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Runaway Slaves addresses the still widely held belief that,
in the slave system of the United States of America, "slaves were
generally content, that racial violence on the plantation was an aberration,
and that the few who ran away struck out for the Promised Land in the
North or Canada" (p. xv). Throughout Runaway Slaves, John
Hope Franklin and Loren Schweninger stress that the majority of slaves
in the United States fought the system and their white oppressors. Moreover,
they lived under constant threats of physical and mental violence and
were conditioned to respond in kind. Furthermore, slaves ran away in
great numbers, and when they ran they did not necessarily go North.
In fact, they more often ran to places where they had relatives or loved
ones. The book is well-organized, with chapters describing everyday acts
of rebellion, reasons for running, how they tried to keep their families
together, their reasons for becoming violent, how they planned escapes,
and where and how they hid. Moreover, the book details how the slaveholders
hunted fugitives, what happened to the slaves once they were taken back
into bondage, and how the slaveholders attempted to manage their human
property. The authors attach seven appendices, including advertisements,
petitions, tables of locations and destinations of runaways, and examples
of correspondence. Almost one hundred pages of notes detail the sources. Franklin and Schweninger undertake a detailed analysis of hundreds
of newspaper articles, advertisements, and court documents in order
to establish many of the "facts" of life in slavery, as well
as a foundation for the tenor of relations between blacks and whites.
Their analysis of these documents addresses a gap in contemporary scholarship
on slavery, which has focused on slave narratives, diaries of slave
planters, and plantation records. In fact, the authors assert that newspapers
and court documents have their own "unique strengths" as primary
source materials. For instance, masters advertising for the return of
their runaways "had little reason to misinform their readers and
every reason to be as precise as possible" (p. 295). They gave
graphic physical descriptions of the runaways and their known connections
around the country. Moreover, court petitioners suing for release from
slavery "realized that it behooved them to be as forthright and
candid as possible" (p. 295). These petitioners often had nothing
to hide, because all the community knew their circumstances; furthermore,
presenting the facts in graphic detail could possibly sway the verdict
their way. Therefore, contemporary white notions of slaves and black
resistance to slavery are well-represented in these documents. The bits and pieces of stories that the authors put together from the
fragments of newspaper clippings and runaway notices are remarkable.
This technique, however, can be a bit confusing when several different
notices or runaways are mentioned in the same paragraph. Moreover, the
reader may become intrigued by the ways a particular slave rebelled
and wish to know more about that particular individual. The downfall
of writing from advertisements is that, in most cases, one never does
know what happened to the person in question. This narrative angst,
of course, only replicates to a small degree the terrible anxiety that
the friends and family of the slave must have felt. For as Franklin
and Schweninger make clear, slave families often did not know where
their loved ones had fled. They also understood very well the penalties
inflicted upon captured runaways. For example, slave owners often contracted
professional slave catchers with dogs to chase their runaways. One plantation
owner admitted to using such methods: the catcher's dogs treed the man
and pulled him out of the tree. The owner then had the dogs bite "him
badly, think[ing] he will stay home a while" (p. 161). In addition to detailing the reasons and the methods of those who ran,
the authors "seek to analyze the motives and responses of the slaveholding
class and other whites" (p. xv). To this end, they have detailed
the owners' announcements about runaways, their rewards for apprehending
the slaves, and their discussions of the tribulations that pursuing
the runaways caused. The results of this analysis are telling. Masters
were often incensed that trusted slaves ran away without "any unjust
or injurious treatment" and they would pursue those slaves until
the time and expense became overwhelming (p. 169). Franklin and Schweninger have done a thorough job reading runaway advertisements
and court cases "against the grain" to determine the possible
reasons why the slaves ran away and committed other crimes. For instance,
they claim that "fear, anxiety, retaliation, frustration, anger,
and hatred propelled slaves toward violence" (p. 79). When slaves
ran, they often took more of their owner's property than just themselves.
The owners described every item stolen. One runaway called Jerry took
with him "a 'considerable quantity' of clothes, 'an aged sorrel
horse,' a pistol, and eighty dollars in cash" (p. 145). A slave
named Sam left wearing "a green frock coat with a black velvet
collar, blue pants, a high-crown black hat; he carried with him a black
leather trunk containing a variety of other clothing, including a reddish
frock coat with a velvet collar, a green cloth coat and a white hat"
(p. 80). What this detailing makes clear is the slaves' understanding
that anything preventing them from acquiring material and intellectual
resources was the basis of their continued enslavement. When they absconded,
they took some of the materials that could help make them free. Runaway Slaves does well in discounting the popular myth that
slaves were docile and cowered in the face of white oppression. In fact,
as Franklin and Schweninger show, a great deal of violence was inflicted
upon slaves, and the slaves reacted in kind. The authors establish that
"most of the violence was spontaneous, and most of it was directed
against whites-owners, members of the owner's family, overseers"
(p. 77). In nearly every Southern state, slaves were indicted for killing
their owners or members of their owner's family. For this reason in
particular, Runaway Slaves is a valuable resource for undergraduate
courses dealing with slavery, as undergraduates often come to this subject
with "romantic, Gone with the Wind" notions of the peculiar
institution. Moreover, the authors cite all the primary sources they
use, making this book a valuable resource for those interested in archival
research on slave narratives, slave codes, and African American history. Samantha Manchester Earley |