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Although racial slavery was well-established in the United States by the early 19th century, certain trends contributed to the emerging description of slavery as a “peculiar institution,” one unique to the South.
One key reason for the emergence of the notion of slavery as a “peculiar institution” in the South was the gradual end of slavery in the North beginning in the late 18th century. Antislavery activists in the North were influenced by the rhetoric and ideology associated with natural equality during the American Revolution, and by religious beliefs that increasingly viewed enslavement as sinful. Moreover, the northern economy (which did not rely as heavily on enslaved labor), along with the development of free labor ideology, which viewed slavery as unfair competition that distorted market relationships, created less incentive to protect the institution.
One way enslaved people in the North gained their freedom was through manumission.
Manumissions often occurred following the death of the holder of the enslaved person, who provided for the freedom of his enslaved person in a will.
EXAMPLE
Phillis Wheatley (her African name is lost to posterity) was born in Africa in 1753. In 1761, she was sold as an enslaved person to the Wheatley family, who lived in Boston, Massachusetts. At a time when most enslaved people were unable to learn to read and write, Wheatley achieved full literacy and became a well-known poet. Phillis was manumitted upon the death of her owner in the 1770s.However, manumissions were quite rare and few holders of enslaved people were willing to free those whom they owned. Fewer than 80 slaveowners in New York City initiated voluntary manumission between 1783 and 1800.
Enslaved people could also gain their freedom through a process known as gradual emancipation, which became the preferred strategy for many northern state legislatures following the American Revolution.
Gradual emancipation promoted the freedom of enslaved people, but it did so in a way that satisfied the economic interests of their enslavers. For instance, gradual emancipation laws could promise to liberate only children born of enslaved mothers. Such laws could also require children to remain in a state of indentured servitude to their mother’s owner for a certain number of years. Both requirements allowed holders of enslaved people to continue to exploit the labor of African Americans for a time, and they caused northern emancipation to proceed at a very slow pace.
EXAMPLE
In 1780, Pennsylvania implemented a gradual emancipation plan that required children of enslaved mothers to serve indentures of 28 years to their mothers’ owners.Despite the slowness of gradual emancipation, and the limited number of private manumissions, the population of free Black people in the northern United States did increase significantly during the early 19th century.
A number of Americans also expressed optimism that slavery would gradually go away throughout the entire United States once the nation stopped participating in the international slave trade. According to the U.S. Constitution, Congress could abolish American participation in the international slave trade in 1808. In 1807, Congress did just this, implementing a ban on American participation in the trade effective January 1, 1808.
However, the ban on American participation in the international slave trade did not lead to the gradual death of enslavement. While smuggling continued to occur after Congress enacted the ban, high fertility rates among enslaved women and low mortality rates relative to other regions of the world led to a natural population increase among enslaved African Americans in the South.
EXAMPLE
Estimates suggest that the population of enslaved people quadrupled between 1808 and 1860, from roughly one million to four million.This natural population increase—combined with the expansion of cotton cultivation in the South—helps explain why slavery did not go away, despite gradual emancipation in the North and a federal ban on participating in the international slave trade.
Racism was another reason why enslavement did not become extinct in 19th-century America. For instance, Thomas Jefferson's views on race were not unusual in his time. Jefferson doubted the intellectual capacities of African Americans and deemed them inferior because of their skin color. He went on to suggest that such differences in skin color played a greater role in determining African Americans’ intellectual capacities than their position in forced servitude:
Thomas Jefferson
"Many millions of them [blacks] have been brought to, and born in America. Most of them indeed have been confined to tillage, to their own homes, and their own society: yet many have been so situated, that they might have availed themselves of the conversation of their masters; many have been brought up to the handicraft arts, and from that circumstance have always been associated with the whites. Some have been liberally educated, and all have lived in countries where the arts and sciences are cultivated to a considerable degree, and have had before their eyes samples of the best works from abroad….[N]ever yet could I find that a black had uttered a thought above the level of plain narration; never see even an elementary trait of painting or sculpture. In music they are more generally gifted than the whites with accurate ears for tune and time.... Whether they will be equal to the composition of a more extensive run of melody, or of complicated harmony, is yet to be proved. Misery is often the parent of the most affecting touches in poetry. Among the blacks is misery enough, God knows, but no poetry."
Jefferson’s ideas toward race were informed by the Enlightenment, the intellectual and cultural movement of the 18th century that emphasized reason, scientific inquiry, and progress over superstition and blind faith. Beginning in the early 19th century, a number of American scientists built upon these principles by gathering data and developing theories to explain all facets of life, including racial differences and the perceived superiority of White Americans.
Starting in the 1820s, a number of American scientists accepted the idea that humans were not part of a single creation event (also known as monogenesis). Rather, to explain the variety of cultural and physical differences between people, they sought evidence to support a theory known as polygenesis.
Among the most popular methods was measuring skull capacity. Dr. Samuel George Morton and his associates robbed Native American graves for the sole purpose of collecting and measuring skulls. Morton’s most famous book, Crania Americana (1839), featured numerous images of skulls, as well as his conclusions on race based on cranial measurements.
He characterized White Americans (and Europeans) by writing:
Dr. Samuel George Morton, Crania Americana
“The Caucasian Race is characterized by a naturally fair skin, susceptible of every tint; hair fine, long and curling, and of various colors. The skull is large and oval, and its anterior portion full and elevated. The face is small in proportion to the head, of an oval form, with well-proportioned features. The nasal bones are arched, the chin full, and the teeth vertical. This race is distinguished for the facility with which it attains the highest intellectual endowments.”
In contrast, he described individuals of African descent by writing:
“Characterized by a black complexion, and black, woolly hair; the eyes are large and prominent, the nose broad and flat, the lips thick, and the mouth wide; the head is long and narrow, the forehead low, the cheekbones prominent, the jaws protruding, and the chin small. In disposition the Negro is joyous, flexible, and indolent; while the many nations which compose this race present a singular diversity of intellectual character, of which the far extreme is the lowest grade of humanity.”
By the 1850s, Morton’s conclusions were widely accepted. A number of scientists in the northern and southern United States, including Louis Agassiz, who taught zoology and geology at Harvard University, and Josiah Nott, who was a surgeon and physician from Alabama, continued to popularize polygenism.
Racism was certainly a key factor in the perpetuation and defense of slavery in the United States. Still, southern enslavers worked continuously to ensure that their “peculiar institution” remained protected by the federal government. The expansion of democracy during the 1820s and 1830s was particularly crucial. Southern lawmakers, such as John C. Calhoun, grew increasingly concerned about a democratic phenomenon known as the tyranny of the majority.
Calhoun and other White southerners watched with concern as the North’s population of enslaved people declined, while its free, White voting population continued to increase at the expense of the South. They worried that if political power in Congress went to a northern majority that became hostile to slavery, the South’s economy and culture would be in danger. For this reason, White southerners in Congress bristled at what they perceived to be northern attempts to deprive them of their livelihood.
Recall that John C. Calhoun opposed John Quincy Adams’s Tariff of 1828, because he believed it would disproportionately harm the South, which relied heavily on imports, and benefit the North, which would receive protections for its manufacturing centers. More importantly, Calhoun was worried that the tariff would open the door for other federal initiatives that might harm enslavement. It was for these reasons that Calhoun argued for nullification in his “South Carolina Exposition and Protest” (Calhoun, 1992):
John C. Calhoun, "South Carolina Exposition and Protest"
“If it be conceded, as it must be by everyone who is the least conversant with our institutions, that the sovereign powers delegated are divided between the General [Federal] and State Governments, and that the latter hold their portion by the same tenure as the former, it would seem impossible to deny to the States the right of deciding on the infractions of their powers, and the proper remedy to be applied for their correction. The right of judging, in such cases, is an essential attribute of sovereignty. . . .”
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Calhoun’s support of nullification illustrated the growing importance of states’ rights arguments to the southern states by the mid-19th century. Calhoun increasingly saw White southerners as an embattled minority and, in an attempt to preserve both the Union and the South’s economic and political interests (which revolved around enslavement), Calhoun advanced the idea of a concurrent majority.
Calhoun’s idea of the concurrent majority found full expression in his essay “A Disquisition on Government” (Calhoun, 1992), which was published after his death in 1850:
John C. Calhoun, "A Disquisition on Government"
“There are two different modes in which the sense of the [political] community may be taken; one, simply by the right of suffrage, unaided; the other by the right through a proper organism. Each collects the sense of the majority. But one regards numbers only…. The other, on the contrary, regards interests as well as numbers…. The former of these I shall call the numerical, or absolute majority; and the latter, the concurrent, or constitutional majority. I call it the constitutional majority, because it is an essential element in every constitutional government….”
Calhoun went on to argue that the interests of any numerical majority could be countered by constitutional measures that protected minority interests, including those of southern holders of enslaved people (Calhoun, 1992):
“The necessary consequence of taking the sense of the community by the concurrent majority is...to give to each interest or portion of the community a negative on the others. It is this mutual negative among its various conflicting interests, which invests each with the power of protecting itself—and places the rights and safety of each, where only they can be securely placed, under its own guardianship. Without this there can be no systematic, peaceful, or effective resistance to the natural tendency of each to come into conflict with the others; and without this there can be no constitution.”
Source: This tutorial curated and/or authored by Matthew Pearce, Ph.D with content adapted from Openstax “U.S. History”. access for free at openstax.org/details/books/us-history LICENSE: CREATIVE COMMONS ATTRIBUTION 4.0 INTERNATIONAL
REFERENCES
Morton, S.G. (1839). Crania Americana. (pp. 5-7) Ret from bit.ly/13xyOiu
Jefferson, T. (1853) Notes on the State of Virginia. Ret from bit.ly/1SbbHRK
John C. Calhoun, Union and Liberty: The Political Philosophy of John C. Calhoun, ed. Ross M. Lence (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 1992). Ret 1/31/2017 from the Web: bit.ly/2kM1AoC