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NGE >> History and Archaeology >> Colonial Era, 1733-1775 >> Groups/Organizations >> Slave Women |
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Slave Women As was true in all
Eighteenth Century It is not known just when the first female slaves came to Georgia. A few slaves had been brought from South Carolina during the early years of the new colony, when the institution was banned, but only after 1750, when the ban was lifted, did black men and women arrive in Georgia in significant numbers. They came as transports from other American colonies, as direct imports from Africa, or as indirect imports by way of the West Indies. From 1750 until the first census, in 1790, Georgia's slave population grew from approximately 1,000 to nearly 30,000.
The Trustees did issue special instructions regarding the labor of female slaves. In August 1750, seeking to establish silk production as a profit-making industry in the new colony, they stipulated that "Female Negroes or Blacks … be well instructed in the Art of winding or reeling of Silk from the Silk Balls or Cocoons." They also ordered planters to send their slave women to Savannah to be trained in silk-making skills. Mention of slave women also appeared in colonial plantation records and newspaper advertisements. Planters kept meticulous records identifying several traditionally female occupations,
"Taken or lost, for the Subscriber, about the 14th February last, off or near the plantation of Philip Delegal, Esq. A NEW NEGROE WENCH "Stout and tall, about 30 years old, speaks no English, has her country marks upon her body, had on when she went away white negroe cloth cloaths. —Whoever takes her up, or can give any intelligence of her to the subscriber, so that he may have her, shall have 20s. reward. —There is a great reason to think the Indians have carried her off." Nineteenth Century During the nineteenth century Georgia developed a mature plantation system, and records illuminating the nature of female slavery are more complete. In early childhood female slaves spent their time playing with other children and performing some light tasks.
Early adolescence for female slaves was often difficult because of the threat of exploitation. For some young women, puberty marked the beginning of a lifetime of physical, sexual, and emotional abuse from masters and mistresses, overseers, male slaves, and members of the planter family. For others, work in the planter's home included close interaction with their owners, which often led to intimate relationships with white men or friendships with white women. House servants spent time tending to the needs of their plantation mistresses—dressing them, combing their hair, sewing their clothing or blankets, nursing their infants, and preparing their meals. They were on call twenty-four hours a day and spent a great deal of time on their feet. Agricultural laborers served as the core of the workforce on both rice and cotton plantations.
Maintaining family stability was one of the greatest challenges for slaves in all regions. Some owners allowed slaves to court, marry, and live with one another. Other owners did not recognize marriage among slaves. The lack of legal sanction for such unions assured the right of owners to sell one spouse away from another or to separate children from their parents. Nothing lowered morale among slaves more than the uncertainty of family bonds. William and Ellen Craft, fugitive slaves from Georgia, claimed that "the fact that another man had the power to tear from our cradle the new-born babe and sell it in the shambles like a brute, and then scourge us if we dared to lift a finger to save it from such a fate, haunted us for years" and ultimately motivated them to escape. Prominent Slave Women in Fact and Fiction Several Georgia slave women achieved prominence as individuals,
Amanda America Dickson was born in 1849, the product of Hancock County planter David Dickson's rape of his twelve-year-old slave Julia Frances Lewis Dickson. Dickson's father brought her up in his household, though she remained legally a slave until 1864, despite her privileged upbringing. Her inheritance at her father's death in 1885 caused a court challenge that went all the way to the Supreme Court of Georgia. The court ruled in her favor, confirming her status as one of the wealthiest black women in late-nineteenth-century America. Among the richest published accounts of the plights of slave women
Certainly the best-known fictional women slaves were the two characters created by Margaret Mitchell in Gone With the Wind (1936). Mammy was brought vividly to life by Hattie McDaniel, who won an Academy Award for her performance in the 1939 film, while Prissy, played by Butterfly McQueen, sparked considerable controversy in later years because of her helpless and ignorant demeanor. A more recent controversy was generated by Alice Randall's The Wind Done Gone (2001), in which the heroine and narrator is Cynara, the slave daughter of Mammy and the half sister of Gerald O'Hara and Scarlett O'Hara. In her novel Jubilee (1966) Mississippian Margaret Walker fictionalized her own great-grandmother's slave experience in Terrell County in southwest Georgia. Walker heard stories of her ancestor's slave experience from her grandmother and traveled to Terrell County to research her family's history there in preparation for the book. Jubilee traces the trials and ultimate triumph of its heroine, Vyry, through its three sections—her early life on a plantation, her emancipation during the Civil War (1861-65), and her adult life as wife and mother during and after Reconstruction. Suggested Reading Ann Short Chirhart and Betty Wood, eds., Georgia Women: Their Lives and Times, vol. 1 (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2009). William Dusinberre, Them Dark Days: Slavery in the American Rice Swamps (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996). Frances Anne Kemble, Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation in 1838-1839, ed. John A. Scott (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1863; reprint, Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1984). Daina L. Ramey, "'She Do a Heap of Work': Female Slave Labor on Glynn County Rice and Cotton Plantations," Georgia Historical Quarterly 82 (winter 1998). Deborah Gray White, Ar'n't I a Woman? Female Slaves in the Plantation South (New York: Norton, 1985). Betty Wood, "Some Aspects of Female Resistance to Chattel Slavery in Low Country Georgia, 1763-1815," Historical Journal 30, no. 3 (1987). Betty Wood, Women's Work, Men's Work: The Informal Slave Economies of Lowcountry Georgia (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1995). Daina L. Ramey, Michigan State University, East Lansing Updated 7/29/2005 |
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