist for inspection by potential buyers. Women and their children, he said, would be crying and begging "not to be separated," but it did no good: "They had to go."


quote:

"My father was a slave, A.H. Stewart, belonging to James Arch Stewart, a slave owner, whose plantation was in Wake County," said Sam T. Stewart, 84, interviewed in North Carolina in June 1937. "When I was two years old James Arch Stewart sold my father to speculators, and he was shipped to Mississippi. I was too young to know my father."


quote:

Alex Woods, of Raleigh, North Carolina, born on May 15, 1858, said that as a boy he saw slaves being marched on their way to the auction block, each person chained to the one next to him, and, as he witnessed this, being "afraid my mother and father would be sold away from me."


quote:

If a woman was a good breeder she brought a good price on the auction block," said Hattie Rogers, a North Carolina resident, when she was interviewed in 1937. "The slave buyers would come around and jab them in the stomach and look them over and if they thought they would have children fast they brought a good price."





I guess as long as they were treated like "prized cattle," all is well. It wasn't that big of a deal; some were pretty much like family, except in a property kind of way.
Posted by GumBro Jackson
Raleigh
Member since Mar 2011
3115 posts
Posted on 2/18/13 at 10:13 am to
Slavery was (and unfortunately still is) an absolute abomination. The American South wasn't the first or last place where it existed, so it is an evil shared by many people. Much of the economy in the southern states was built on the the backs of slaves and that is a legacy that we still have to deal with.

Slavery in the US ended (for the most part) a long time ago but institutional racism lasted a lot longer. We are definitely making progress but it is an uneven path.
Posted by udtiger
Over your left shoulder
Member since Nov 2006
99821 posts
Posted on 2/18/13 at 10:16 am to
WPA Slave narratives. They are valuable to a point. Bear in mind that the start of the Civil War, there were approximately 4 million slaves in the South. The slave narratives only interviewed about 2300 people.
Posted by CarRamrod
Spurbury, VT
Member since Dec 2006
57528 posts
Posted on 2/18/13 at 1:00 pm to
quote:

My father was a slave, A.H. Stewart, belonging to James Arch Stewart, a slave owner, whose plantation was in Wake County," said Sam T. Stewart, 84, interviewed in North Carolina in June 1937. "When I was two years old James Arch Stewart sold my father to speculators, and he was shipped to Mississippi. I was too young to know my father.
now most of the black dads just leave on their own accord.
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