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Union occupation of parts of the Confederacy during the Civil War
forced federal officials to confront questions about the social
order that would replace slavery. This volume of Freedom presents a
documentary history of the emergence of free-labor relations in the
large plantation areas of the Union-occupied Lower South. The
documents illustrate the experiences of former slaves as military
laborers, as residents of federally sponsored "contraband camps,"
as wage laborers on plantations and in towns, and in some
instances, as independent farmers and self-employed workers.
Together with the editors' interpretative essays, these documents
portray the different understandings of freedom advanced by the
many participants in the wartime evolution of free labor--former
slaves and free blacks; former slaveholders; Union military
officers and officials in Washington; and Northern planters,
ministers and teachers. The war sealed the fate of slavery only to
open a contest over the meaning of freedom. This volume documents
an important chapter of that contest. Ira Berlin is the Director of
the Freedmen and Southern Society Project, University of Maryland.
In their efforts to achieve freedom, ex-slaves mounted a dual struggle to elude the personal domination of the old order and to blunt new coercions embedded in terms of emerging wage employment. This book draws on a rich documentary record to allow ex-slaves to express in their own words and behavior the aspirations that underlay their efforts. The author discusses the labor disputes that convulsed the post-Civil War South, in which can be read former slaves' critiques of both Southern slavery and Northern freedom.
Union occupation of parts of the Confederacy during the Civil War
forced federal officials to confront questions about the social
order that would replace slavery. This volume of Freedom, first
published in 1991, presents a documentary history of the emergence
of free-labor relations in the large plantation areas of the
Union-occupied Lower South. The documents illustrate the
experiences of former slaves as military laborers, as residents of
federally sponsored 'contraband camps', as wage laborers on
plantations and in towns, and, in some instances, as independent
farmers and self-employed workers. Together with the editors'
interpretative essays, these documents portray the different
understandings of freedom advanced by the many participants in the
wartime evolution of free labor - former slaves and free blacks;
former slaveholders; Union military officers and officials in
Washington; and Northern planters, ministers and teachers. The war
sealed the fate of slavery only to open a contest over the meaning
of freedom. This volume documents an important chapter of that
contest.
This book examines social, political, and cultural conflicts opened
by the abolition of slavery and the fashioning of wage relations in
the era of the American Civil War. It offers a new, close look at
the origins, goals, and tactics of popular political clubs created
by emancipated workers in the countryside of one of the Deep
South's oldest plantation states. The Work of Reconstruction draws
on a rich documentary record that allowed ex-slaves to express in
their own words and behavior the aspirations and goals that
underlay their efforts. Not satisfied to render freed men and women
as objects of theoretical inquiry, this book vividly recovers the
concrete practices and language in which ex-slaves achieved freedom
and the expectations that they had of liberty.
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