The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 3 of 4 eBook

American Anti-Slavery Society
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,269 pages of information about The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 3 of 4.

The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 3 of 4 eBook

American Anti-Slavery Society
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,269 pages of information about The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 3 of 4.
this, they labor more hours in the day than convicts, as will be shown under another head, and are obliged to prepare and cook their own food after they have finished the labor of the day, while the convicts have theirs prepared for them.  These, with other circumstances, necessarily make larger and longer draughts upon the strength of the slave, produce consequently greater exhaustion, and demand a larger amount of food to restore and sustain the laborer than is required by the convict in his briefer, less exposed, and less exhausting toils.

That the slaveholders themselves regard the usual allowance of food to slaves as insufficient, both in kind and quantity, for hard-working men, is shown by the fact, that in all the slave states, we believe without exception, white convicts at hard labor, have a much larger allowance of food than the usual one of slaves; and generally more than one third of this daily allowance is meat.  This conviction of slaveholders shows itself in various forms.  When persons wish to hire slaves to labor on public works, in addition to the inducement of high wages held out to masters to hire out their slaves, the contractors pledge themselves that a certain amount of food shall be given the slaves, taking care to specify a larger amount than the usual allowance, and a part of it meat.

The following advertisement is an illustration.  We copy it from the “Daily Georgian,” Savannah, Dec. 14, 1838.

NEGROES WANTED.

The Contractors upon the Brunswick and Alatamaha Canal are desirous to hire a number of prime Negro Men, from the 1st October next, for fifteen months, until the 1st January, 1810.  They will pay at the rate of eighteen dollars per month for each prime hand.

These negroes will be employed in the excavation of the Canal.  They will be provided with three and a half pounds of pork or bacon, and ten quarts of gourd seed corn per week, lodged in comfortable shantees and attended constantly a skilful physician.  J.H.  COUPER, P.M.  NIGHTINGALE.

But we have direct testimony to this point.  The late Hon. John Taylor, of Caroline Co.  Virginia, for a long time Senator in Congress, and for many years president of the Agricultural Society of the State, says in his “Agricultural Essays,” No. 30, page 97, “BREAD ALONE OUGHT NEVER TO BE CONSIDERED A SUFFICIENT DIET FOR SLAVES EXCEPT AS A PUNISHMENT.”  He urges upon the planters of Virginia to give their slaves, in addition to bread, “salt meat and vegetables,” and adds, “we shall be ASTONISHED to discover upon trial, that this great comfort to them is a profit to the master.”

The Managers of the American Prison Discipline Society, in their third Report, page 58, say, “In the Penitentiaries generally, in the United States, the animal food is equal to one pound of meat per day for each convict.”

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The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 3 of 4 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.