Phillip Corven’s case against Charles Lucas came before the Virginia Supreme Court on the afternoon of June 16, 1675, for final disposition, Lieutenant Governor Sir Henry Chicheley presiding. Opposing counsels may have argued the case a few days earlier, on June 12, to the full court of Governor Sir William Berkeley. Most cases landed at the Virginia General Council (the colonial-era supreme court) on appeal. Either the petitioner, Corven, or the defendant, Lucas, presumably contested an adverse ruling by the lower Warwick County Court, which is how the case came up for final review by judges Henry Chicheley (knighted by Charles I), Thomas Bacon, James Bridger, Phillip Ludwell, James Bray, and William Cole.
We know for certain that Phillip Corven was a Black man, his case officially annotated as the “Petition of a negro for redress, etc.” In his initial filing, Corven presented details of how he had been treated like property: Anne Beasley bequeathed him to her cousin, Humphrey Stafford, who then sold him to Charles Lucas.
Phillip Corven, however, asserted he was not a slave. Beasley’s will stipulated an eight-year indenture, after which Corven was to have been given his freedom. But Lucas, his present master, had forced Corven to work three years longer than the terms of that will. Then, after those eleven years of service, Lucas forced Corven to sign an indenture for an additional twenty years, under “threats & a high hand,” Corven said.
At that point, Phillip Corven had had enough. He took his case to the judicial system of colonial Virginia, demanding not only his freedom but also the three barrels of corn and a suit of clothes promised him in Anne Beasley’s will; that promise was widely known in colonial America as “freedom dues.”1
Chicheley handed down the supreme court’s ruling, from which there would be no subsequent appeal: Petitioner’s twenty-year indenture? Vacated. Petitioner’s request for freedom? Granted. Petitioner’s request for court costs paid by defendant Lucas? Granted. Petitioner’s request for freedom dues from defendant? Granted.
Freedom dues is an idea as old as America. Not expressed in the Declaration of Independence, nor enshrined in the Constitution, nor enumerated in the Bill of Rights, freedom dues, nonetheless, arrived on America’s shores with the first colonists: a belief that power and wealth created from the labor of others entitled those who helped create that power and wealth to their fair share.
Stolen from Africa, hoodwinked, captured, or voluntarily signed on from Europe, in the early 1600s, indentured servants worked in the fields of colonial planter-masters without pay. But unlike slaves, bound in perpetuity, the labor of indentured servants had limits. They entered into contracts with their masters, offering their service for four, five, seven, eleven, fourteen years, and in some cases longer.
At the end of their bondage, indentured servants expected not only their freedom but also their freedom dues—some combination of land, seed, tools, and clothes to help them begin anew. Freedom dues represented a promise: for a very few, a path up from poverty into the wealth, security, and prominence of the privileged planter class; for most, at least the bare essentials of subsistence living, enough to keep poverty at bay.
This book focuses on the clash and convergence of two fundamental human conditions—freedom and bondage—and how that clash and convergence has played out in America.
The clash between freedom and bondage is obvious.
Not surprisingly, many masters, like Charles Lucas, refused to pay freedom dues, especially when it came to land grants. This failure to pay freedom dues was but one of many means by which landholding masters thwarted the aspirations of indentured servants—brutal working conditions, refusing to abide by contracts, arbitrary extension of the terms of indenture were others.
But landowners fought most bitterly to prevent those formerly bonded to them, Black or White, from owning land, which, after all, was the basis of colonial-era power and wealth. So, in this conflict between those who owned land and those who felt deserving of land lies another, equally potent force coursing through early America—the amassing of wealth and power by a few, and the denial of even a portion of that wealth and power to many.
Here is the earliest glimmer of the 1 percent in America, for the roots of wealth inequality lay in this gathering and holding tight of land. Here, too, lay the earliest roots of the 99 percent calling for a reversal of this inequality in the form of freedom dues. And this contest between masters and servants; between the landed and the landless; between those denying freedom dues and those demanding them; between freedom and bondage, has animated America ever since.
The convergence between freedom and bondage is less obvious.
In his books and lectures, the late Edmund S. Morgan, a professor of American history at Yale University, captured this convergence succinctly. In America, Morgan said, freedom presupposes bondage; in other words, there is no freedom without bondage. Here’s what Morgan was getting at. Take any of the slaveholding Founders, for example: Washington, Jefferson, or Madison. In previous generations, they were considered heroes because of the lofty ideals of freedom and equality they espoused. The fact that they owned slaves was never an issue, even though slavery was diametrically opposed to freedom. In modern times, the fact that most Founders owned slaves looms large; for some, this hypocrisy looms larger than the ideals of freedom they espoused. On one hand, freedom is most important. On the other hand, bondage is most important. Morgan would say that either position misses a deeper truth, a truth that is both more revealing and more damning.
Without slavery, the Founders would not have been able to pontificate on the lofty ideals of freedom that made their way into documents like the Declaration, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights. They would have been so tied to their land, growing their crops, mostly tobacco, that they simply would not have had time for anything else. Cultivating tobacco, it turns out, even with slave labor, was incredibly time-consuming. Thus, freedom in early America was a privilege that derived from slavery.
This idea of an inextricable link between freedom and slavery proves to be extremely useful. It’s a means for understanding why almost 25 percent of the US Constitution is related to the support of slavery, while the word slavery is never mentioned in the original text. It’s a tool for examining the Emancipation Proclamation, and Lincoln’s motives, then realizing the proclamation itself did not free a single slave. And, it’s the basis for understanding how Black labor built White power and wealth.
If, historically speaking, there was no freedom without slavery in America, then the institutions of power and wealth that emerged in America owe themselves to the slavery upon which America established its freedom. Pick an institution, any institution—agriculture, politics, jurisprudence, religion, medicine, policing, finance, transportation, military—apply Morgan’s rule, and you’ll discover that as a means of power and wealth, that institution is rooted in slavery. In fact, that’s exactly what this book intends to do—examine how American institutions of power and wealth came about as the result of Black labor, which before 1865 meant, for the most part, slavery.
Sometimes, the answer to the question of how Black labor built a particular institution of White power and wealth will be direct. Take agriculture. Black labor, slave labor, by working in farm fields, literally built the agricultural industry in America as one of the first institutions of power and wealth. At other times, the answer to this question will be indirect. Like policing. Black men and women had no direct hand in creating the institution of policing, an obvious instance of power used to protect White wealth. But the institution of policing was created to control the labor of Black men and women. Without the need of White slave owners to control their slave populations, policing may not have developed in America the way that it did. And occasionally, the answer will be both direct and indirect. How did Black labor build Wall Street? Turns out slaves actually built the wall, but slavery was also the basis for many of the financial instruments and investment vehicles used by brokers on the Street.
I approach this book by plotting a course along the river of American history, and at each stretch examine the institutions being born and trace their connections to Black labor at the time. But the method has its disadvantages. Principally, the river of American history is vast—wide, deep, ever-flowing, with many side streams and tributaries. How do you chart a course?
Black history is a strong current within this river of American history. So primarily, that’s the course I chose. I began with the capture of Africans in West Africa as slaves in the seventeenth century, and their arrival in Virginia in 1619. And I ended about a decade after the Civil War, a decade after the end of slavery. Within this large sweep of time most of the key institutions of power and wealth in America were established, and the role that Black men and women played in their creation can be seen.
A key tenet of human systems theory is that in any interaction between the members of a group one finds essential elements of every interaction between those members, essential elements that do not vary over time.2 Groups, in this view, refer to collections of people that share deep interdependencies and bonds. When applied to racial groups in America, this tenet serves as a tool to help understand how Black lives matter in creating White power and wealth, and how Black Americans have not shared in the wealth and power they have helped to create.
A pattern of racial interaction began well before there even was an America, in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries in West Africa. There, Europeans first met Africans, and, for the most part, those Europeans viewed the African men and women they encountered not as humans but as resources to be exploited, like the gold and exotic spices they coveted and also found.
The “Age of Exploration” was not a time of beneficent contact between Europeans and new peoples and civilizations. The Portuguese, the Spanish, the English, the Dutch, and many other European countries and monarchies sent expeditions beyond the horizon for two reasons—to secure power and to obtain wealth. The two goals were fundamentally intertwined. Wealth came from trade. Trade came from shipping. Shipping came from the power to control the seas and from the power to control and subjugate the people Europeans encountered in this quest for power and wealth.
From slavery in the seventeenth century to the designation “essential workers” in the time of a pandemic in the twenty-first century, the essential elements of racial interaction in America have not changed: Black lives are a means to an end for all too many White Americans. That end? Greater wealth. To protect the acquisition of greater wealth? Greater power.
We will witness a similar racial interaction time and time again, starting in Africa in the sixteenth century and continuing through the post–Civil War period in America. Whites interacted with Blacks based on how Blacks could help create White wealth, and Whites developed systems of power to protect this wealth creation. Time and again, when Blacks asked for their fair share of this wealth or power—asked for their freedom dues—that request was met with outright betrayal and brutality, met with deception, violence, and death.
This present volume ends a decade after the Civil War with the election of 1876. For reasons I hope will become clear to the reader, the election of 1876 is so sharp a line of demarcation that it’s possible to speak of how Black lives created White wealth and power before, and after, that election. From the Great Migration to eugenics to the Black Freedom Struggle to the killing of George Floyd, nearly everything that has happened since 1876 has deep roots in the period before. But leading up to the Civil War and the period just after, it seems as though new institutions of wealth and power were coming into being at a surprising rate. Rarely, if ever, does the history of that period trace these institutions back to the principal role that Black lives played in their creation.
In this regard, Of Blood and Sweat is also a story about the history and emergence of White privilege in this country. At the mere mention of the term “White privilege,” the eyes of many Americans glaze over. “What, me? I have not lived a privileged life. I’ve worked hard for everything I’ve obtained. The playing field is level. If you work hard, you can attain the same, too.” That’s how the reasoning goes, and while this is the essence of the American Dream, it is also the substance of an American Nightmare. The playing field has never been level for Black Americans and other Americans of color. There has always been a privileged class in America, and that privilege has long been based on skin color.
White wealth. White power. White privilege. These are fascinating ideas to explore at this unique moment in American history. In all likelihood, before the close of the current century, reparations for slavery will be made to Black Americans as a gesture, an overture, at closing the yawning income inequality gap, and recognizing their contribution to the institutions of power and wealth in America. How were White wealth, power, and privilege created? How should wealth be distributed? Who gets to decide? To answer these questions is to maintain a better grasp on why reparations for slavery are justified and why the income inequality gap needs to be closed.
But Americans, for the most part, are not enamored of history even when it might offer insights into current issues and predicaments. As an alternative to a lifeless and dry history of facts and figures, I want to tell the story of how Black labor created White power and wealth through the actual stories of men and women who did the creating. Like the story of Phillip Corven, suing for his freedom dues; or the story of Antoney and Isabella, whose African names we do not know, but who were captured and thrown together on that first ship which appeared off Point Comfort, Virginia, in 1619 carrying “20. and odd Africans.” Antoney and Isabella were later married, went into indentured servitude, and had the first Black child born in America.
I am also writing this book in the midst of the novel coronavirus pandemic. So the question of how disease shapes the course of human history and institutions is not far away; and the rise of slavery, for example, is directly related to the smallpox and measles pandemics of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, as I discuss.
I’ve been in self-isolation while working on this book. Even in isolation it is impossible to be insulated from the protests and calls for change sweeping across the country, and around the world; calls for racial equity, an end to police brutality, and an end to income inequality. These pressing present issues all have deep roots in America’s past. And I hope, in some small way, Of Blood and Sweat will contribute to the ongoing discussion of how to understand and best address them.
Of Blood and Sweat scours the past for clues about the present and the future. As a student of history, how I wish I could walk the shores of colonial Virginia in late August 1619. I’d like to peer over the shoulder of Sir John Rolfe, husband-turned-betrayer of Pocahontas, as he pens entries into his ledger of the Flemish man-of-war White Lion, anchored in the James River off modern-day Fort Monroe, Virginia, with its cargo of “20. and odd Negroes.” I’d like to row out to speak with Captain John Colyn Jope, in command of the White Lion, to inquire of him the sea battle he engaged in with the São João Bautista, a Portuguese slaver that had acquired its human cargo in present-day Luanda, Angola; booty, it appears, from Portuguese wars with the Angolan kingdom of the Ndongo.
What student of history would not want to travel back in time to be physically present during an epoch of interest? But even if we could time travel, we would still bring our present biases into the past.
For example, it is not possible to tell the story of Of Blood and Sweat without encountering the words negro and nigger, which appear everywhere throughout the extensive historical documents related to Black Americans. As a Black American myself, I have an implicit bias against these words, and as a student of history, I’ve also worked hard at overcoming this bias throughout the years. The word negro, for example, was not used in colonial America in the same way it was used in eighteenth-century America, nor twentieth-century America, nor the way it is thought of today. If we are to crack the code of how Black labor created White power and wealth, we must also begin to crack the code of the language used around race. And at the beginning of this book, I want to attempt that by examining my relationship to the word negro, as an example of addressing implicit historical bias.
As a child of the turbulent and radical 1960s, the clenched fist raised by John Lewis or Stokely Carmichael at a Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) rally, or Eldridge Cleaver marching with a group of Black Panthers, or Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the Olympics, spoke to me more deeply than the use of negro by Martin Luther King, Jr. on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. Yet, much like music across generations, the word negro fueled a radical departure for my parents and grandparents from the term colored, used to describe African Americans a generation before me. If Black or Afro-American or African American was radical for me, negro was radical for them. Yet, I heard echoes of nigger in the word, and I abhorred it.
Some time ago, I had the chance to write a book about African mythology, and as part of that book I became fascinated with the mythology of black and white. How did “white” come to connote goodness and purity, and “black” to connote evil and filth? What I discovered forever changed my relationship with the word negro and all words related to it, even the word nigger.
For it turns out that niger, a Latin root from which the words negro and nigger derive, has origins as a vowel-less Egyptian Semitic word, ngr, the similarity of the Semitic and Latin words unmistakable. Linguists have no real idea how ngr was pronounced in ancient Egypt, hence its representation absent vowels. But ngr referred to the grace and power of the Nigretai, a fierce clan of Libyan charioteers admired for the beauty of their black skins. And ngr also referred to the Niger River, whose strange, U-shaped course led many early observers to believe the river terminated in desert sands. Linguists tell us that ngr originally meant “water to flow into sand” and the Black people along the river were the “people of the water to flow into sand.”3
This was a wholly new and unexpected discovery of the real meaning of negro, which shook me at first. I fully understood how negro, for some, referred to Black subservience and nigger was used to convey hate. But, in the ancient history of the words, I’d also discovered a meaning which was poetic and beautiful; a meaning I readily embraced.
Therein, I feel, lies one secret to addressing implicit bias: the ability to hold competing truths simultaneously. I will probably always recoil, at first, upon hearing negro or nigger; and yet I will also recover after a moment, recognizing that unlike many people, I also have knowledge that provides me with a deeper understanding of both words.
And so, when approaching historical records, as was so necessary in writing Of Blood and Sweat, I do recoil, at first, upon encountering the words negro, negroe, neggar, and nigger as they appear so frequently in the writings of the White and Black men and women in early America. But I also recover after a period of time, with my own understanding of the deeper meaning behind these words, and also an understanding they were not used with the same meaning in the seventeenth century as they are today.
Prior to 1640, when slavery was firmly established in the American colonies, the words negroe and neggar were usually no more than descriptions of people with dark skin from Africa, and sometimes they were simply called Africans. As the American colonies embraced slavery, the words took on new meaning as substitutes, or code words, for the word slave. With the abolition of slavery, negro and nigger became Jim Crow terms for referring to Blacks pejoratively with regard to their prior status as slaves; a reminder they still occupied the lowest rung on the ladder of the American hierarchy of race and class. And, in modern times, a similar usage of the words continued, though after the rise of eugenics in the early twentieth century, there was an added element of hatred that came from wanting to eliminate these undesirable people from the ranks of the American population. So, in some ways, the story told in Of Blood and Sweat also could be told by simply tracking the evolutionary use of these N-words.
As a scholar deeply interested in history, I have long been at odds with the idea that history should be told in dispassionate, removed terms. This way of thinking about history goes something like this: (a) events took place in the past; (b) you, the historian, have a hypothesis about what happened and why; (c) you assemble the facts of those historical events that might prove (or disprove) your hypothesis; and (d) you remove yourself as much as possible from the presentation of those events and let others decide whether you have successfully proved, or disproved, your hypothesis. This is history as a courtroom drama.
My starting point is somewhat different. Yes, events happened in the past but those events are more like stones thrown into a body of water creating ripples that move out from the center. Those ripples travel forward into the future, interacting with the ripples from other stones thrown into the water. All of those intersecting ripples affect us today. I cannot but be affected, for example, when I am personally touched by the strictures of a world caught in the throes of a pandemic but also reading about a world four hundred years ago also in the midst of a pandemic. In this book, in that case, I’m going to draw parallels between both times, and comment on them personally as it seems appropriate. Similarly, when I hear outside my door chants of “Black Lives Matter,” then read of a 1672 colonial law which allowed for the taking of Black lives with impunity, I’m going to draw parallels and comment, and it’s going to be personal.
I know this approach to history breaks with the ranks of those who feel the “scientific method” should be applied to the study of history, and the personal opinions of the historian should be left out. But I also feel so many people, particularly Americans, take perverse pride in saying, along with Sam Cooke, “don’t know much about history” precisely because it tends to be overly academic and sanitized. And one way to reverse this disdain for the past is by making it relevant to current times and also making it personal.
As a writer, I find the historical use and evolution of the English language fascinating. Most readers have no idea that just a few hundred years ago written English was so different than it is today. In the early parts of the book I have resisted the temptation to modernize word spellings and usage as they appear in the original sources.
In seventeenth- and eighteenth-century America, writers frequently spelled words as they heard them. Add to this, English in those times still showed influences from Old English, German, Latin, and other languages: f, for instance, is often used in place of s; v is occasionally used in place of u, and vice versa; y is sometimes found where we might expect an i; e is tacked onto words in a seemingly random fashion. And there are many other spellings and usages that seem foreign and wrong by today’s standards. This particularly effects the spelling of names. Thomas Key, for example, might be spelled Thomas Keie, Keye, or Kaye, or sometimes all three spellings within the same document, still referring to the same person.
So, instead of saying, “It appears to us that she is the daughter of Thomas Key based on several pieces of evidence,” the original statement might have been written, “It appeareth to us that shee is the daughter of Thomas Keie by severall Evidences.”
It might take a moment longer to read and comprehend such statements, but this archaic English language and spelling allows me to better connect with that past moment in time and it seemes to Mee to adde Hystoricale colour to what myhte bee an Otherwyse drye Storye.
Similarly, when using slave narratives from the Library of Congress collection, I quote the words of individuals as they were written. These narratives are a rich source of personal stories from the Black men and women who lived during some of the times covered in this book. They were recorded near the end of their lives in the late 1930s, by writers working with the New Deal Works Progress Administration (WPA) Writers’ Project. These chroniclers were instructed to scour the south for older Black men and women, who grew up during slavery. A few had massive, portable recording devices wired to heavy batteries weighing down the trunks of their cars and made actual audio recordings of these ex-slaves. But most had only pen and paper, or perhaps a typewriter. They tried to capture the words the ex-slaves spoke. So the English is full of dats and dems and deys. I have made no effort to change or standardize the spellings, which are unique to each WPA writer.
Some consider this use of English reflective of the uneducated, ignorant state of these men and women—a belief I completely reject. In fact, I actually find it amusing to contrast the strange English used by White men in historical documents with the equally strange English used by ex-slaves in telling their stories. While they are not the same, they both bring me closer to the individuals behind the words.
Where possible, Of Blood and Sweat is based on primary sources. What that means is the book uses, as much as possible, original documents contemporary to the time period under consideration. Sir John Rolfe’s ledger entry for August 20, 1619, that the captain of the White Lion anchored off Fort Monroe “brought not anything but 20. and odd Negroes,” is an example of a primary source document. When such source documents are not available, then secondary or tertiary sources are used. These include recognized experts in various fields of study writing about historical events or about the findings of other recognized experts.
Writing about historical events is akin to working on a jigsaw puzzle where many pieces are either missing or damaged. You piece together what you can, then make reasoned assumptions and conjectures about the absent puzzle parts. Rolfe’s statement about the arrival of Africans is a case in point. Does “20. and odd Negroes” mean exactly twenty Africans or approximately twenty Africans? Some researchers examining other documents from colonial Virginia in August 1619 note a count of twenty-two or twenty-three Africans, so the figures vary. But then recent discoveries point to the arrival of a second ship, Treasurer, four days after White Lion, which may have left two or three Africans, so the count of Africans at the end of August 1619 may have conflated these two groups.
Of course, a more important question is does it matter if we know exactly how many Africans arrived in Virginia in August 1619? As a student of history, I feel that accuracy does matter; that the more accurate we are, even in the smallest of details, the more reliable we will be when forced to move beyond facts and details into the realm of assumptions and conjectures.
There’s another reason I prefer to use original source material when it is available. In reading the works of others writing about the past, time and time again, I found that the actual historical documents were misquoted, misspelled, or taken out of context. Even people I deeply respect, like my mentors and past teachers, made such errors. In the past, references to source documents would be buried in footnotes, which required a researcher to have the books the author cited, or travel to a library to get them. That was a time-consuming process that few readers, or other authors, engaged in. We simply trusted the principal writer as long as they included a footnote to a quoted source. Now, however, it’s quite easy to type a phrase into a search engine and see what results are returned. When I did that, it surprised me how often what the author wrote varied in some meaningful way from the original; surprised me to the point that I checked and double-checked nearly every secondary or tertiary reference I used.
Throughout the book, when I dispute the claims and assertions of other researchers from my own reading of the historical record, for the most part, I move that commentary into endnotes, so as not to interrupt the main flow of the narrative. Some of this commentary is quite long. While students and lovers of history may find these comments interesting and engaging, those less interested in such historical details may simply skip over them with little sacrifice.
Many years ago, as a young student at Wesleyan University in Connecticut and the Institute of the Black World in Atlanta, I had the great privilege of studying with two towering scholars of Black history, the late Drs. Vincent Harding and Lerone Bennett, Jr. Both would become mentors and friends. They shaped my understanding of the importance and power of Black history, and through them I learned how history needn’t be a dry and lifeless recounting of facts, for they were both masterful storytellers who wove compelling tales from the facts of the Black American experience they assembled.
Of Blood and Sweat owes much to these men. The book covers events and people that both Bennett and Harding covered numerous times in their scholarship. I am thrilled to be able to retake a journey for which these two men served as my first guides, as I am also thrilled to be able to contribute something of my own to that journey. History is continually being rewritten as historical finds are made. More is available to me now, as I reconsider the formative years of America, than was available to Bennett and Harding when they wrote. While Of Blood and Sweat updates and corrects the historical account of Black Americans, it also adds to this account insights from my own scholarship. And, the book applies the historical record of how Black lives mattered in building White power and wealth to issues central to public discourse today, such as police brutality, income inequality, and reparations, that were not as central to the public discourse when Bennett and Harding wrote.
History, it is said, is written by the victors. And Black folks, more often vanquished than victorious, have only infrequently woven their own place into the fabric of the American story. Of Blood and Sweat seeks to do justice to the many ways in which Black Americans have fundamentally contributed to and shaped the American story. Of Blood and Sweat is not a top-down story of American triumphalism and exceptionalism. It is a bottom-up people’s account of how this American story was fashioned and molded based on the presence of a marginalized group considered unworthy and undeserving of full inclusion.
That said, I am mindful that Of Blood and Sweat does not account for all the marginalized groups that form the warp and weft of the American fabric. Notably absent in this present account is the full story of Native Americans, the story of Whites who were not part of the ruling class, and the story of women. Their stories are essential. Fortunately, there are scholars better equipped than I am, researching and telling these stories.
I strongly support reparations to Black Americans, for having suffered many decades of slavery, then endured the brutality of post-slavery America to the present day. But Of Blood and Sweat is not written simply to make that case, nor to make the case to eliminate or reduce wealth inequality, nor to completely refashion American policing, all of which I also strongly support. Still, it’s my hope that Of Blood and Sweat tells a powerful tale about how Black Americans helped to build White power and wealth while never receiving their fair share and, in so doing, contributes to discussion of these important issues.
Clyde W. Ford
May 2021
Bellingham, Washington