fbpx
Wikipedia

Peon

Peon (English /ˈpɒn/ PEE-on, from the Spanish peón Spanish pronunciation: [peˈon]) usually refers to a person subject to peonage: any form of wage labor, financial exploitation, coercive economic practice, or policy in which the victim or a laborer (peon) has little control over employment or economic conditions. Peon and peonage can refer to both the colonial period and post-colonial period of Latin America, as well as the period after the end of slavery in the United States, when "Black Codes" were passed to retain African-American freedmen as labor through other means.

Foreman and country peon by Prilidiano Pueyrredón (1823 - 1870)

Usage edit

In English, peon (doublet of pawn) and peonage have meanings related to their Spanish etymology (foot soldier[1]); a peon may be defined as a person with little authority, often assigned unskilled tasks; an underling or any person subjected to capricious or unreasonable oversight. In this sense, peon can be used in either a derogatory or self-effacing context.[citation needed]

There are similar usages in contemporary cultures:

  • South Asian dialects of English: a peon is an office boy, an attendant, or an orderly, a person kept around for odd jobs (and, historically, a policeman or foot soldier).
  • Shanghai: among native Chinese working in firms where English is spoken, the word refers to a worker with little authority, who suffers indignities from superiors.

However, the term has a historical basis and usage related to much more severe conditions of forced labor:

History edit

 
Foreman and rebel peon by Martín León Boneo, 1901.

The Spanish conquest of Mexico and Caribbean islands included peonage; the conquistadors forced natives to work for Spanish planters and mine operators. Peonage was prevalent in Latin America, especially in the countries of Mexico, Guatemala, Ecuador and Peru. It remains an important part of social life, as among the Urarina of the Peruvian Amazon.[3]

Peonage in the United States edit

 
Punishment of peons employed by American railroad tycoon Henry Meiggs in Chile or Peru, 1862

After the American Civil War of 1861–1865, peonage developed in the Southern United States. Poor white farmers and formerly enslaved African Americans known as freedmen, who could not afford their own land, would farm another person's land, exchanging labor for a share of the crops. This was called sharecropping. The land owner would pay for the seeds and tools in exchange for a percentage of the money earned from the crop and a portion of the crop. As time passed, many landowners began to abuse this system.[citation needed] The landowner would force the tenant farmer or sharecropper to buy seeds and tools from the land owner's store, which often had inflated prices. As sharecroppers were often illiterate, they had to depend on the books and accounting by the landowner and his staff. Other tactics included debiting expenses against the sharecropper's profits after the crop was harvested and "miscalculating" the net profit from the harvest, thereby keeping the sharecropper in perpetual debt to the landowner. Since the tenant farmers could not offset the costs, they were forced into involuntary labor due to the debts they owed the landowner. Additionally, unpredictable or disruptive climatic conditions, such as droughts or storms, caused disruptions to seasonal plantings or harvests, which in turn, caused the tenant farmers to accrue debts with the landowners.[citation needed]

After the U.S. Civil War, the South passed "Black Codes", laws to control freed black slaves. Vagrancy laws were included in these Black Codes. Homeless or unemployed African Americans who were between jobs, most of whom were former slaves, were arrested and fined as vagrants. Usually lacking the resources to pay the fine, the "vagrant" was sent to county labor or hired out under the convict lease program to a private employer. The authorities also tried to restrict the movement of freedmen between rural areas and cities, to between towns.[citation needed]

Under such laws, local officials arbitrarily arrested tens of thousands of people and charged them with fines and court costs of their cases. Black freedmen were those most aggressively targeted. Poor whites were also arrested, but usually in much smaller numbers. White merchants, farmers, and business owners were allowed to pay these debts, and the prisoner had to work off the debt. Prisoners were leased as laborers to owners and operators of coal mines, lumber camps, brickyards, railroads, quarries, and farm plantations, with the lease revenues for their labor going to the states. The lessors were responsible for room and board of the laborers, and frequently abused them with little oversight by the state. Government officials leased imprisoned blacks and whites to small town entrepreneurs, provincial farmers, and dozens of corporations looking for cheap labor. Their labor was repeatedly bought and sold for decades, well into the 20th century, long after the official abolition of American slavery.[4]

Southern states and private businesses profited by this form of unpaid labor. It is estimated that at the beginning of the 20th century, up to 40% of blacks in the South were trapped in peonage. Overseers and owners often used severe physical deprivation, beatings, whippings, and other abuse as "discipline" against the workers.[5]

 
Cartoon of Indictment of US Planters and negro peonage

After the Civil War, the Thirteenth Amendment prohibited involuntary servitude such as peonage for all but convicted criminals. Congress also passed various laws to protect the constitutional rights of Southern blacks, making those who violated such rights by conspiracy, by trespass, or in disguise, guilty of an offense punishable by ten years in prison and civil disability. Unlawful use of state law to subvert rights under the Federal Constitution was made punishable by fine or a year's imprisonment. But until the involuntary servitude was abolished by president Lyndon B. Johnson in August 6, 1966, sharecroppers in Southern states were forced to continue working to pay off old debts or to pay taxes. Southern states allowed this in order to preserve sharecropping.[citation needed]

The following reported court cases involved peonage:

  • 1903 – South Dakota, a 17-year-old girl was reported to have been sold into peonage at the age of two by her own father[6]
  • 1904 – Alabama, ten persons indicted for holding black and white persons in peonage[7]
  • 1906 – John W. Pace of Alabama, the "father" of peonage; pardoned by his friend President Theodore Roosevelt.[8]
  • 1906 – Five officials of Jackson Lumber Company sentenced in Pensacola, Florida to prison terms ranging from 13 months to 18 months. One of the defendants was fined $5,000, while the others were each fined $1,000.[9]
  • 1916 – Edward McCree of Georgia Legislature; owner of 37,000 acres of land; indicted on 13 charges. Pleaded guilty to first charge and paid a $1,000.00 fine.[10]
  • 1916 – two men found guilty in Lexington County, South Carolina of trying to force a white man into peonage; each fined $500 and sentenced to a year and day in jail[11]
  • 1921 – Hawaiian sugar plantation owners unsuccessfully try to legalize peonage of Chinese workers.[12]
  • 1921 – Georgia farmer John S. Williams and his black overseer Clyde Manning were convicted in the deaths of 11 blacks working as peons at Williams' farm.[13][14] Williams was the only white farmer convicted of killing black peons since April 1, 1877.[15]
  • 1922 – Convicted in 1921 for hopping a freight train in Florida without a ticket, Martin Tabert of North Dakota becomes part of Florida State Convict leasing. He died Feb 1, 1922[16] after being whipped for being unable to work due to illness. Reports of his death led to the prohibition in 1923 of convict leasing in Florida. The man who killed Tarbert, Thomas Walter Higginbotham, was later sentenced to 20 years in prison for second degree murder.[17]
  • 1923 – Investigations of the Tabert killing by the Florida state legislature in 1923 led to evidence of widespread abuses in north Florida[18] and found that peonage was standard practice at the Knabb Turpentine camp in Baker County belonging to State Senator T. J. Knabb.[19][20]
  • 1925 – Pensacola, Florida - White farmer and four others found guilty of using negro workers in peonage[21]
  • 1925 – Columbia, South Carolina - An African-American youth who had been missing since 1923 escaped from peonage at a work camp.[22]
  • 1954 - Sumter County, Alabama - Two brothers Oscar and Fred Dial were convicted in May of holding two African-American men in peonage. In December they were sentenced to eighteen months in federal prison.[23][24][25]

Because of the Spanish tradition, peonage remained legal and widespread in the New Mexico Territory even after the Civil War. In response, Congress passed the Peonage Act of 1867 on March 2, 1867, which said: "Sec 1990. The holding of any person to service or labor under the system known as peonage is abolished and forever prohibited in the territory of New Mexico, or in any other territory or state of the United States; and all acts, laws, … made to establish, maintain, or enforce, directly or indirectly, the voluntary or involuntary service or labor of any persons as peons, in liquidation of any debt or obligation, or otherwise, are declared null and void."[26] The current version of this statute is codified at Chapter 21-I of 42 U.S.C. § 1994 and makes no specific mention of New Mexico.[citation needed]

See also edit

  • Mae Louise Miller - woman whom along with her family was enslaved in peonage until 1961

References edit

  1. ^ https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/pe%C3%B3n#Etymology_3[user-generated source]
  2. ^ Howe, William Wirt (April 1904). "The Peonage Cases". Columbia Law Review. 4 (4): 656–58. doi:10.2307/1109963. JSTOR 1109963.
  3. ^ Bartholomew, Dean (2009). Urarina Society, Cosmology, and History in Peruvian Amazonia. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. ISBN 978-0-8130-3378-5.
  4. ^ Blackmon, Douglas (2008). Slavery By Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black People in America from the Civil War to World War II. Doubleday. p. 152. ISBN 978-0-385-50625-0.
  5. ^ Blackmon (2008), Slavery by Another Name
  6. ^ "The times dispatch. (Richmond, Va.) 1903–1914, August 23, 1903, EDITORIAL SECTION, Image 4". The Times Dispatch. 1903-08-23. ISSN 1941-0700. Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  7. ^ "The Ocala banner. (Ocala, Marion County, Fla.) 1883-194?, January 22, 1904, Image 12". The Ocala Banner. 1904-01-22. p. 12. ISSN 1943-8877. Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  8. ^ The Nation. J.H. Richards. 1906-01-01.
  9. ^ "The Pensacola journal. (Pensacola, Fla.) 1898–1985, November 24, 1906, Image 1". The Pensacola Journal. 1906-11-24. p. 1. ISSN 1941-109X. Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  10. ^ "Honolulu star-bulletin. (Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii) 1912–current, August 19, 1916, 3:30 Edition, Image 14". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. 1916-08-19. p. 14. ISSN 2326-1137. Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  11. ^ "The Manning times. (Manning, Clarendon County, S.C.) 1884–current, December 13, 1916, Image 2". The Manning Times. 1916-12-13. ISSN 2330-8826. Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  12. ^ "The labor world. (Duluth, Minn.) 1896-current, September 03, 1921, Labor Day Edition 1921, Image 27". The Labor World. 1921-09-03. ISSN 0023-6667. Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  13. ^ 1922 Court Reporting in Williams Manning Case
  14. ^ "The Piedmont Chronicles: John Williams Saga (Peonage Murders)". www.thepiedmontchronicles.com. Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  15. ^ Freeman, Gregory A. (1999). Lay This Body Down: The 1921 Murders of Eleven Plantation Slaves, Chicago: Chicago Review Press.
  16. ^ Vivien M. L. Miller (2006). "Murder, "Convict Flogging Affairs," and Debt Peonage: The Roaring Twenties in the American South". In Godden, Richard; Crawford, Martin (eds.). Reading Southern Poverty Between the Wars, 1918-1939. University of Georgia Press. p. 78. ISBN 978-0-8203-2708-2.
  17. ^ . Florida Department of Corrections. Archived from the original on 2018-07-29. Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  18. ^ Davis, Clifford (14 September 2014). . Florida Times-Union. Morris Communications. Archived from the original on 14 September 2014. Retrieved 17 December 2019.
  19. ^ Lauriault, Robert N. (January 1989). "From Can't to Can't: The North Florida Turpentine Camp, 1900-1950". The Florida Historical Quarterly. Florida Historical Society. 67 (3): 321–322.
  20. ^ Miller, Vivien E. (2003). "The Icelandic Man Cometh: North Dakota State Attorney Gudmunder Grimson and a Reassessment of the Martin Tabert Case". The Florida Historical Quarterly. Florida Historical Society. 81 (3): 287. Retrieved 17 December 2019.
  21. ^ Evening Star [Washington DC] May 23, 1925. Accessed June 24, 2019
  22. ^ "The Afro American October 17, 1925 – Google News Archive Search". news.google.com. Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  23. ^ "Peonage Case Goes to Jury". Asheville Citizen-Times. Asheville, North Carolina. 14 May 1954. Retrieved 8 Aug 2023 – via newspapers.com. Oscar and Fred Dial, were accused of bailing Negroes out of Mississippi jails and enslaving them on the isolated farm they and other members of their family operate near the Mississippi-Alabama line.
  24. ^ "Brothers Held Negroes in Slavery". The Caledonian-Record. St. Johnsbury, Vermont. 16 May 1954. Retrieved 8 Aug 2023 – via newspapers.com. A Federal Court jury last night convicted two white brothers of holding terrorized Negro workers in slavery on their posperous west Alabama farm.
  25. ^ "Two Brothers Get Jail Sentence on Slavery Charge". Hartford Courant. Hartford, Connecticut. 17 Dec 1954. Retrieved 8 Aug 2023 – via newspapers.com. Two Sumter County, Ala., brothers today were sentenced to 18 months in federal prison for holding Negroes in slavery.
  26. ^ Supreme Court Reporter, West Publishing Co, Bailey v. Alabama (1910), p. 151.

Further reading edit

  • Daniel, Pete (1990). The Shadow of Slavery: Peonage in the South, 1901–1969 (5th ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-519742-9.
  • Reynolds, Aaron, "Inside the Jackson Tract: The Battle Over Peonage Labor Camps in Southern Alabama, 1906," Southern Spaces, 21 January 2013.
  • Whayne, Jeannie M., ed. Shadows over Sunnyside: An Arkansas Plantation in Transition, 1830–1945, Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press, 1993.
  • Woodruff, Nan Elizabeth. American Congo: The African American Freedom Struggle in the Delta, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2003.

External links edit

  • Conversation With Erminio Orellana Mini Documentary by Jorge Uzon
  • 42 USC § 1994 – Peonage Abolished
  • FBI.gov
  • "Peonage" . The New Student's Reference Work . 1914.

peon, fortress, ancient, galatia, peium, redirects, here, further, information, debt, bondage, english, from, spanish, peón, spanish, pronunciation, peˈon, usually, refers, person, subject, peonage, form, wage, labor, financial, exploitation, coercive, economi. For the fortress of ancient Galatia see Peium Peonage redirects here For further information see Debt bondage Peon English ˈ p iː ɒ n PEE on from the Spanish peon Spanish pronunciation peˈon usually refers to a person subject to peonage any form of wage labor financial exploitation coercive economic practice or policy in which the victim or a laborer peon has little control over employment or economic conditions Peon and peonage can refer to both the colonial period and post colonial period of Latin America as well as the period after the end of slavery in the United States when Black Codes were passed to retain African American freedmen as labor through other means Foreman and country peon by Prilidiano Pueyrredon 1823 1870 Contents 1 Usage 2 History 3 Peonage in the United States 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksUsage editIn English peon doublet of pawn and peonage have meanings related to their Spanish etymology foot soldier 1 a peon may be defined as a person with little authority often assigned unskilled tasks an underling or any person subjected to capricious or unreasonable oversight In this sense peon can be used in either a derogatory or self effacing context citation needed There are similar usages in contemporary cultures South Asian dialects of English a peon is an office boy an attendant or an orderly a person kept around for odd jobs and historically a policeman or foot soldier Shanghai among native Chinese working in firms where English is spoken the word refers to a worker with little authority who suffers indignities from superiors However the term has a historical basis and usage related to much more severe conditions of forced labor American English in a historical and legal sense peon generally referred to someone working in an unfree labor system known as peonage The word often implied debt bondage or indentured servitude 2 History edit nbsp Foreman and rebel peon by Martin Leon Boneo 1901 Main article Slavery in the Spanish New World colonies The Spanish conquest of Mexico and Caribbean islands included peonage the conquistadors forced natives to work for Spanish planters and mine operators Peonage was prevalent in Latin America especially in the countries of Mexico Guatemala Ecuador and Peru It remains an important part of social life as among the Urarina of the Peruvian Amazon 3 Peonage in the United States edit nbsp Punishment of peons employed by American railroad tycoon Henry Meiggs in Chile or Peru 1862After the American Civil War of 1861 1865 peonage developed in the Southern United States Poor white farmers and formerly enslaved African Americans known as freedmen who could not afford their own land would farm another person s land exchanging labor for a share of the crops This was called sharecropping The land owner would pay for the seeds and tools in exchange for a percentage of the money earned from the crop and a portion of the crop As time passed many landowners began to abuse this system citation needed The landowner would force the tenant farmer or sharecropper to buy seeds and tools from the land owner s store which often had inflated prices As sharecroppers were often illiterate they had to depend on the books and accounting by the landowner and his staff Other tactics included debiting expenses against the sharecropper s profits after the crop was harvested and miscalculating the net profit from the harvest thereby keeping the sharecropper in perpetual debt to the landowner Since the tenant farmers could not offset the costs they were forced into involuntary labor due to the debts they owed the landowner Additionally unpredictable or disruptive climatic conditions such as droughts or storms caused disruptions to seasonal plantings or harvests which in turn caused the tenant farmers to accrue debts with the landowners citation needed After the U S Civil War the South passed Black Codes laws to control freed black slaves Vagrancy laws were included in these Black Codes Homeless or unemployed African Americans who were between jobs most of whom were former slaves were arrested and fined as vagrants Usually lacking the resources to pay the fine the vagrant was sent to county labor or hired out under the convict lease program to a private employer The authorities also tried to restrict the movement of freedmen between rural areas and cities to between towns citation needed Under such laws local officials arbitrarily arrested tens of thousands of people and charged them with fines and court costs of their cases Black freedmen were those most aggressively targeted Poor whites were also arrested but usually in much smaller numbers White merchants farmers and business owners were allowed to pay these debts and the prisoner had to work off the debt Prisoners were leased as laborers to owners and operators of coal mines lumber camps brickyards railroads quarries and farm plantations with the lease revenues for their labor going to the states The lessors were responsible for room and board of the laborers and frequently abused them with little oversight by the state Government officials leased imprisoned blacks and whites to small town entrepreneurs provincial farmers and dozens of corporations looking for cheap labor Their labor was repeatedly bought and sold for decades well into the 20th century long after the official abolition of American slavery 4 Southern states and private businesses profited by this form of unpaid labor It is estimated that at the beginning of the 20th century up to 40 of blacks in the South were trapped in peonage Overseers and owners often used severe physical deprivation beatings whippings and other abuse as discipline against the workers 5 nbsp Cartoon of Indictment of US Planters and negro peonageAfter the Civil War the Thirteenth Amendment prohibited involuntary servitude such as peonage for all but convicted criminals Congress also passed various laws to protect the constitutional rights of Southern blacks making those who violated such rights by conspiracy by trespass or in disguise guilty of an offense punishable by ten years in prison and civil disability Unlawful use of state law to subvert rights under the Federal Constitution was made punishable by fine or a year s imprisonment But until the involuntary servitude was abolished by president Lyndon B Johnson in August 6 1966 sharecroppers in Southern states were forced to continue working to pay off old debts or to pay taxes Southern states allowed this in order to preserve sharecropping citation needed The following reported court cases involved peonage 1903 South Dakota a 17 year old girl was reported to have been sold into peonage at the age of two by her own father 6 1904 Alabama ten persons indicted for holding black and white persons in peonage 7 1906 John W Pace of Alabama the father of peonage pardoned by his friend President Theodore Roosevelt 8 1906 Five officials of Jackson Lumber Company sentenced in Pensacola Florida to prison terms ranging from 13 months to 18 months One of the defendants was fined 5 000 while the others were each fined 1 000 9 1916 Edward McCree of Georgia Legislature owner of 37 000 acres of land indicted on 13 charges Pleaded guilty to first charge and paid a 1 000 00 fine 10 1916 two men found guilty in Lexington County South Carolina of trying to force a white man into peonage each fined 500 and sentenced to a year and day in jail 11 1921 Hawaiian sugar plantation owners unsuccessfully try to legalize peonage of Chinese workers 12 1921 Georgia farmer John S Williams and his black overseer Clyde Manning were convicted in the deaths of 11 blacks working as peons at Williams farm 13 14 Williams was the only white farmer convicted of killing black peons since April 1 1877 15 1922 Convicted in 1921 for hopping a freight train in Florida without a ticket Martin Tabert of North Dakota becomes part of Florida State Convict leasing He died Feb 1 1922 16 after being whipped for being unable to work due to illness Reports of his death led to the prohibition in 1923 of convict leasing in Florida The man who killed Tarbert Thomas Walter Higginbotham was later sentenced to 20 years in prison for second degree murder 17 1923 Investigations of the Tabert killing by the Florida state legislature in 1923 led to evidence of widespread abuses in north Florida 18 and found that peonage was standard practice at the Knabb Turpentine camp in Baker County belonging to State Senator T J Knabb 19 20 1925 Pensacola Florida White farmer and four others found guilty of using negro workers in peonage 21 1925 Columbia South Carolina An African American youth who had been missing since 1923 escaped from peonage at a work camp 22 1954 Sumter County Alabama Two brothers Oscar and Fred Dial were convicted in May of holding two African American men in peonage In December they were sentenced to eighteen months in federal prison 23 24 25 Because of the Spanish tradition peonage remained legal and widespread in the New Mexico Territory even after the Civil War In response Congress passed the Peonage Act of 1867 on March 2 1867 which said Sec 1990 The holding of any person to service or labor under the system known as peonage is abolished and forever prohibited in the territory of New Mexico or in any other territory or state of the United States and all acts laws made to establish maintain or enforce directly or indirectly the voluntary or involuntary service or labor of any persons as peons in liquidation of any debt or obligation or otherwise are declared null and void 26 The current version of this statute is codified at Chapter 21 I of 42 U S C 1994 and makes no specific mention of New Mexico citation needed nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to U S Department of Justice Circular No 3591 Re Involuntary Servitude Slavery and Peonage See also editCritique of work Day labor Debt bondage Extortion Fagging Feudalism Peasant Proletariat Serfdom Hodges v United States 203 U S 1 1906 Bailey v Alabama 219 U S 219 1911 Boy Slaves 1939 film Mary Grace Quackenbos federal attorney who investigated peonage in the United States in the early 1900s Mae Louise Miller woman whom along with her family was enslaved in peonage until 1961References edit https en wiktionary org wiki pe C3 B3n Etymology 3 user generated source Howe William Wirt April 1904 The Peonage Cases Columbia Law Review 4 4 656 58 doi 10 2307 1109963 JSTOR 1109963 Bartholomew Dean 2009 Urarina Society Cosmology and History in Peruvian Amazonia Gainesville University Press of Florida ISBN 978 0 8130 3378 5 Blackmon Douglas 2008 Slavery By Another Name The Re Enslavement of Black People in America from the Civil War to World War II Doubleday p 152 ISBN 978 0 385 50625 0 Blackmon 2008 Slavery by Another Name The times dispatch Richmond Va 1903 1914 August 23 1903 EDITORIAL SECTION Image 4 The Times Dispatch 1903 08 23 ISSN 1941 0700 Retrieved 2016 04 11 The Ocala banner Ocala Marion County Fla 1883 194 January 22 1904 Image 12 The Ocala Banner 1904 01 22 p 12 ISSN 1943 8877 Retrieved 2016 04 11 The Nation J H Richards 1906 01 01 The Pensacola journal Pensacola Fla 1898 1985 November 24 1906 Image 1 The Pensacola Journal 1906 11 24 p 1 ISSN 1941 109X Retrieved 2016 04 11 Honolulu star bulletin Honolulu Oahu Hawaii 1912 current August 19 1916 3 30 Edition Image 14 Honolulu Star Bulletin 1916 08 19 p 14 ISSN 2326 1137 Retrieved 2016 04 11 The Manning times Manning Clarendon County S C 1884 current December 13 1916 Image 2 The Manning Times 1916 12 13 ISSN 2330 8826 Retrieved 2016 04 11 The labor world Duluth Minn 1896 current September 03 1921 Labor Day Edition 1921 Image 27 The Labor World 1921 09 03 ISSN 0023 6667 Retrieved 2016 04 11 1922 Court Reporting in Williams Manning Case The Piedmont Chronicles John Williams Saga Peonage Murders www thepiedmontchronicles com Retrieved 2016 04 11 Freeman Gregory A 1999 Lay This Body Down The 1921 Murders of Eleven Plantation Slaves Chicago Chicago Review Press Vivien M L Miller 2006 Murder Convict Flogging Affairs and Debt Peonage The Roaring Twenties in the American South In Godden Richard Crawford Martin eds Reading Southern Poverty Between the Wars 1918 1939 University of Georgia Press p 78 ISBN 978 0 8203 2708 2 Timeline 1921 page 1 A History of Corrections in Florida Florida Department of Corrections Archived from the original on 2018 07 29 Retrieved 2016 04 11 Davis Clifford 14 September 2014 Turpentine and prisons The dark legacy of a prominent Baker County family Florida Times Union Morris Communications Archived from the original on 14 September 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2019 Lauriault Robert N January 1989 From Can t to Can t The North Florida Turpentine Camp 1900 1950 The Florida Historical Quarterly Florida Historical Society 67 3 321 322 Miller Vivien E 2003 The Icelandic Man Cometh North Dakota State Attorney Gudmunder Grimson and a Reassessment of the Martin Tabert Case The Florida Historical Quarterly Florida Historical Society 81 3 287 Retrieved 17 December 2019 Evening Star Washington DC May 23 1925 Accessed June 24 2019 The Afro American October 17 1925 Google News Archive Search news google com Retrieved 2016 04 11 Peonage Case Goes to Jury Asheville Citizen Times Asheville North Carolina 14 May 1954 Retrieved 8 Aug 2023 via newspapers com Oscar and Fred Dial were accused of bailing Negroes out of Mississippi jails and enslaving them on the isolated farm they and other members of their family operate near the Mississippi Alabama line Brothers Held Negroes in Slavery The Caledonian Record St Johnsbury Vermont 16 May 1954 Retrieved 8 Aug 2023 via newspapers com A Federal Court jury last night convicted two white brothers of holding terrorized Negro workers in slavery on their posperous west Alabama farm Two Brothers Get Jail Sentence on Slavery Charge Hartford Courant Hartford Connecticut 17 Dec 1954 Retrieved 8 Aug 2023 via newspapers com Two Sumter County Ala brothers today were sentenced to 18 months in federal prison for holding Negroes in slavery Supreme Court Reporter West Publishing Co Bailey v Alabama 1910 p 151 Further reading editDaniel Pete 1990 The Shadow of Slavery Peonage in the South 1901 1969 5th ed New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 519742 9 Reynolds Aaron Inside the Jackson Tract The Battle Over Peonage Labor Camps in Southern Alabama 1906 Southern Spaces 21 January 2013 Whayne Jeannie M ed Shadows over Sunnyside An Arkansas Plantation in Transition 1830 1945 Fayetteville University of Arkansas Press 1993 Woodruff Nan Elizabeth American Congo The African American Freedom Struggle in the Delta Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 2003 External links edit nbsp Look up peon or peon in Wiktionary the free dictionary Conversation With Erminio Orellana Mini Documentary by Jorge Uzon 42 USC 1994 Peonage Abolished FBI gov Peonage The New Student s Reference Work 1914 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peon amp oldid 1195322314, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.