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Slavery in Cuba

Slavery in Cuba was a portion of the larger Atlantic Slave Trade that primarily supported Spanish plantation owners engaged in the sugarcane trade. It was practised on the island of Cuba from the 16th century until it was abolished by Spanish royal decree on October 7, 1886.

An enslaved Afro-Cuban in the 19th century.

The first organized system of slavery in Cuba was introduced by the Spanish Empire, which attacked and enslaved the island's indigenous Taíno and Guanahatabey peoples on a grand scale. Cuba's original population was decimated after the arrival of the Spanish, due to both a lack of immunity to Old World diseases such as smallpox, but also because of the conditions associated with the forced labor that was used by the Spanish colonist throughout the 1500s.[citation needed] The remaining Taino intermixed with Europeans or African slaves and no full-blooded Taino remained after the 1600s, though many Cubans today do have Taino DNA and are descendants of those intermixed Tainos.

Following the decimation of the island's native population, the Spanish wanted new slaves to uphold their sugarcane production. They brought more than a million enslaved African people to Cuba. The African enslaved population grew to outnumber European Cubans, and a large proportion of Cubans today descend from these enslaved peoples—perhaps as much as 65% of the population .[citation needed]

Cuba became one of the world's largest sugarcane producers after the Haitian Revolution and continued to import enslaved Africans long after the practice was internationally outlawed. Cuba did not stop participating in the slave trade until 1867, nor abolish slave ownership until 1886. Due to growing pressure on the trade throughout the 19th century, it also imported more than 100,000 Chinese indentured workers to replace dwindling African labor.[citation needed]

History edit

Since the 1550s, the Spanish had relied on the indigenous Taino population for their primary enslaved labor. The indigenous population of Cuba was facing declining numbers from disease and warfare. Many enslaved Tainos fled into the interiors of Cuba, as they were much more familiar with the land than the Spaniards were. Between the population decline and the indigenous rebellions against Spanish rule, the demand for labor in Cuba became high. The Spanish introduced chattel slavery of West African people to remedy this labor shortage.[1]

They provided services to the garrisons of the Nueva España and Tierra Firme fleets, which arrived at the port annually. Throughout the 1500s and 1600s, enslaved people made up a large portion of the services sector of the city's economy and also held numerous skilled trade positions in Havana.[1] European-Cuban historian José Martín Félix de Arrate y Acosta recalled in 1761 that “negros and pardos” were “very able and capable to apply themselves, becoming distinguished masters, not only in the lowest ones such as shoemakers, tailors, masons, and carpenters, but also in those which require more ability and genius, such as silversmith’s craft, sculpture, painting, and carving, as denoted by their marvelous works.”[2] Some enslaved Havanans worked under a market-based system in which the enslaved person had the responsibility of finding their own job and employer, and then giving over a portion of their earnings to their owner.[1]

Enslaved peoples in Cuba did not begin to experience the harsh conditions of plantation agriculture until after the 1770s, once the international plantation economy had expanded into Western Cuba.[1] In 1740 the Havana Company was formed to stimulate the sugar industry by encouraging slave importation into the colony, although it was an unsuccessful early attempt.[3][dubious ] But in 1762 the British Empire, led by the Earl of Albemarle, captured Havana during the Seven Years' War with Spain.[4] During the year-long occupation of Havana and the surrounding regions, the British expanded the plantation system on the island and imported 4,000 enslaved people from their other possessions in the West Indies to populate the new plantations. These 4,000 enslaved formed nearly 10% of all enslaved people imported to the island during the previous 250 years.[4] Spain regained control of the British-held regions of Cuba in 1763 by surrendering Florida to the British in exchange.

The British had also freed 90 enslaved people who had sided with them during the invasion, in recognition of their contribution to the Spanish defeat.[4] Given their role in the Seven Years' War, Spanish colonial official Julián de Arriaga realized that enslaved people could become partisans of foreign nations that offered them freedom. He thus began to issue cartas de libertad and emancipated some two dozen enslaved people who had defended Havana against the British.[5] The Spanish Crown increased slave imports to ensure the loyalty of European-Cuban planters and to increase revenues from the lucrative sugar trade, as the crop was then in high demand in Europe.[6]

In 1792 enslaved people of the French colony of Saint-Domingue began a revolution on the nearby island of Hispaniola. In 1803, ships carrying both white European and free people of color refugees arrived in Cuba from Saint-Domingue. Though all the passengers on board had been legally free under French law for years, and many of the mixed-race people had been born free, upon their arrival the Cubans classified those of even partial African descent as slaves. The white passengers were allowed entry into Cuba while African and mulatto passengers were restrained on the ships. Some of the white passengers had additionally claimed some of the Black passengers as slaves during the journey. The women of African descent and their children were particularly subject to being pressed into slavery.[7]

In the long run, Santiago de Cuba was a receptive landing point for men and women who hoped to restore the social relations of slavery, and for their project of redefining others among the refugees as slaves. Authorized since 1789 as a port of arrival for the transatlantic trade in African captives, Santiago served an expanding hinterland of plantations producing sugar and coffee. Ships arrived regularly from the west coast of Africa, delivering bound laborers into the urban and rural economy. Men and women from Saint-Domingue who brought with them both financial resources and the habit of command could make a convincing case that they – and their ‘slaves’ – offered something of value to a developing agricultural export sector. Those with more-modest resources, including men and women designated mulatos or mulatas libres, could simply point out that they needed the labor of one or two slaves to avoid becoming a charge on the Cuban government.[8]

The Haitians finally gained their independence in 1804. They declared the new Republic of Haiti, making it second Republic in the Western Hemisphere and the first founded by formerly enslaved people. Cuban slaveholders watched these events closely, but took comfort in thinking the rebellion was the result of the radical politics of the French Revolution, during which the French government had abolished slavery in the colonies before Napoleon attempted to reintroduce it shortly afterwards.[9] As the new freedmen set up small subsistence farms in Haiti, Cuba's planters gained much of the sugar market formerly held by Saint-Domingue's large plantations.[10] As sugar expanded to dominate the economy in Cuba, planters greatly expanded their importation of enslaved people from Africa. As a result, “between 1791 to 1805, 91,211 slaves entered the island through Havana”.[11][failed verification][page needed]

In the early 19th century, the Cuban planters, who relied almost exclusively on foreign slave traders, closely followed debates on abolishing slavery in Britain and the newly independent United States. In 1807, both Britain and the United States banned the Atlantic slave trade, with the British ban taking effect in 1807 and the American ban taking effect in 1808.[12] Unlike in the rest of the Americas, the 19th century European-descended Cuban elite did not form an anti-colonial movement. They worried that such action would encourage enslaved Cubans to revolt.[13] Cuban elites petitioned the Spanish Crown to create an independent Cuban slave-trading company, and smugglers continued to ship enslaved people to the island when they could evade British and American anti-slavery patrols around West Africa.[12]

In March 1812, a series of revolts led by freedman José Antonio Aponte erupted in the plantations of Cuba.[14] After the revolts were suppressed by the local militias armed by the government, hundreds of enslaved people were arrested, with many of the leaders being tried and executed.[15]

By 1817, Britain and Spain were making a concerted effort to reform their diplomatic ties and negotiate the legal status of the Atlantic slave trade. An Anglo-Spanish treaty in 1817 formally gained Spanish agreement to immediately end the slave trade north of the Equator and expand enforcement against illegal slave ships. But, as recorded by legal trade documents of the era, 372,449 enslaved people were imported to Cuba before the slave trade legally ended, and at least 123,775 were imported between 1821 and 1853.[16]

Even as the slave trade ceased in other parts of the Atlantic, the Cuban slave trade continued on until 1867. The ownership of human beings as chattel slaves remained legal in Cuba until 1880. The slave trade in Cuba would not systematically end until chattel Cuban slavery was abolished by Spanish royal decree in 1886, making it one of the last countries in the Western Hemisphere (preceding only Brazil) to formally abolish slavery.[12][3]

Conditions of enslavement edit

Enslaved people on sugar plantations and in sugar mills were often subject to the harshest conditions. Field work was rigorous manual labor that began at an early age. Work days lasted close to 20 hours during harvest and processing, including cultivating and cutting the crops, hauling wagons, and processing sugarcane with dangerous machinery. Enslaved people were forced to reside in barracoons, where they were crammed in and locked in by a padlock at night, getting about three to four hours of sleep. The conditions of the barracoons were highly unsanitary and extremely hot. Typically there was no ventilation; the only window was a small barred hole in the wall.[17]

“So the place swarmed with fleas and ticks that gave the entire work force infections and diseases.”

Biography of a Runaway Slave, page 23

Enslaved people who misbehaved, underproduced, or disobeyed their masters were often placed in stocks in boiler houses, where they were abandoned for anywhere from a few days to as much as two to three months at a time. The wooden stocks were built in both standing and prostrate varieties, and women were subjected to this and other forms of torture even when pregnant. When subjected to whippings, pregnant women had to lay "face down over a scooped-out piece of round [earth] to protect their bellies."[18] Some masters reportedly whipped pregnant women in the belly, often causing miscarriages. Enslaved Cubans developed herbal remedies to treat torture wounds where possible, applying “compresses of tobacco leaves, urine and salt" to lashing wounds in particular.[19]

Under Spanish law in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, enslaved people had certain rights and were able to appeal to authorities to ensure the enforcement of these rights. These rights were influenced by the Siete Partidas code of Alfonso X the Wise, which regulated slavery in Castile.[1] Some of these rights included the right to purchase freedom and access to Catholic sacraments, such as baptism and marriage. The purchase of freedom was often facilitated by a legal custom, coartación. Through coartación, enslaved people were able to come to agreements with their slaveholder on a price for their freedom and would pay for their manumission in installments.[1] Enslaved people who created these agreements with their slaveholders were called coartados.[1]

In 1789, the Spanish Crown led an effort to reform slavery, as the demand for enslaved labor in Cuba was growing. The Crown issued a decree, the Código Negro Español (Spanish Black Code), that specified food and clothing provisions, put limits on the number of work hours, limited punishments, required religious instruction, and protected marriages, forbidding the sale of young children away from their mothers.[10] But planters often flouted the laws and protested against them. They considered the code a threat to their authority[10] and an intrusion into their personal lives.[20]

The slave owners did not protest against all the measures of the code, many of which, they argued, were already common practices. They objected to efforts to set limits on their ability to apply physical punishment. For instance, the Black Code limited lashings to 25 and required whipping "not to cause serious bruises or bleeding".[20] The slaveholders thought that the enslaved Cubans would interpret these limits as weaknesses, ultimately leading to resistance.[20] Another contested issue was the restriction of work hours "from sunrise to sunset." Planters said that during the harvest season, the rapid cutting and processing of cane required 20-hour days.[21] Enslaved people working on plantations ultimately had minimal opportunities to claim any of these rights. Most coartados during this time were urban enslaved people.[1]

Gendered slavery edit

Cuban patriarchy provided a framework for projecting gender roles onto enslaved peoples. Just as the practice of machismo solidified male domination over others, the practice of marianismo elevated the position of white women over enslaved peoples.[22] Machismo and marianismo functioned symbiotically: the Hispanic Cuban male was expected to express dominance in public spaces and ventures like the slave trade, while Hispanic women exercised control of private spaces (including those staffed by enslaved people) through feminine virtues like motherhood, modesty, and honor.[22][page needed]

Cuba's slavery system was gendered in that some labor was performed only by men, and some only by women. Enslaved women in the city of Havana, from the sixteenth century onwards, performed duties such as operating the town taverns, eating houses, and lodges, as well as working as laundresses and domestic laborers. Enslaved women were also forced to serve as sex slaves in the towns.[23]

Though gender roles were predominant in enslaved peoples' labor, historical narratives[whose?] have been interpreted[by whom?] in gendered ways that highlight the role of men in the resistance to slavery, while occluding the role of enslaved women. Further studies[whose?] show that the relationship between gender and slave revolt was complex. For instance, historical interpretations of the La Escalera conspiracy reveal the role of machismo in Cuban historiography:

As December 1843 drew to a close, an enslaved woman in the Sabanilla district named Polonia Gangá shocked her master with the information that his prized sugar property was about to be engulfed in open rebellion… But commencing the story of 1844 at the moment of Polonia’s declaration also necessarily equates a woman’s betrayal.[24]

A machismo historical perspective frames betrayal as one of the only possibilities for enslaved women's participation in insurrection, because it associates rebellion exclusively to masculine aggression. But despite enslaved women being viewed through this limiting lens, these women were known to have played a key role both in armed rebellion against slavery and in more subtle forms of resistance. One such leader was an enslaved woman named Carlota, who led a rebellion in the Triunvirate plantation in Matanzas in 1843.[25] She is considered a pioneer in the Cuban fight against slavery.

Enslaved women also practised methods of resistance that did not involve armed rebellion. Cuban oral histories and newspaper advertisements indicate a contingent of formerly enslaved women who escaped from their owners.[26] And as in other Latin cultures, racial segregation was not strictly enforced between white men and the mulatta population in Cuba, so some enslaved Cuban women thus gained their freedom through familial and sexual relationships with white men. Men who took enslaved women as wives or concubines sometimes freed both them and their children. Free mixed-race people thus eventually began to constitute an additional Cuban social class in a stature beneath ethnic Europeans and above enslaved Africans. Both freedmen and free people of color, generally of mixed race, came to represent 20% of the total Cuban population and 41% of the non-white Cuban population.[27]

However, plantation owners also encouraged Afro-Cuban enslaved women to have children in order to increase their enslaved work force and replace people killed by the harsh conditions of slavery. Owners paired strong black men with healthy black women, even if they were immediate relatives, forcing them to have sex and “breed stock” of children. The children could then be sold for about 500 pesos[when?], and also saved owners on the cost of importing additional enslaved people from Africa. Sometimes if the owners did not like the quality of the children, they separated the parents and sent the mother back to working in the fields.[28]

Literary legacy edit

Caña (Sugarcane)

El negro
junto al cañaveral.

El yanqui
sobre el cañaveral.

La tierra
bajo el cañaveral.

¡Sangre
que se nos va!

English translation

The Negro
bound to the canefield.

The Yankee
above the canefield.

The earth
beneath the canefield.

Blood
seeps out of us!

~Nicolás Guillén[29]

Slavery left a long-lasting mark on Cuban culture that persists to the present day. Cuban writers such as Nicolás Guillén and Lydia Cabrera participated in the Pan-African Négritude movement of the early 20th century (locally known as negrista or negrismo). Afro-Cuban writers undertook a Hispanophone effort to reclaim Cuban blackness and connections to African culture, while expressing a new sensibility comparable to the Harlem Renaissance in New York City. Guillén, Cabrera, and their contemporaries revisited and tried to make sense of slavery and other crimes against Afro-Cuban people, as well as celebrating the enslaved people who had survived and created their own culture.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h de la Fuente, Alejandro (2004). "Slave Law and Claims-Making in Cuba: The Tannenbaum Debate Revisited". Law and History Review. 22 (2): 339–369. doi:10.2307/4141649. JSTOR 4141649. S2CID 143271423.
  2. ^ de Arrate, José Martín Félix (1949). Llave del Nuevo Mundo. Mexico City: Fondo de Cultura Económica. p. 95.
  3. ^ a b "Sugarcane and the growth of slavery". Britannica. Retrieved 1 September 2020.
  4. ^ a b c Childs, p. 24
  5. ^ Childs, p. 25
  6. ^ Childs, p. 26
  7. ^ Freedom Papers, pp. 48–51
  8. ^ Rebecca J. Scott and Jean M. Hébrard, Freedom Papers: An Atlantic Odyssey in the Age of Emancipation, Harvard University Press, p. 52
  9. ^ Childs, p. 30
  10. ^ a b c Childs, p. 35
  11. ^ Willis Fletcher Johnson. The History of Cuba, Volume IV, B.F. Buck Incorporated, 1920.
  12. ^ a b c Childs, p. 29
  13. ^ Childs, pp. 177–178
  14. ^ Childs, p. 120
  15. ^ Childs, p. 121
  16. ^ Humboldt, Alexander. The Island of Cuba, New York: 1856, p. 221. http://www.latinamericanstudies.org
  17. ^ Montejo pp. 80–82
  18. ^ Montejo p. 40
  19. ^ Montejo pp. 39–40
  20. ^ a b c Childs, p. 36
  21. ^ Childs, p. 37
  22. ^ a b Franklin, Sarah L. Women and Slavery in Nineteenth-century Colonial Cuba. Rochester Studies in African History and the Diaspora: 1st Edition. Rochester: University of Rochester Press, 2012
  23. ^ General History of the Caribbean, Vol III, p. 141.
  24. ^ Finch, Aisha K. (2015). Rethinking Slave Rebellion in Cuba: La Escalera and the Insurgencies of 1841-1844. The University of North Carolina Press. doi:10.5149/northcarolina/9781469622347.001.0001. ISBN 978-1-4696-2236-1. Project MUSE book 40881.[page needed]
  25. ^ Houser, Myra Ann. “Avenging Carlota in Africa: Angola and the memory of Cuban Slavery,” Atlantic Studies: Global Currents, Feb 13 2015.
  26. ^ Rodriguez, Lina. “Free Cuba: Runaway Slave Advertisements from Colonial Havana,” The Appendix. July 9, 2013. http://theappendix.net
  27. ^ General History of the Caribbean, Vol III, pp. 144–5.
  28. ^ Montejo p. 39
  29. ^ Nicolas Guillen pp. 22–23

Further reading edit

  • Aimes, Hubert H.S. (1907). A History of Slavery in Cuba, 1511 to 1868. G. P. Putnam's sons.
  • Allahar, Anton L. (1988). "Slaves, Slave Merchants and Slave Owners in 19th Century Cuba". Caribbean Studies. 21 (1/2): 158–191. JSTOR 25612932.
  • Brehony, Margaret (2008). "Irish Migration to Cuba, 1835–1845: Empire, Ethnicity, Slavery". Cuban Studies. 39: 60–84. Also Brehony, Margaret (16 March 2012). Irish Migration to Cuba, 1835–1845: Empire, Ethnicity, Slavery and 'Free' Labour (Thesis). hdl:10379/3181.
  • Childs, Matt D. (2006). The 1812 Aponte Rebellion in Cuba and the Struggle Against Atlantic Slavery. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-3058-1.
  • Franklin, Sarah L. Women and slavery in nineteenth-century colonial Cuba (University Rochester Press, 2012).
  • de la Fuente, Alejandro (2004). "Slave Law and Claims-Making in Cuba: The Tannenbaum Debate Revisited". Law and History Review. 22 (2): 339–369. doi:10.2307/4141649. JSTOR 4141649. S2CID 143271423.
  • Guillén, Nicolás. “Sugarcane,” in Yoruba from Cuba, Trans. Salvador Ortiz-Carboneres. London: Peepal Tree Pres, 2005. 22–23.
  • Hu‐Dehart, Evelyn (April 1993). "Chinese coolie labour in Cuba in the nineteenth century: Free labour or neo‐slavery?". Slavery & Abolition. 14 (1): 67–86. doi:10.1080/01440399308575084.
  • Jennings, Evelyn Powell (2005). "War as the 'Forcing House of Change': State Slavery in Late-Eighteenth-Century Cuba". The William and Mary Quarterly. 62 (3): 411–440. doi:10.2307/3491530. JSTOR 3491530.
  • Jennings, Evelyn Powell (2003). "In the Eye of the Storm: The Spanish Colonial State and African Enslavement in Havana, 1763-90". Historical Reflections / Réflexions Historiques. 29 (1): 145–162. JSTOR 41299264.
  • Knight, Franklin W. (May 1977). "Origins of Wealth and the Sugar Revolution in Cuba, 1750-1850". Hispanic American Historical Review. 57 (2): 231–253. doi:10.1215/00182168-57.2.231. JSTOR 2513773.
  • Knight, Franklin Willis (1969). Cuban Slave Society on the Eve of Abolition, 1838–1880 (Thesis). ProQuest 302453931.
  • Montejo, Esteban. Biography of a Runaway Slave (1966). Ed. Miguel Barnet. Trans. W. Nick Hill. Willimantic, CT: Curbstone, 1994. (First published in Spanish in Cuba, and in English in the UK in 1966)
  • Murray, David (December 1999). "The slave trade, slavery and Cuban independence". Slavery & Abolition. 20 (3): 106–126. doi:10.1080/01440399908575288. PMID 22332272.
  • Portuondo, María M. (2003). "Plantation Factories: Science and Technology in Late-Eighteenth-Century Cuba". Technology and Culture. 44 (2): 231–257. doi:10.1353/tech.2003.0086. JSTOR 25148106. S2CID 143310371.
  • Singleton, Theresa A. (January 2001). "Slavery and spatial dialectics on Cuban coffee plantations". World Archaeology. 33 (1): 98–114. doi:10.1080/00438240120047654. S2CID 53387360.

Comparative and international slavery edit

  • Araújo, Ana Lucia (April 2016). "Slavery and the Atlantic Slave Trade in Brazil and Cuba from an Afro-Atlantic Perspective". Almanack (12): 1–5. doi:10.1590/2236-463320161201.
  • Bartlett, Christopher (1989). "Britain and the Abolition of Slavery in Puerto Rico and Cuba". The Journal of Caribbean History. 23 (1): 96. ProQuest 1302673173.
  • Bergad, Laird (2007). The Comparative Histories of Slavery in Brazil, Cuba, and the United States. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-87235-5.
  • Corwin, Arthur F. Spain and the Abolition of Slavery in Cuba, 1817–1886 (U of Texas Press, 2014).
  • Curbelo, Silvia Álvarez (2020). "Caribbean siblings". The Routledge Hispanic Studies Companion to Nineteenth-Century Spain. pp. 4–18. doi:10.4324/9781351122900-2. ISBN 9781351122900. S2CID 242997361.
  • Horne, Gerald. Race to Revolution: The US and Cuba during Slavery and Jim Crow (NYU Press, 2014).
  • Kaye, Anthony E. (2009). "The Second Slavery: Modernity in the Nineteenth-Century South and the Atlantic World". The Journal of Southern History. 75 (3): 627–650. JSTOR 27779029.
  • Knight, Franklin W., ed. General History of the Caribbean: Volume III: The Slave Societies of the Caribbean. (London: UNESCO, 1997).
  • Marquese, Rafael; Parron, Tâmis; Berbel, Márcia (2016). Slavery and Politics: Brazil and Cuba, 1790-1850. UNM Press. ISBN 978-0-8263-5649-9.
  • Munford, Clarence J.; Zeuske, Michael (1988). "Black Slavery, Class Struggle, Fear and Revolution in St. Domingue and Cuba, 1785-1795". The Journal of Negro History. 73 (1/4): 12–32. doi:10.1086/JNHv73n1-4p12. JSTOR 3031519. S2CID 148858981.
  • Raminelli, Ronald (April 2021). "Reformadores da escravidão Brasil e Cuba c. 1790 e 1840". Varia Historia. 37 (73): 119–154. doi:10.1590/0104-87752021000100005. S2CID 233530719.
  • Schmidt-Nowara, Christopher. Empire and Antislavery: Spain, Cuba, and Puerto Rico, 1833-1874 (University of Pittsburgh Press, 1999).
  • Schmidt‐Nowara, Christopher (August 2000). "The end of slavery and the end of empire: Slave emancipation in Cuba and Puerto Rico". Slavery & Abolition. 21 (2): 188–207. doi:10.1080/01440390008575312. S2CID 143477302.
  • Schneider, Elena (6 April 2015). "African Slavery and Spanish Empire". Journal of Early American History. 5 (1): 3–29. doi:10.1163/18770703-00501002.
  • Scott, Rebecca J. and Jean M. Hébrard. Freedom Papers: An Atlantic Odyssey in the Age of Emancipation. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 2012.
  • Scott, Rebecca J. Degrees of freedom: Louisiana and Cuba after slavery (Harvard University Press, 2009).
  • Sheridan, Richard B. (1976). "'Sweet Malefactor': The Social Costs of Slavery and Sugar in Jamaica and Cuba, 1807-54". The Economic History Review. 29 (2): 236–257. doi:10.2307/2594313. JSTOR 2594313.
  • Toplin, Robert Brent, ed. Slavery and race relations in Latin America (Greenwood Press, 1974).

Historiography and memory edit

  • Aching, Gerard. Freedom from Liberation: Slavery, Sentiment, and Literature in Cuba (Indiana University Press, 2015).
  • Curry-Machado, Jonathan (April 2004). "How Cuba burned with the ghosts of British slavery: race, abolition and the Escalera". Slavery & Abolition. 25 (1): 71–93. doi:10.1080/0144039042000220937. S2CID 159621576.
  • Routon, Kenneth (November 2008). "Conjuring the past: Slavery and the historical imagination in Cuba". American Ethnologist. 35 (4): 632–649. doi:10.1111/j.1548-1425.2008.00102.x.

slavery, cuba, portion, larger, atlantic, slave, trade, that, primarily, supported, spanish, plantation, owners, engaged, sugarcane, trade, practised, island, cuba, from, 16th, century, until, abolished, spanish, royal, decree, october, 1886, enslaved, afro, c. Slavery in Cuba was a portion of the larger Atlantic Slave Trade that primarily supported Spanish plantation owners engaged in the sugarcane trade It was practised on the island of Cuba from the 16th century until it was abolished by Spanish royal decree on October 7 1886 An enslaved Afro Cuban in the 19th century The first organized system of slavery in Cuba was introduced by the Spanish Empire which attacked and enslaved the island s indigenous Taino and Guanahatabey peoples on a grand scale Cuba s original population was decimated after the arrival of the Spanish due to both a lack of immunity to Old World diseases such as smallpox but also because of the conditions associated with the forced labor that was used by the Spanish colonist throughout the 1500s citation needed The remaining Taino intermixed with Europeans or African slaves and no full blooded Taino remained after the 1600s though many Cubans today do have Taino DNA and are descendants of those intermixed Tainos Following the decimation of the island s native population the Spanish wanted new slaves to uphold their sugarcane production They brought more than a million enslaved African people to Cuba The African enslaved population grew to outnumber European Cubans and a large proportion of Cubans today descend from these enslaved peoples perhaps as much as 65 of the population citation needed Cuba became one of the world s largest sugarcane producers after the Haitian Revolution and continued to import enslaved Africans long after the practice was internationally outlawed Cuba did not stop participating in the slave trade until 1867 nor abolish slave ownership until 1886 Due to growing pressure on the trade throughout the 19th century it also imported more than 100 000 Chinese indentured workers to replace dwindling African labor citation needed Contents 1 History 2 Conditions of enslavement 3 Gendered slavery 4 Literary legacy 5 Notes 6 Further reading 6 1 Comparative and international slavery 6 2 Historiography and memoryHistory editSince the 1550s the Spanish had relied on the indigenous Taino population for their primary enslaved labor The indigenous population of Cuba was facing declining numbers from disease and warfare Many enslaved Tainos fled into the interiors of Cuba as they were much more familiar with the land than the Spaniards were Between the population decline and the indigenous rebellions against Spanish rule the demand for labor in Cuba became high The Spanish introduced chattel slavery of West African people to remedy this labor shortage 1 They provided services to the garrisons of the Nueva Espana and Tierra Firme fleets which arrived at the port annually Throughout the 1500s and 1600s enslaved people made up a large portion of the services sector of the city s economy and also held numerous skilled trade positions in Havana 1 European Cuban historian Jose Martin Felix de Arrate y Acosta recalled in 1761 that negros and pardos were very able and capable to apply themselves becoming distinguished masters not only in the lowest ones such as shoemakers tailors masons and carpenters but also in those which require more ability and genius such as silversmith s craft sculpture painting and carving as denoted by their marvelous works 2 Some enslaved Havanans worked under a market based system in which the enslaved person had the responsibility of finding their own job and employer and then giving over a portion of their earnings to their owner 1 Enslaved peoples in Cuba did not begin to experience the harsh conditions of plantation agriculture until after the 1770s once the international plantation economy had expanded into Western Cuba 1 In 1740 the Havana Company was formed to stimulate the sugar industry by encouraging slave importation into the colony although it was an unsuccessful early attempt 3 dubious discuss But in 1762 the British Empire led by the Earl of Albemarle captured Havana during the Seven Years War with Spain 4 During the year long occupation of Havana and the surrounding regions the British expanded the plantation system on the island and imported 4 000 enslaved people from their other possessions in the West Indies to populate the new plantations These 4 000 enslaved formed nearly 10 of all enslaved people imported to the island during the previous 250 years 4 Spain regained control of the British held regions of Cuba in 1763 by surrendering Florida to the British in exchange The British had also freed 90 enslaved people who had sided with them during the invasion in recognition of their contribution to the Spanish defeat 4 Given their role in the Seven Years War Spanish colonial official Julian de Arriaga realized that enslaved people could become partisans of foreign nations that offered them freedom He thus began to issue cartas de libertad and emancipated some two dozen enslaved people who had defended Havana against the British 5 The Spanish Crown increased slave imports to ensure the loyalty of European Cuban planters and to increase revenues from the lucrative sugar trade as the crop was then in high demand in Europe 6 In 1792 enslaved people of the French colony of Saint Domingue began a revolution on the nearby island of Hispaniola In 1803 ships carrying both white European and free people of color refugees arrived in Cuba from Saint Domingue Though all the passengers on board had been legally free under French law for years and many of the mixed race people had been born free upon their arrival the Cubans classified those of even partial African descent as slaves The white passengers were allowed entry into Cuba while African and mulatto passengers were restrained on the ships Some of the white passengers had additionally claimed some of the Black passengers as slaves during the journey The women of African descent and their children were particularly subject to being pressed into slavery 7 In the long run Santiago de Cuba was a receptive landing point for men and women who hoped to restore the social relations of slavery and for their project of redefining others among the refugees as slaves Authorized since 1789 as a port of arrival for the transatlantic trade in African captives Santiago served an expanding hinterland of plantations producing sugar and coffee Ships arrived regularly from the west coast of Africa delivering bound laborers into the urban and rural economy Men and women from Saint Domingue who brought with them both financial resources and the habit of command could make a convincing case that they and their slaves offered something of value to a developing agricultural export sector Those with more modest resources including men and women designated mulatos or mulatas libres could simply point out that they needed the labor of one or two slaves to avoid becoming a charge on the Cuban government 8 The Haitians finally gained their independence in 1804 They declared the new Republic of Haiti making it second Republic in the Western Hemisphere and the first founded by formerly enslaved people Cuban slaveholders watched these events closely but took comfort in thinking the rebellion was the result of the radical politics of the French Revolution during which the French government had abolished slavery in the colonies before Napoleon attempted to reintroduce it shortly afterwards 9 As the new freedmen set up small subsistence farms in Haiti Cuba s planters gained much of the sugar market formerly held by Saint Domingue s large plantations 10 As sugar expanded to dominate the economy in Cuba planters greatly expanded their importation of enslaved people from Africa As a result between 1791 to 1805 91 211 slaves entered the island through Havana 11 failed verification page needed In the early 19th century the Cuban planters who relied almost exclusively on foreign slave traders closely followed debates on abolishing slavery in Britain and the newly independent United States In 1807 both Britain and the United States banned the Atlantic slave trade with the British ban taking effect in 1807 and the American ban taking effect in 1808 12 Unlike in the rest of the Americas the 19th century European descended Cuban elite did not form an anti colonial movement They worried that such action would encourage enslaved Cubans to revolt 13 Cuban elites petitioned the Spanish Crown to create an independent Cuban slave trading company and smugglers continued to ship enslaved people to the island when they could evade British and American anti slavery patrols around West Africa 12 In March 1812 a series of revolts led by freedman Jose Antonio Aponte erupted in the plantations of Cuba 14 After the revolts were suppressed by the local militias armed by the government hundreds of enslaved people were arrested with many of the leaders being tried and executed 15 By 1817 Britain and Spain were making a concerted effort to reform their diplomatic ties and negotiate the legal status of the Atlantic slave trade An Anglo Spanish treaty in 1817 formally gained Spanish agreement to immediately end the slave trade north of the Equator and expand enforcement against illegal slave ships But as recorded by legal trade documents of the era 372 449 enslaved people were imported to Cuba before the slave trade legally ended and at least 123 775 were imported between 1821 and 1853 16 Even as the slave trade ceased in other parts of the Atlantic the Cuban slave trade continued on until 1867 The ownership of human beings as chattel slaves remained legal in Cuba until 1880 The slave trade in Cuba would not systematically end until chattel Cuban slavery was abolished by Spanish royal decree in 1886 making it one of the last countries in the Western Hemisphere preceding only Brazil to formally abolish slavery 12 3 Conditions of enslavement editEnslaved people on sugar plantations and in sugar mills were often subject to the harshest conditions Field work was rigorous manual labor that began at an early age Work days lasted close to 20 hours during harvest and processing including cultivating and cutting the crops hauling wagons and processing sugarcane with dangerous machinery Enslaved people were forced to reside in barracoons where they were crammed in and locked in by a padlock at night getting about three to four hours of sleep The conditions of the barracoons were highly unsanitary and extremely hot Typically there was no ventilation the only window was a small barred hole in the wall 17 So the place swarmed with fleas and ticks that gave the entire work force infections and diseases Biography of a Runaway Slave page 23 Enslaved people who misbehaved underproduced or disobeyed their masters were often placed in stocks in boiler houses where they were abandoned for anywhere from a few days to as much as two to three months at a time The wooden stocks were built in both standing and prostrate varieties and women were subjected to this and other forms of torture even when pregnant When subjected to whippings pregnant women had to lay face down over a scooped out piece of round earth to protect their bellies 18 Some masters reportedly whipped pregnant women in the belly often causing miscarriages Enslaved Cubans developed herbal remedies to treat torture wounds where possible applying compresses of tobacco leaves urine and salt to lashing wounds in particular 19 Under Spanish law in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries enslaved people had certain rights and were able to appeal to authorities to ensure the enforcement of these rights These rights were influenced by the Siete Partidas code of Alfonso X the Wise which regulated slavery in Castile 1 Some of these rights included the right to purchase freedom and access to Catholic sacraments such as baptism and marriage The purchase of freedom was often facilitated by a legal custom coartacion Through coartacion enslaved people were able to come to agreements with their slaveholder on a price for their freedom and would pay for their manumission in installments 1 Enslaved people who created these agreements with their slaveholders were called coartados 1 In 1789 the Spanish Crown led an effort to reform slavery as the demand for enslaved labor in Cuba was growing The Crown issued a decree the Codigo Negro Espanol Spanish Black Code that specified food and clothing provisions put limits on the number of work hours limited punishments required religious instruction and protected marriages forbidding the sale of young children away from their mothers 10 But planters often flouted the laws and protested against them They considered the code a threat to their authority 10 and an intrusion into their personal lives 20 The slave owners did not protest against all the measures of the code many of which they argued were already common practices They objected to efforts to set limits on their ability to apply physical punishment For instance the Black Code limited lashings to 25 and required whipping not to cause serious bruises or bleeding 20 The slaveholders thought that the enslaved Cubans would interpret these limits as weaknesses ultimately leading to resistance 20 Another contested issue was the restriction of work hours from sunrise to sunset Planters said that during the harvest season the rapid cutting and processing of cane required 20 hour days 21 Enslaved people working on plantations ultimately had minimal opportunities to claim any of these rights Most coartados during this time were urban enslaved people 1 Gendered slavery editCuban patriarchy provided a framework for projecting gender roles onto enslaved peoples Just as the practice of machismo solidified male domination over others the practice of marianismo elevated the position of white women over enslaved peoples 22 Machismo and marianismo functioned symbiotically the Hispanic Cuban male was expected to express dominance in public spaces and ventures like the slave trade while Hispanic women exercised control of private spaces including those staffed by enslaved people through feminine virtues like motherhood modesty and honor 22 page needed Cuba s slavery system was gendered in that some labor was performed only by men and some only by women Enslaved women in the city of Havana from the sixteenth century onwards performed duties such as operating the town taverns eating houses and lodges as well as working as laundresses and domestic laborers Enslaved women were also forced to serve as sex slaves in the towns 23 Though gender roles were predominant in enslaved peoples labor historical narratives whose have been interpreted by whom in gendered ways that highlight the role of men in the resistance to slavery while occluding the role of enslaved women Further studies whose show that the relationship between gender and slave revolt was complex For instance historical interpretations of the La Escalera conspiracy reveal the role of machismo in Cuban historiography As December 1843 drew to a close an enslaved woman in the Sabanilla district named Polonia Ganga shocked her master with the information that his prized sugar property was about to be engulfed in open rebellion But commencing the story of 1844 at the moment of Polonia s declaration also necessarily equates a woman s betrayal 24 A machismo historical perspective frames betrayal as one of the only possibilities for enslaved women s participation in insurrection because it associates rebellion exclusively to masculine aggression But despite enslaved women being viewed through this limiting lens these women were known to have played a key role both in armed rebellion against slavery and in more subtle forms of resistance One such leader was an enslaved woman named Carlota who led a rebellion in the Triunvirate plantation in Matanzas in 1843 25 She is considered a pioneer in the Cuban fight against slavery Enslaved women also practised methods of resistance that did not involve armed rebellion Cuban oral histories and newspaper advertisements indicate a contingent of formerly enslaved women who escaped from their owners 26 And as in other Latin cultures racial segregation was not strictly enforced between white men and the mulatta population in Cuba so some enslaved Cuban women thus gained their freedom through familial and sexual relationships with white men Men who took enslaved women as wives or concubines sometimes freed both them and their children Free mixed race people thus eventually began to constitute an additional Cuban social class in a stature beneath ethnic Europeans and above enslaved Africans Both freedmen and free people of color generally of mixed race came to represent 20 of the total Cuban population and 41 of the non white Cuban population 27 However plantation owners also encouraged Afro Cuban enslaved women to have children in order to increase their enslaved work force and replace people killed by the harsh conditions of slavery Owners paired strong black men with healthy black women even if they were immediate relatives forcing them to have sex and breed stock of children The children could then be sold for about 500 pesos when and also saved owners on the cost of importing additional enslaved people from Africa Sometimes if the owners did not like the quality of the children they separated the parents and sent the mother back to working in the fields 28 Literary legacy editCana Sugarcane El negro junto al canaveral El yanqui sobre el canaveral La tierra bajo el canaveral Sangre que se nos va English translationThe Negro bound to the canefield The Yankee above the canefield The earth beneath the canefield Blood seeps out of us Nicolas Guillen 29 Slavery left a long lasting mark on Cuban culture that persists to the present day Cuban writers such as Nicolas Guillen and Lydia Cabrera participated in the Pan African Negritude movement of the early 20th century locally known as negrista or negrismo Afro Cuban writers undertook a Hispanophone effort to reclaim Cuban blackness and connections to African culture while expressing a new sensibility comparable to the Harlem Renaissance in New York City Guillen Cabrera and their contemporaries revisited and tried to make sense of slavery and other crimes against Afro Cuban people as well as celebrating the enslaved people who had survived and created their own culture Notes edit a b c d e f g h de la Fuente Alejandro 2004 Slave Law and Claims Making in Cuba The Tannenbaum Debate Revisited Law and History Review 22 2 339 369 doi 10 2307 4141649 JSTOR 4141649 S2CID 143271423 de Arrate Jose Martin Felix 1949 Llave del Nuevo Mundo Mexico City Fondo de Cultura Economica p 95 a b Sugarcane and the growth of slavery Britannica Retrieved 1 September 2020 a b c Childs p 24 Childs p 25 Childs p 26 Freedom Papers pp 48 51 Rebecca J Scott and Jean M Hebrard Freedom Papers An Atlantic Odyssey in the Age of Emancipation Harvard University Press p 52 Childs p 30 a b c Childs p 35 Willis Fletcher Johnson The History of Cuba Volume IV B F Buck Incorporated 1920 a b c Childs p 29 Childs pp 177 178 Childs p 120 Childs p 121 Humboldt Alexander The Island of Cuba New York 1856 p 221 http www latinamericanstudies org Montejo pp 80 82 Montejo p 40 Montejo pp 39 40 a b c Childs p 36 Childs p 37 a b Franklin Sarah L Women and Slavery in Nineteenth century Colonial Cuba Rochester Studies in African History and the Diaspora 1st Edition Rochester University of Rochester Press 2012 General History of the Caribbean Vol III p 141 Finch Aisha K 2015 Rethinking Slave Rebellion in Cuba La Escalera and the Insurgencies of 1841 1844 The University of North Carolina Press doi 10 5149 northcarolina 9781469622347 001 0001 ISBN 978 1 4696 2236 1 Project MUSE book 40881 page needed Houser Myra Ann Avenging Carlota in Africa Angola and the memory of Cuban Slavery Atlantic Studies Global Currents Feb 13 2015 Rodriguez Lina Free Cuba Runaway Slave Advertisements from Colonial Havana The Appendix July 9 2013 http theappendix net General History of the Caribbean Vol III pp 144 5 Montejo p 39 Nicolas Guillen pp 22 23Further reading editAimes Hubert H S 1907 A History of Slavery in Cuba 1511 to 1868 G P Putnam s sons Allahar Anton L 1988 Slaves Slave Merchants and Slave Owners in 19th Century Cuba Caribbean Studies 21 1 2 158 191 JSTOR 25612932 Brehony Margaret 2008 Irish Migration to Cuba 1835 1845 Empire Ethnicity Slavery Cuban Studies 39 60 84 Also Brehony Margaret 16 March 2012 Irish Migration to Cuba 1835 1845 Empire Ethnicity Slavery and Free Labour Thesis hdl 10379 3181 Childs Matt D 2006 The 1812 Aponte Rebellion in Cuba and the Struggle Against Atlantic Slavery University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 3058 1 Franklin Sarah L Women and slavery in nineteenth century colonial Cuba University Rochester Press 2012 de la Fuente Alejandro 2004 Slave Law and Claims Making in Cuba The Tannenbaum Debate Revisited Law and History Review 22 2 339 369 doi 10 2307 4141649 JSTOR 4141649 S2CID 143271423 Guillen Nicolas Sugarcane in Yoruba from Cuba Trans Salvador Ortiz Carboneres London Peepal Tree Pres 2005 22 23 Hu Dehart Evelyn April 1993 Chinese coolie labour in Cuba in the nineteenth century Free labour or neo slavery Slavery amp Abolition 14 1 67 86 doi 10 1080 01440399308575084 Jennings Evelyn Powell 2005 War as the Forcing House of Change State Slavery in Late Eighteenth Century Cuba The William and Mary Quarterly 62 3 411 440 doi 10 2307 3491530 JSTOR 3491530 Jennings Evelyn Powell 2003 In the Eye of the Storm The Spanish Colonial State and African Enslavement in Havana 1763 90 Historical Reflections Reflexions Historiques 29 1 145 162 JSTOR 41299264 Knight Franklin W May 1977 Origins of Wealth and the Sugar Revolution in Cuba 1750 1850 Hispanic American Historical Review 57 2 231 253 doi 10 1215 00182168 57 2 231 JSTOR 2513773 Knight Franklin Willis 1969 Cuban Slave Society on the Eve of Abolition 1838 1880 Thesis ProQuest 302453931 Montejo Esteban Biography of a Runaway Slave 1966 Ed Miguel Barnet Trans W Nick Hill Willimantic CT Curbstone 1994 First published in Spanish in Cuba and in English in the UK in 1966 Murray David December 1999 The slave trade slavery and Cuban independence Slavery amp Abolition 20 3 106 126 doi 10 1080 01440399908575288 PMID 22332272 Portuondo Maria M 2003 Plantation Factories Science and Technology in Late Eighteenth Century Cuba Technology and Culture 44 2 231 257 doi 10 1353 tech 2003 0086 JSTOR 25148106 S2CID 143310371 Singleton Theresa A January 2001 Slavery and spatial dialectics on Cuban coffee plantations World Archaeology 33 1 98 114 doi 10 1080 00438240120047654 S2CID 53387360 Comparative and international slavery edit Araujo Ana Lucia April 2016 Slavery and the Atlantic Slave Trade in Brazil and Cuba from an Afro Atlantic Perspective Almanack 12 1 5 doi 10 1590 2236 463320161201 Bartlett Christopher 1989 Britain and the Abolition of Slavery in Puerto Rico and Cuba The Journal of Caribbean History 23 1 96 ProQuest 1302673173 Bergad Laird 2007 The Comparative Histories of Slavery in Brazil Cuba and the United States Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 87235 5 Corwin Arthur F Spain and the Abolition of Slavery in Cuba 1817 1886 U of Texas Press 2014 Curbelo Silvia Alvarez 2020 Caribbean siblings The Routledge Hispanic Studies Companion to Nineteenth Century Spain pp 4 18 doi 10 4324 9781351122900 2 ISBN 9781351122900 S2CID 242997361 Horne Gerald Race to Revolution The US and Cuba during Slavery and Jim Crow NYU Press 2014 Kaye Anthony E 2009 The Second Slavery Modernity in the Nineteenth Century South and the Atlantic World The Journal of Southern History 75 3 627 650 JSTOR 27779029 Knight Franklin W ed General History of the Caribbean Volume III The Slave Societies of the Caribbean London UNESCO 1997 Marquese Rafael Parron Tamis Berbel Marcia 2016 Slavery and Politics Brazil and Cuba 1790 1850 UNM Press ISBN 978 0 8263 5649 9 Munford Clarence J Zeuske Michael 1988 Black Slavery Class Struggle Fear and Revolution in St Domingue and Cuba 1785 1795 The Journal of Negro History 73 1 4 12 32 doi 10 1086 JNHv73n1 4p12 JSTOR 3031519 S2CID 148858981 Raminelli Ronald April 2021 Reformadores da escravidao Brasil e Cuba c 1790 e 1840 Varia Historia 37 73 119 154 doi 10 1590 0104 87752021000100005 S2CID 233530719 Schmidt Nowara Christopher Empire and Antislavery Spain Cuba and Puerto Rico 1833 1874 University of Pittsburgh Press 1999 Schmidt Nowara Christopher August 2000 The end of slavery and the end of empire Slave emancipation in Cuba and Puerto Rico Slavery amp Abolition 21 2 188 207 doi 10 1080 01440390008575312 S2CID 143477302 Schneider Elena 6 April 2015 African Slavery and Spanish Empire Journal of Early American History 5 1 3 29 doi 10 1163 18770703 00501002 Scott Rebecca J and Jean M Hebrard Freedom Papers An Atlantic Odyssey in the Age of Emancipation Cambridge MA Harvard UP 2012 Scott Rebecca J Degrees of freedom Louisiana and Cuba after slavery Harvard University Press 2009 Sheridan Richard B 1976 Sweet Malefactor The Social Costs of Slavery and Sugar in Jamaica and Cuba 1807 54 The Economic History Review 29 2 236 257 doi 10 2307 2594313 JSTOR 2594313 Toplin Robert Brent ed Slavery and race relations in Latin America Greenwood Press 1974 Historiography and memory edit Aching Gerard Freedom from Liberation Slavery Sentiment and Literature in Cuba Indiana University Press 2015 Curry Machado Jonathan April 2004 How Cuba burned with the ghosts of British slavery race abolition and the Escalera Slavery amp Abolition 25 1 71 93 doi 10 1080 0144039042000220937 S2CID 159621576 Routon Kenneth November 2008 Conjuring the past Slavery and the historical imagination in Cuba American Ethnologist 35 4 632 649 doi 10 1111 j 1548 1425 2008 00102 x Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Slavery in Cuba amp oldid 1192709371, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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