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Convict leasing

Convict leasing was a system of forced penal labor which was practiced historically in the Southern United States, the laborers being mainly African-American men; it was ended during the 20th century. (Convict labor in general continues; for example[not verified in body] voluntary labor from the general prison population has been used more recently in some parts of the Western United States).[1][full citation needed] It provided prisoner labor to private parties, such as plantation owners and corporations (e.g. Tennessee Coal and Iron Company and Chattahoochee Brick Company). The lessee was responsible for feeding, clothing, and housing the prisoners.

Convicts leased to harvest timber circa 1915, in Florida

The state of Louisiana leased out convicts as early as 1844,[2] but the system expanded throughout most of the South with the emancipation of slaves at the end of the American Civil War in 1865. It could be lucrative for the states: in 1898, some 73% of Alabama's entire annual state revenue came from convict leasing.[3]

While states of the Northern United States sometimes contracted for prison labor, the historian Alex Lichtenstein notes that "only in the South did the state entirely give up its control to the contractor; and only in the South did the physical "penitentiary" become virtually synonymous with the various private enterprises in which convicts labored".[4]

Corruption, lack of accountability, and violence resulted in "one of the harshest and most exploitative labor systems known in American history".[5] African Americans, mostly adult males, due to "vigorous and selective enforcement of laws and discriminatory sentencing", comprised the vast majority—though not all—of the convicts leased.[6]

The writer Douglas A. Blackmon described the system: "It was a form of bondage distinctly different from that of the antebellum South in that for most men, and the relatively few women drawn in, this slavery did not last a lifetime and did not automatically extend from one generation to the next. But it was nonetheless slavery – a system in which armies of free men, guilty of no crimes and entitled by law to freedom, were compelled to labor without compensation, were repeatedly bought and sold, and were forced to do the bidding of white masters through the regular application of extraordinary physical coercion".[7]

U.S. Steel is among the American companies who have acknowledged using African-American leased convict labor.[8] The practice peaked about 1880, was formally outlawed by the last state (Alabama) in 1928, and persisted in various forms until it was abolished by President Franklin D. Roosevelt via Francis Biddle's "Circular 3591" of December 12, 1941.

Origins

Convict leasing in the United States was widespread in the South during the Reconstruction Period (1865–1877) after the end of the Civil War, when many Southern legislatures were ruled by majority coalitions of blacks and Radical Republicans,[9][10] and Union generals acted as military governors. Farmers and businessmen needed to find replacements for the labor force once their slaves had been freed. Some Southern legislatures passed Black Codes to restrict free movement of blacks and force them into employment. For instance, several states made it illegal for a black man to change jobs without the approval of his employer.[11] If convicted of vagrancy, blacks could be imprisoned, and they also received sentences for a variety of petty offenses. States began to lease convict labor to the plantations and other facilities seeking labor, as the freed men were trying to withdraw and work for themselves. This provided the states with a new source of revenue during years when their finances were largely depleted, and lessees profited by the use of forced labor at less than market rates.[12]

 
Laboring convicts at the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman in 1911. When Mississippi ended convict leasing in 1906, all prisoners were sent to Parchman.

The criminal justice system allegedly colluded with private planters and other business owners to entrap, convict, and lease blacks as prison laborers.[12] The constitutional basis for convict leasing is that the 1865 Thirteenth Amendment, while abolishing slavery and involuntary servitude generally, permits it as a punishment for crime.

The criminologist Thorsten Sellin, in his book Slavery and the Penal System (1976), wrote that the sole purpose of convict leasing "was financial profit to the lessees who exploited the labor of the prisoners to the fullest, and to the government which sold the convicts to the lessees".[13] The practice became widespread and was used to supply labor to farming, railroad, mining, and logging operations throughout the South.

The system in various states

In Georgia convict leasing began in April 1868, when Union General and newly appointed provisional governor Thomas H. Ruger issued a convict lease for prisoners to William Fort for work on the Georgia and Alabama Railroad.[10] The contract specified "one hundred able bodied and healthy Negro convicts" in return for a fee to the state of $2500.[14] In May the state entered into a second agreement with Fort and his business partner Joseph Printup for another 100 convicts, this time for $1000, to work on the Selma, Rome and Dalton Railroad, also in north Georgia.[15] Georgia ended the convict lease system in 1908.

In Tennessee, the convict leasing system was ended on January 1, 1894 because of the attention brought by the "Coal Creek War" of 1891, an armed labor action lasting more than a year. At the time both free and convict labor were used in mines, although the two types of workers were kept separated. Free coal miners attacked and burned prison stockades, and freed hundreds of black convicts; the related publicity and outrage turned Governor John P. Buchanan out of office.

The end of convict leasing did not mean the end of convict labor, however. The state sited its new penitentiary, Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary, with the help of geologists. The prison built a working coal mine on the site, dependent on labor done by prisoners, and operated it at significant profit. These prison mines were closed in 1966.[16]

Texas began convict leasing by 1883 and abolished it officially in 1910.[17] A cemetery containing what are believed to be the remains of 95 "slave convicts" has recently (2018) been discovered in Sugar Land, now a suburb of Houston.[18]

The Convict Lease System and Lynch Law are twin infamies which flourish hand in hand in many of the United States. They are the two great outgrowths and results of the class legislation under which our people suffer to-day.

Alabama began convict leasing in 1846 and outlawed it in 1928. It was the last state to formally outlaw it. The revenues derived from convict leasing were substantial, accounting for about 10% of total state revenues during 1883,[20] surging to nearly 73% by 1898.[3] Political campaigning against convict leasing in Alabama began in 1915. Bibb Graves, who became Alabama's governor in 1927, had promised during his election campaign to abolish convict leasing as soon as he was inaugurated, and this was finally achieved by the end of June 1928.[21]

This lucrative practice created incentives for states and counties to convict African Americans, and helped increase the prison population in the South to become predominantly African-American after the Civil War.[citation needed] In Tennessee, African Americans represented 33 percent of the population at the main prison in Nashville as of October 1, 1865, but by November 29, 1867, their percentage had increased to 58.3. By 1869, it had increased to 64 percent, and it reached an all-time high of 67 percent between 1877 and 1879.[13]

 
Orphaned and "Criminal" Children. 1903.

Prison populations also increased overall in the South. In Georgia prison populations increased tenfold during the four-decade period (1868–1908) when it used convict leasing; in North Carolina the prison population increased from 121 in 1870 to 1,302 in 1890; in Florida the population increased from 125 in 1881 to 1,071 in 1904; in Mississippi the population quadrupled between 1871 and 1879; in Alabama it increased from 374 in 1869 to 1,878 in 1903; and to 2,453 in 1919.[13]

In Florida, convicts, who were often African American, were sent to work in turpentine factories and lumber camps. The convict labor system in Florida was described as being "severe", compared to other states.[12] Florida was one of the last states to end convict leasing, in 1923 (see Union Correctional Institution).

End of the system

Although opposition to the system increased during the beginning of the 20th century, state politicians resisted its elimination. In states where the convict lease system was used, revenues from the program generated income nearly four times the cost (372%) of prison administration.[22] The practice was extremely profitable for the governments, as well as for those business-owners who used convict labor. However, other problems accompanied convict leasing, and employers became gradually more aware of the disadvantages.[23]

While some believe the demise of the system can be attributed to exposure of the inhumane treatment suffered by the convicts,[24] others indicate causes ranging from comprehensive legislative reforms to political retribution.[22] Though the convict lease system, as such, disappeared, other types of convict labor continued (and still exist presently). These other systems include plantations, industrial prisons, and chain gangs.[13]

The convict lease system was gradually phased out during the early 20th century due to negative publicity and other factors. A notable case of negative publicity for the system was the case of Martin Tabert, a young white man from Munich, North Dakota. Arrested in late 1921 in Tallahassee, Florida on a charge of vagrancy for being on a train without a ticket, Tabert was convicted and fined $25.[25] Although his parents sent $25 for the fine, plus $25 for Tabert to return home to North Dakota, the money disappeared while Tabert was held in the Leon County Jail. Tabert was then leased to the Putnam Lumber Company in Clara, a town in the Florida Panhandle approximately 60 miles (97 km) south of Tallahassee in Dixie County.[25] There, he was flogged to death by the whipping boss, Thomas Walter Higginbotham.[26] Coverage of Tabert's killing by the New York World newspaper in 1924 earned it the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. Governor Cary A. Hardee ended convict leasing in 1923, due in part to the Tabert case and the resulting publicity.

North Carolina, while without a system comparable to the other states, did not prohibit the practice until 1933. Alabama was the last to end the practice of official convict leasing in 1928 by the State,[27] but many counties in the South continued the practice for years.[11]

See also

References

  1. ^ Agriculture farmers turn to prisons labor to fill labor needs
  2. ^ Punishment in America: A Reference Handbook, by Cyndi Banks, page 58
  3. ^ a b Robert Perkinson (2010). Texas Tough: The Rise of America's Prison Empire. Henry Holt and Company. p. 105. ISBN 978-1-429-95277-4.
  4. ^ Alex Lichtenstein, Twice the Work of Free Labor: The Political Economy of Convict Labor in the New South, Verso Press, 1996, p. 3
  5. ^ Mancini, Matthew J. (1996). One Dies, Get Another: Convict Leasing in the American South, 1866-1928. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 9781570030833. p. 1-2.
  6. ^ Litwack, Leon F. Trouble in Mind: Black Southerners in the Age of Jim Crow, (1998) ISBN 0-394-52778-X, p. 271
  7. ^ Blackmon, Douglas A. Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II, (2008) ISBN 978-0-385-50625-0, p. 4
  8. ^ "Book: American Slavery Continued Until 1941". Newsweek. July 13, 2008.
  9. ^ Foner, Eric (January 31, 2018). "South Carolina's Forgotten Black Political Revolution". Slate Magazine.
  10. ^ a b The Georgia and Alabama Railroad formed in 1850 by Georgia state charter to organize rail service between Rome and the Alabama state line. Never financially healthy, the company managed to operate until after the Civil War; it was unrelated to later rail companies of the same name. See Fairfax Harrison's A History of the Legal Development of the Railroad System of Southern Railway Company, 1901/reprint 2012 General Books, p. 790
  11. ^ a b Slavery by another name
  12. ^ a b c "Convicts Leased to Harvest Timber". World Digital Library. 1915. Retrieved July 28, 2013.
  13. ^ a b c d "The Black Commentator - Slavery in the Third Millennium, Part II - Issue 142". blackcommentator.com.
  14. ^ Lichtenstein (1996), Twice the Work of Free Labor, pp. 41-42
  15. ^ Lichtenstein (1996), Twice the Work of Free Labor, p. 42
  16. ^ W. Calvin Dickinson, "Brushy Mountain Prison"], Southern History, July 1, 2003
  17. ^ "Handbook of Texas Online". Retrieved December 8, 2007.
  18. ^ Gannon, Megan (July 20, 2018). "Century-Old Burials of 95 Convict Slaves Uncovered in Texas". Live Science.
  19. ^ Frederick Douglass, "The Convict Lease System", from The Reason Why the Coloured American Is Not in the World's Colombian Exposition (1893)
  20. ^ "Digital History". digitalhistory.uh.edu.
  21. ^ "Alabama Ends Convict Leasing". The New York Times. July 1, 1928.
  22. ^ a b Mancini, M. (1978). "Race, Economics, and the Abandonment of Convict Leasing", Journal of Negro History, 63(4), 339–340. Retrieved October 1, 2006, from JSTOR database.
  23. ^ "Forced Labor in the 19th Century South: The Story of Parchman Farm" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on May 12, 2008. Retrieved December 8, 2007.
  24. ^ Todd, W. (2005). "Convict Lease System", In The New Georgia Encyclopedia. Retrieved October 1, 2006, from [1]
  25. ^ a b Staff (2013). . Florida Department of Corrections. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved October 22, 2013.
  26. ^ "Whipping Boss will Go Free"[permanent dead link], Associated Press, Jul 17, 1925, quoted in Miami News, from news.google.com
  27. ^ Fierce, Milfred (1994). Slavery Revisited: Blacks and the Southern Convict Lease System, 1865-1933. New York: Africana Studies Research Center, Brooklyn College, City University of New York. pp. 192–193. ISBN 0-9643248-0-6.

Further reading

  • Blackmon, Douglas A. Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II, New York: Anchor Books, Random House Publishing, 2008. ISBN 0-385-72270-2.
  • Kahn, Si, and Elizabeth Minnich. The Fox in the Henhouse: How Privatization Threatens Democracy, San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2005. ISBN 1-57675-337-9.
  • Moulder, Rebecca, H. "Convicts as Capital: Thomas O'Conner and the Leases of the Tennessee Penitentiary System, 1871–1883", East Tennessee Historical Society Publications, no. 48 (1976): 58–59.
  • Oshinsky, David M. Worse Than Slavery: Parchman Farm and the Ordeal of Jim Crow Justice. New York: The Free Press, 1996. ISBN 0-684-82298-9.
  • Blue, Ethan. "Doing Time in the Depression: Everyday Life in Texas and California Prison". New York: New York University Press, 2012. ISBN 978-0-8147-0940-5.
  • Staples, Brent (October 27, 2018). "A Fate Worse Than Slavery, Unearthed in Sugar Land". The New York Times.
  • Cardon, Nathan. "'Less Than Mayhem': Louisiana's Convict Lease, 1865-1901" Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana History Association (Fall, 2017): 416-439.
  • Shapiro, Karen. A New South Rebellion: The Battle Against Convict Labor in the Tennessee Coalfields, 1871-1896 (University of North Carolina Press, 1998).
  • Lichtenstein, Alex. Twice the Work of Free Labor: The Political Economy of Convict Labor in the New South (Verso, 1996).

External links

  • Powell, J.C., The American Siberia (1891), memoir of 14 years in a Florida convict camp; full text online at GoogleBooks
  • , June 2007, guest post at Laura James' CLEWS, a literary blog about crime
  • Slavery by Another Name (2012)

convict, leasing, system, colonial, australia, convict, assignment, system, forced, penal, labor, which, practiced, historically, southern, united, states, laborers, being, mainly, african, american, ended, during, 20th, century, convict, labor, general, conti. For the system in colonial Australia see Convict assignment Convict leasing was a system of forced penal labor which was practiced historically in the Southern United States the laborers being mainly African American men it was ended during the 20th century Convict labor in general continues for example not verified in body voluntary labor from the general prison population has been used more recently in some parts of the Western United States 1 full citation needed It provided prisoner labor to private parties such as plantation owners and corporations e g Tennessee Coal and Iron Company and Chattahoochee Brick Company The lessee was responsible for feeding clothing and housing the prisoners Convicts leased to harvest timber circa 1915 in Florida This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s lead section may be too long for the length of the article Please help by moving some material from it into the body of the article Please read the layout guide and lead section guidelines to ensure the section will still be inclusive of all essential details Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page January 2022 This article s lead section contains information that is not included elsewhere in the article If the information is appropriate for the lead of the article this information should also be included in the body of the article January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The state of Louisiana leased out convicts as early as 1844 2 but the system expanded throughout most of the South with the emancipation of slaves at the end of the American Civil War in 1865 It could be lucrative for the states in 1898 some 73 of Alabama s entire annual state revenue came from convict leasing 3 While states of the Northern United States sometimes contracted for prison labor the historian Alex Lichtenstein notes that only in the South did the state entirely give up its control to the contractor and only in the South did the physical penitentiary become virtually synonymous with the various private enterprises in which convicts labored 4 Corruption lack of accountability and violence resulted in one of the harshest and most exploitative labor systems known in American history 5 African Americans mostly adult males due to vigorous and selective enforcement of laws and discriminatory sentencing comprised the vast majority though not all of the convicts leased 6 The writer Douglas A Blackmon described the system It was a form of bondage distinctly different from that of the antebellum South in that for most men and the relatively few women drawn in this slavery did not last a lifetime and did not automatically extend from one generation to the next But it was nonetheless slavery a system in which armies of free men guilty of no crimes and entitled by law to freedom were compelled to labor without compensation were repeatedly bought and sold and were forced to do the bidding of white masters through the regular application of extraordinary physical coercion 7 U S Steel is among the American companies who have acknowledged using African American leased convict labor 8 The practice peaked about 1880 was formally outlawed by the last state Alabama in 1928 and persisted in various forms until it was abolished by President Franklin D Roosevelt via Francis Biddle s Circular 3591 of December 12 1941 Contents 1 Origins 2 The system in various states 3 End of the system 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksOrigins EditConvict leasing in the United States was widespread in the South during the Reconstruction Period 1865 1877 after the end of the Civil War when many Southern legislatures were ruled by majority coalitions of blacks and Radical Republicans 9 10 and Union generals acted as military governors Farmers and businessmen needed to find replacements for the labor force once their slaves had been freed Some Southern legislatures passed Black Codes to restrict free movement of blacks and force them into employment For instance several states made it illegal for a black man to change jobs without the approval of his employer 11 If convicted of vagrancy blacks could be imprisoned and they also received sentences for a variety of petty offenses States began to lease convict labor to the plantations and other facilities seeking labor as the freed men were trying to withdraw and work for themselves This provided the states with a new source of revenue during years when their finances were largely depleted and lessees profited by the use of forced labor at less than market rates 12 Laboring convicts at the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman in 1911 When Mississippi ended convict leasing in 1906 all prisoners were sent to Parchman The criminal justice system allegedly colluded with private planters and other business owners to entrap convict and lease blacks as prison laborers 12 The constitutional basis for convict leasing is that the 1865 Thirteenth Amendment while abolishing slavery and involuntary servitude generally permits it as a punishment for crime The criminologist Thorsten Sellin in his book Slavery and the Penal System 1976 wrote that the sole purpose of convict leasing was financial profit to the lessees who exploited the labor of the prisoners to the fullest and to the government which sold the convicts to the lessees 13 The practice became widespread and was used to supply labor to farming railroad mining and logging operations throughout the South The system in various states EditIn Georgia convict leasing began in April 1868 when Union General and newly appointed provisional governor Thomas H Ruger issued a convict lease for prisoners to William Fort for work on the Georgia and Alabama Railroad 10 The contract specified one hundred able bodied and healthy Negro convicts in return for a fee to the state of 2500 14 In May the state entered into a second agreement with Fort and his business partner Joseph Printup for another 100 convicts this time for 1000 to work on the Selma Rome and Dalton Railroad also in north Georgia 15 Georgia ended the convict lease system in 1908 In Tennessee the convict leasing system was ended on January 1 1894 because of the attention brought by the Coal Creek War of 1891 an armed labor action lasting more than a year At the time both free and convict labor were used in mines although the two types of workers were kept separated Free coal miners attacked and burned prison stockades and freed hundreds of black convicts the related publicity and outrage turned Governor John P Buchanan out of office The end of convict leasing did not mean the end of convict labor however The state sited its new penitentiary Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary with the help of geologists The prison built a working coal mine on the site dependent on labor done by prisoners and operated it at significant profit These prison mines were closed in 1966 16 Texas began convict leasing by 1883 and abolished it officially in 1910 17 A cemetery containing what are believed to be the remains of 95 slave convicts has recently 2018 been discovered in Sugar Land now a suburb of Houston 18 The Convict Lease System and Lynch Law are twin infamies which flourish hand in hand in many of the United States They are the two great outgrowths and results of the class legislation under which our people suffer to day Frederick Douglass 19 Alabama began convict leasing in 1846 and outlawed it in 1928 It was the last state to formally outlaw it The revenues derived from convict leasing were substantial accounting for about 10 of total state revenues during 1883 20 surging to nearly 73 by 1898 3 Political campaigning against convict leasing in Alabama began in 1915 Bibb Graves who became Alabama s governor in 1927 had promised during his election campaign to abolish convict leasing as soon as he was inaugurated and this was finally achieved by the end of June 1928 21 This lucrative practice created incentives for states and counties to convict African Americans and helped increase the prison population in the South to become predominantly African American after the Civil War citation needed In Tennessee African Americans represented 33 percent of the population at the main prison in Nashville as of October 1 1865 but by November 29 1867 their percentage had increased to 58 3 By 1869 it had increased to 64 percent and it reached an all time high of 67 percent between 1877 and 1879 13 Orphaned and Criminal Children 1903 Prison populations also increased overall in the South In Georgia prison populations increased tenfold during the four decade period 1868 1908 when it used convict leasing in North Carolina the prison population increased from 121 in 1870 to 1 302 in 1890 in Florida the population increased from 125 in 1881 to 1 071 in 1904 in Mississippi the population quadrupled between 1871 and 1879 in Alabama it increased from 374 in 1869 to 1 878 in 1903 and to 2 453 in 1919 13 In Florida convicts who were often African American were sent to work in turpentine factories and lumber camps The convict labor system in Florida was described as being severe compared to other states 12 Florida was one of the last states to end convict leasing in 1923 see Union Correctional Institution End of the system EditAlthough opposition to the system increased during the beginning of the 20th century state politicians resisted its elimination In states where the convict lease system was used revenues from the program generated income nearly four times the cost 372 of prison administration 22 The practice was extremely profitable for the governments as well as for those business owners who used convict labor However other problems accompanied convict leasing and employers became gradually more aware of the disadvantages 23 While some believe the demise of the system can be attributed to exposure of the inhumane treatment suffered by the convicts 24 others indicate causes ranging from comprehensive legislative reforms to political retribution 22 Though the convict lease system as such disappeared other types of convict labor continued and still exist presently These other systems include plantations industrial prisons and chain gangs 13 The convict lease system was gradually phased out during the early 20th century due to negative publicity and other factors A notable case of negative publicity for the system was the case of Martin Tabert a young white man from Munich North Dakota Arrested in late 1921 in Tallahassee Florida on a charge of vagrancy for being on a train without a ticket Tabert was convicted and fined 25 25 Although his parents sent 25 for the fine plus 25 for Tabert to return home to North Dakota the money disappeared while Tabert was held in the Leon County Jail Tabert was then leased to the Putnam Lumber Company in Clara a town in the Florida Panhandle approximately 60 miles 97 km south of Tallahassee in Dixie County 25 There he was flogged to death by the whipping boss Thomas Walter Higginbotham 26 Coverage of Tabert s killing by the New York World newspaper in 1924 earned it the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service Governor Cary A Hardee ended convict leasing in 1923 due in part to the Tabert case and the resulting publicity North Carolina while without a system comparable to the other states did not prohibit the practice until 1933 Alabama was the last to end the practice of official convict leasing in 1928 by the State 27 but many counties in the South continued the practice for years 11 See also Edit United States portal Law portalConvict assignment Australia Federal Prison Industries Field holler Field slaves in the United States History of unfree labor in the United States Penal labor in the United States Ruiz v Estelle Slavery in the 21st century Prison labor Trusty systemReferences Edit Agriculture farmers turn to prisons labor to fill labor needs Punishment in America A Reference Handbook by Cyndi Banks page 58 a b Robert Perkinson 2010 Texas Tough The Rise of America s Prison Empire Henry Holt and Company p 105 ISBN 978 1 429 95277 4 Alex Lichtenstein Twice the Work of Free Labor The Political Economy of Convict Labor in the New South Verso Press 1996 p 3 Mancini Matthew J 1996 One Dies Get Another Convict Leasing in the American South 1866 1928 Columbia SC University of South Carolina Press ISBN 9781570030833 p 1 2 Litwack Leon F Trouble in Mind Black Southerners in the Age of Jim Crow 1998 ISBN 0 394 52778 X p 271 Blackmon Douglas A Slavery by Another Name The Re Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II 2008 ISBN 978 0 385 50625 0 p 4 Book American Slavery Continued Until 1941 Newsweek July 13 2008 Foner Eric January 31 2018 South Carolina s Forgotten Black Political Revolution Slate Magazine a b The Georgia and Alabama Railroad formed in 1850 by Georgia state charter to organize rail service between Rome and the Alabama state line Never financially healthy the company managed to operate until after the Civil War it was unrelated to later rail companies of the same name See Fairfax Harrison s A History of the Legal Development of the Railroad System of Southern Railway Company 1901 reprint 2012 General Books p 790 a b Slavery by another name a b c Convicts Leased to Harvest Timber World Digital Library 1915 Retrieved July 28 2013 a b c d The Black Commentator Slavery in the Third Millennium Part II Issue 142 blackcommentator com Lichtenstein 1996 Twice the Work of Free Labor pp 41 42 Lichtenstein 1996 Twice the Work of Free Labor p 42 W Calvin Dickinson Brushy Mountain Prison Southern History July 1 2003 Handbook of Texas Online Retrieved December 8 2007 Gannon Megan July 20 2018 Century Old Burials of 95 Convict Slaves Uncovered in Texas Live Science Frederick Douglass The Convict Lease System from The Reason Why the Coloured American Is Not in the World s Colombian Exposition 1893 Digital History digitalhistory uh edu Alabama Ends Convict Leasing The New York Times July 1 1928 a b Mancini M 1978 Race Economics and the Abandonment of Convict Leasing Journal of Negro History 63 4 339 340 Retrieved October 1 2006 from JSTOR database Forced Labor in the 19th Century South The Story of Parchman Farm PDF Archived PDF from the original on May 12 2008 Retrieved December 8 2007 Todd W 2005 Convict Lease System In The New Georgia Encyclopedia Retrieved October 1 2006 from 1 a b Staff 2013 Timeline 1921 Florida Department of Corrections Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved October 22 2013 Whipping Boss will Go Free permanent dead link Associated Press Jul 17 1925 quoted in Miami News from news google com Fierce Milfred 1994 Slavery Revisited Blacks and the Southern Convict Lease System 1865 1933 New York Africana Studies Research Center Brooklyn College City University of New York pp 192 193 ISBN 0 9643248 0 6 Further reading EditBlackmon Douglas A Slavery by Another Name The Re Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II New York Anchor Books Random House Publishing 2008 ISBN 0 385 72270 2 Kahn Si and Elizabeth Minnich The Fox in the Henhouse How Privatization Threatens Democracy San Francisco Berrett Koehler Publishers 2005 ISBN 1 57675 337 9 Moulder Rebecca H Convicts as Capital Thomas O Conner and the Leases of the Tennessee Penitentiary System 1871 1883 East Tennessee Historical Society Publications no 48 1976 58 59 Oshinsky David M Worse Than Slavery Parchman Farm and the Ordeal of Jim Crow Justice New York The Free Press 1996 ISBN 0 684 82298 9 Blue Ethan Doing Time in the Depression Everyday Life in Texas and California Prison New York New York University Press 2012 ISBN 978 0 8147 0940 5 Staples Brent October 27 2018 A Fate Worse Than Slavery Unearthed in Sugar Land The New York Times Cardon Nathan Less Than Mayhem Louisiana s Convict Lease 1865 1901 Louisiana History The Journal of the Louisiana History Association Fall 2017 416 439 Shapiro Karen A New South Rebellion The Battle Against Convict Labor in the Tennessee Coalfields 1871 1896 University of North Carolina Press 1998 Lichtenstein Alex Twice the Work of Free Labor The Political Economy of Convict Labor in the New South Verso 1996 External links EditPowell J C The American Siberia 1891 memoir of 14 years in a Florida convict camp full text online at GoogleBooks Waters Robert Convict Leasing in Florida or A Postcard from a Southern Siberia June 2007 guest post at Laura James CLEWS a literary blog about crime Slavery by Another Name 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Convict leasing amp oldid 1141820667, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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