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The Film:
Interview Transcripts:
Loren Schweninger
Loren Schweninger,
Professor of History, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, on
rebels on the plantation
Some
historians who wrote about slavery in the early part of the 20th
Century pictured slaves as passive and as contented, and as one
scholar said, it was a “chapel of ease” for those who lived in it and
that “Sambo was content in his place, and loved his master.” That was
in a textbook in the 1930s that was read widely.
Historians now
recognize that the plantation was a place of turmoil and conflict and
violence and constant pain and suffering among many slaves. In recent
years, scholars have delved into this and looked at slavery in various
parts of the south to show this violence and this tension and
conflict.
In the public
mind, many people still feel that slavery was a passive, nonviolent
and calm institution, that slaves were generally contented after they
were Christianized, and that after they came from the dark shores of
Africa, living in America was a good thing for them.
Frederick Law
Olmstead, who traveled in the south during the 1850s, observed that on
virtually every plantation he visited over a two-year period, the
owners of the plantation told about runaway slaves.
Plantation owners
struggled to control slaves. It was continual and it was pervasive
throughout the south. Runaway slaves were advertised in newspapers
and on broadsides, and planters spent a good deal of time trying to
retrieve their property. The slaves were caught, brought back,
punished, and ran away again. |
The Race and
Slavery
Petitions Project
obstacles and
heart-wrenching decisions
three groups of free blacks
dramatic slave escapes
slavery’s long shadow
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