I am black but comely, O ye daughters
of Jerusalem,
As the tents of Kedar, as the curtains
of Solomon.
Look not upon me, because I am black,
Because the sun hath looked upon me:
My mother’s children were angry
with me;
They made me the keeper of the vineyards;
But mine own vineyard have I not kept.
The song of Solomon.
Out of the North the train thundered,
and we woke to see the crimson soil of Georgia stretching
away bare and monotonous right and left. Here
and there lay straggling, unlovely villages, and lean
men loafed leisurely at the depots; then again came
the stretch of pines and clay. Yet we did not
nod, nor weary of the scene; for this is historic
ground. Right across our track, three hundred
and sixty years ago, wandered the cavalcade of Hernando
de Soto, looking for gold and the Great Sea; and he
and his foot-sore captives disappeared yonder in the
grim forests to the west. Here sits Atlanta,
the city of a hundred hills, with something Western,
something Southern, and something quite its own, in
its busy life. Just this side Atlanta is the
land of the Cherokees and to the southwest, not far
from where Sam Hose was crucified, you may stand on
a spot which is to-day the centre of the Negro problem, the
centre of those nine million men who are America’s
dark heritage from slavery and the slave-trade.
Not only is Georgia thus the geographical
focus of our Negro population, but in many other respects,
both now and yesterday, the Negro problems have seemed
to be centered in this State. No other State
in the Union can count a million Negroes among its
citizens, a population as large as the
slave population of the whole Union in 1800; no other
State fought so long and strenuously to gather this
host of Africans. Oglethorpe thought slavery
against law and gospel; but the circumstances which
gave Georgia its first inhabitants were not calculated
to furnish citizens over-nice in their ideas about
rum and slaves. Despite the prohibitions of
the trustees, these Georgians, like some of their
descendants, proceeded to take the law into their
own hands; and so pliant were the judges, and so flagrant
the smuggling, and so earnest were the prayers of
Whitefield, that by the middle of the eighteenth century
all restrictions were swept away, and the slave-trade
went merrily on for fifty years and more.
Down in Darien, where the Delegal
riots took place some summers ago, there used to come
a strong protest against slavery from the Scotch Highlanders;
and the Moravians of Ebenezer did not like the system.
But not till the Haytian Terror of Toussaint was the
trade in men even checked; while the national statute
of 1808 did not suffice to stop it. How the Africans
poured in! fifty thousand between 1790 and
1810, and then, from Virginia and from smugglers,
two thousand a year for many years more. So
the thirty thousand Negroes of Georgia in 1790 doubled
in a decade, were over a hundred thousand
in 1810, had reached two hundred thousand in 1820,
and half a million at the time of the war. Thus
like a snake the black population writhed upward.
But we must hasten on our journey.
This that we pass as we near Atlanta is the ancient
land of the Cherokees, that brave Indian
nation which strove so long for its fatherland, until
Fate and the United States Government drove them beyond
the Mississippi. If you wish to ride with me
you must come into the “Jim Crow Car.”
There will be no objection, already four
other white men, and a little white girl with her
nurse, are in there. Usually the races are mixed
in there; but the white coach is all white.
Of course this car is not so good as the other, but
it is fairly clean and comfortable. The discomfort
lies chiefly in the hearts of those four black men
yonder and in mine.
We rumble south in quite a business-like
way. The bare red clay and pines of Northern
Georgia begin to disappear, and in their place appears
a rich rolling land, luxuriant, and here and there
well tilled. This is the land of the Creek Indians;
and a hard time the Georgians had to seize it.
The towns grow more frequent and more interesting,
and brand-new cotton mills rise on every side.
Below Macon the world grows darker; for now we approach
the Black Belt, that strange land of shadows,
at which even slaves paled in the past, and whence
come now only faint and half-intelligible murmurs
to the world beyond. The “Jim Crow Car”
grows larger and a shade better; three rough field-hands
and two or three white loafers accompany us, and the
newsboy still spreads his wares at one end.
The sun is setting, but we can see the great cotton
country as we enter it, the soil now dark
and fertile, now thin and gray, with fruit-trees and
dilapidated buildings, all the way to Albany.
At Albany, in the heart of the Black
Belt, we stop. Two hundred miles south of Atlanta,
two hundred miles west of the Atlantic, and one hundred
miles north of the Great Gulf lies Dougherty County,
with ten thousand Negroes and two thousand whites.
The Flint River winds down from Andersonville, and,
turning suddenly at Albany, the county-seat, hurries
on to join the Chattahoochee and the sea. Andrew
Jackson knew the Flint well, and marched across it
once to avenge the Indian Massacre at Fort Mims.
That was in 1814, not long before the battle of New
Orleans; and by the Creek treaty that followed this
campaign, all Dougherty County, and much other rich
land, was ceded to Georgia. Still, settlers fought
shy of this land, for the Indians were all about,
and they were unpleasant neighbors in those days.
The panic of 1837, which Jackson bequeathed to Van
Buren, turned the planters from the impoverished lands
of Virginia, the Carolinas, and east Georgia, toward
the West. The Indians were removed to Indian
Territory, and settlers poured into these coveted
lands to retrieve their broken fortunes. For
a radius of a hundred miles about Albany, stretched
a great fertile land, luxuriant with forests of pine,
oak, ash, hickory, and poplar; hot with the sun and
damp with the rich black swamp-land; and here the
corner-stone of the Cotton Kingdom was laid.
Albany is to-day a wide-streeted,
placid, Southern town, with a broad sweep of stores
and saloons, and flanking rows of homes, whites
usually to the north, and blacks to the south.
Six days in the week the town looks decidedly too
small for itself, and takes frequent and prolonged
naps. But on Saturday suddenly the whole county
disgorges itself upon the place, and a perfect flood
of black peasantry pours through the streets, fills
the stores, blocks the sidewalks, chokes the thoroughfares,
and takes full possession of the town. They are
black, sturdy, uncouth country folk, good-natured
and simple, talkative to a degree, and yet far more
silent and brooding than the crowds of the Rhine-pfalz,
or Naples, or Cracow. They drink considerable
quantities of whiskey, but do not get very drunk;
they talk and laugh loudly at times, but seldom quarrel
or fight. They walk up and down the streets,
meet and gossip with friends, stare at the shop windows,
buy coffee, cheap candy, and clothes, and at dusk
drive home happy? well no, not exactly
happy, but much happier than as though they had not
come.
Thus Albany is a real capital, a
typical Southern county town, the centre of the life
of ten thousand souls; their point of contact with
the outer world, their centre of news and gossip, their
market for buying and selling, borrowing and lending,
their fountain of justice and law. Once upon
a time we knew country life so well and city life
so little, that we illustrated city life as that of
a closely crowded country district. Now the
world has well-nigh forgotten what the country is,
and we must imagine a little city of black people scattered
far and wide over three hundred lonesome square miles
of land, without train or trolley, in the midst of
cotton and corn, and wide patches of sand and gloomy
soil.
It gets pretty hot in Southern Georgia
in July, a sort of dull, determined heat
that seems quite independent of the sun; so it took
us some days to muster courage enough to leave the
porch and venture out on the long country roads, that
we might see this unknown world. Finally we started.
It was about ten in the morning, bright with a faint
breeze, and we jogged leisurely southward in the valley
of the Flint. We passed the scattered box-like
cabins of the brickyard hands, and the long tenement-row
facetiously called “The Ark,” and were
soon in the open country, and on the confines of the
great plantations of other days. There is the
“Joe Fields place”; a rough old fellow
was he, and had killed many a “nigger”
in his day. Twelve miles his plantation used
to run, a regular barony. It is nearly
all gone now; only straggling bits belong to the family,
and the rest has passed to Jews and Negroes.
Even the bits which are left are heavily mortgaged,
and, like the rest of the land, tilled by tenants.
Here is one of them now, a tall brown
man, a hard worker and a hard drinker, illiterate,
but versed in farmlore, as his nodding crops declare.
This distressingly new board house is his, and he
has just moved out of yonder moss-grown cabin with
its one square room.
From the curtains in Benton’s
house, down the road, a dark comely face is staring
at the strangers; for passing carriages are not every-day
occurrences here. Benton is an intelligent yellow
man with a good-sized family, and manages a plantation
blasted by the war and now the broken staff of the
widow. He might be well-to-do, they say; but
he carouses too much in Albany. And the half-desolate
spirit of neglect born of the very soil seems to have
settled on these acres. In times past there
were cotton-gins and machinery here; but they have
rotted away.
The whole land seems forlorn and forsaken.
Here are the remnants of the vast plantations of
the Sheldons, the Pellots, and the Rensons; but the
souls of them are passed. The houses lie in half
ruin, or have wholly disappeared; the fences have
flown, and the families are wandering in the world.
Strange vicissitudes have met these whilom masters.
Yonder stretch the wide acres of Bildad Reasor; he
died in war-time, but the upstart overseer hastened
to wed the widow. Then he went, and his neighbors
too, and now only the black tenant remains; but the
shadow-hand of the master’s grand-nephew or cousin
or creditor stretches out of the gray distance to
collect the rack-rent remorselessly, and so the land
is uncared-for and poor. Only black tenants
can stand such a system, and they only because they
must. Ten miles we have ridden to-day and have
seen no white face.
A resistless feeling of depression
falls slowly upon us, despite the gaudy sunshine and
the green cottonfields. This, then, is the Cotton
Kingdom, the shadow of a marvellous dream.
And where is the King? Perhaps this is he, the
sweating ploughman, tilling his eighty acres with
two lean mules, and fighting a hard battle with debt.
So we sit musing, until, as we turn a corner on the
sandy road, there comes a fairer scene suddenly in
view, a neat cottage snugly ensconced by
the road, and near it a little store. A tall
bronzed man rises from the porch as we hail him, and
comes out to our carriage. He is six feet in
height, with a sober face that smiles gravely.
He walks too straight to be a tenant, yes,
he owns two hundred and forty acres. “The
land is run down since the boom-days of eighteen hundred
and fifty,” he explains, and cotton is low.
Three black tenants live on his place, and in his
little store he keeps a small stock of tobacco, snuff,
soap, and soda, for the neighborhood. Here is
his gin-house with new machinery just installed.
Three hundred bales of cotton went through it last
year. Two children he has sent away to school.
Yes, he says sadly, he is getting on, but cotton
is down to four cents; I know how Debt sits staring
at him.
Wherever the King may be, the parks
and palaces of the Cotton Kingdom have not wholly
disappeared. We plunge even now into great groves
of oak and towering pine, with an undergrowth of myrtle
and shrubbery. This was the “home-house”
of the Thompsons, slave-barons who drove
their coach and four in the merry past. All is
silence now, and ashes, and tangled weeds. The
owner put his whole fortune into the rising cotton
industry of the fifties, and with the falling prices
of the eighties he packed up and stole away.
Yonder is another grove, with unkempt lawn, great
magnolias, and grass-grown paths. The Big House
stands in half-ruin, its great front door staring blankly
at the street, and the back part grotesquely restored
for its black tenant. A shabby, well-built Negro
he is, unlucky and irresolute. He digs hard
to pay rent to the white girl who owns the remnant
of the place. She married a policeman, and lives
in Savannah.
Now and again we come to churches.
Here is one now, Shepherd’s, they
call it, a great whitewashed barn of a thing,
perched on stilts of stone, and looking for all the
world as though it were just resting here a moment
and might be expected to waddle off down the road at
almost any time. And yet it is the centre of
a hundred cabin homes; and sometimes, of a Sunday,
five hundred persons from far and near gather here
and talk and eat and sing. There is a schoolhouse
near, a very airy, empty shed; but even
this is an improvement, for usually the school is
held in the church. The churches vary from log-huts
to those like Shepherd’s, and the schools from
nothing to this little house that sits demurely on
the county line. It is a tiny plank-house, perhaps
ten by twenty, and has within a double row of rough
unplaned benches, resting mostly on legs, sometimes
on boxes. Opposite the door is a square home-made
desk. In one corner are the ruins of a stove,
and in the other a dim blackboard. It is the
cheerfulest schoolhouse I have seen in Dougherty,
save in town. Back of the schoolhouse is a lodgehouse
two stories high and not quite finished. Societies
meet there, societies “to care for
the sick and bury the dead”; and these societies
grow and flourish.
We had come to the boundaries of Dougherty,
and were about to turn west along the county-line,
when all these sights were pointed out to us by a
kindly old man, black, white-haired, and seventy.
Forty-five years he had lived here, and now supports
himself and his old wife by the help of the steer
tethered yonder and the charity of his black neighbors.
He shows us the farm of the Hills just across the
county line in Baker, a widow and two strapping
sons, who raised ten bales (one need not add “cotton”
down here) last year. There are fences and pigs
and cows, and the soft-voiced, velvet-skinned young
Memnon, who sauntered half-bashfully over to greet
the strangers, is proud of his home. We turn
now to the west along the county line. Great
dismantled trunks of pines tower above the green cottonfields,
cracking their naked gnarled fingers toward the border
of living forest beyond. There is little beauty
in this region, only a sort of crude abandon that
suggests power, a naked grandeur, as it
were. The houses are bare and straight; there
are no hammocks or easy-chairs, and few flowers.
So when, as here at Rawdon’s, one sees a vine
clinging to a little porch, and home-like windows
peeping over the fences, one takes a long breath.
I think I never before quite realized the place of
the Fence in civilization. This is the Land
of the Unfenced, where crouch on either hand scores
of ugly one-room cabins, cheerless and dirty.
Here lies the Negro problem in its naked dirt and
penury. And here are no fences. But now
and then the crisscross rails or straight palings
break into view, and then we know a touch of culture
is near. Of course Harrison Gohagen, a
quiet yellow man, young, smooth-faced, and diligent, of
course he is lord of some hundred acres, and we expect
to see a vision of well-kept rooms and fat beds and
laughing children. For has he not fine fences?
And those over yonder, why should they build fences
on the rack-rented land? It will only increase
their rent.
On we wind, through sand and pines
and glimpses of old plantations, till there creeps
into sight a cluster of buildings, wood
and brick, mills and houses, and scattered cabins.
It seemed quite a village. As it came nearer
and nearer, however, the aspect changed: the buildings
were rotten, the bricks were falling out, the mills
were silent, and the store was closed. Only
in the cabins appeared now and then a bit of lazy
life. I could imagine the place under some weird
spell, and was half-minded to search out the princess.
An old ragged black man, honest, simple, and improvident,
told us the tale. The Wizard of the North the
Capitalist had rushed down in the seventies
to woo this coy dark soil. He bought a square
mile or more, and for a time the field-hands sang,
the gins groaned, and the mills buzzed. Then
came a change. The agent’s son embezzled
the funds and ran off with them. Then the agent
himself disappeared. Finally the new agent stole
even the books, and the company in wrath closed its
business and its houses, refused to sell, and let
houses and furniture and machinery rust and rot.
So the Waters-Loring plantation was stilled by the
spell of dishonesty, and stands like some gaunt rebuke
to a scarred land.
Somehow that plantation ended our
day’s journey; for I could not shake off the
influence of that silent scene. Back toward town
we glided, past the straight and thread-like pines,
past a dark tree-dotted pond where the air was heavy
with a dead sweet perfume. White slender-legged
curlews flitted by us, and the garnet blooms of the
cotton looked gay against the green and purple stalks.
A peasant girl was hoeing in the field, white-turbaned
and black-limbed. All this we saw, but the spell
still lay upon us.
How curious a land is this, how
full of untold story, of tragedy and laughter, and
the rich legacy of human life; shadowed with a tragic
past, and big with future promise! This is the
Black Belt of Georgia. Dougherty County is the
west end of the Black Belt, and men once called it
the Egypt of the Confederacy. It is full of historic
interest. First there is the Swamp, to the west,
where the Chickasawhatchee flows sullenly southward.
The shadow of an old plantation lies at its edge,
forlorn and dark. Then comes the pool; pendent
gray moss and brackish waters appear, and forests
filled with wildfowl. In one place the wood
is on fire, smouldering in dull red anger; but nobody
minds. Then the swamp grows beautiful; a raised
road, built by chained Negro convicts, dips down into
it, and forms a way walled and almost covered in living
green. Spreading trees spring from a prodigal
luxuriance of undergrowth; great dark green shadows
fade into the black background, until all is one mass
of tangled semi-tropical foliage, marvellous in its
weird savage splendor. Once we crossed a black
silent stream, where the sad trees and writhing creepers,
all glinting fiery yellow and green, seemed like some
vast cathedral, some green Milan builded
of wildwood. And as I crossed, I seemed to see
again that fierce tragedy of seventy years ago.
Osceola, the Indian-Negro chieftain, had risen in
the swamps of Florida, vowing vengeance. His
war-cry reached the red Creeks of Dougherty, and their
war-cry rang from the Chattahoochee to the sea.
Men and women and children fled and fell before them
as they swept into Dougherty. In yonder shadows
a dark and hideously painted warrior glided stealthily
on, another and another, until three hundred
had crept into the treacherous swamp. Then the
false slime closing about them called the white men
from the east. Waist-deep, they fought beneath
the tall trees, until the war-cry was hushed and the
Indians glided back into the west. Small wonder
the wood is red.
Then came the black slaves.
Day after day the clank of chained feet marching from
Virginia and Carolina to Georgia was heard in these
rich swamp lands. Day after day the songs of
the callous, the wail of the motherless, and the muttered
curses of the wretched echoed from the Flint to the
Chickasawhatchee, until by 1860 there had risen in
West Dougherty perhaps the richest slave kingdom the
modern world ever knew. A hundred and fifty barons
commanded the labor of nearly six thousand Negroes,
held sway over farms with ninety thousand acres tilled
land, valued even in times of cheap soil at three
millions of dollars. Twenty thousand bales of
ginned cotton went yearly to England, New and Old;
and men that came there bankrupt made money and grew
rich. In a single decade the cotton output increased
four-fold and the value of lands was tripled.
It was the heyday of the nouveau riche,
and a life of careless extravagance among the masters.
Four and six bobtailed thoroughbreds rolled their
coaches to town; open hospitality and gay entertainment
were the rule. Parks and groves were laid out,
rich with flower and vine, and in the midst stood
the low wide-halled “big house,” with
its porch and columns and great fireplaces.
And yet with all this there was something
sordid, something forced, a certain feverish
unrest and recklessness; for was not all this show
and tinsel built upon a groan? “This land
was a little Hell,” said a ragged, brown, and
grave-faced man to me. We were seated near a
roadside blacksmith shop, and behind was the bare ruin
of some master’s home. “I’ve
seen niggers drop dead in the furrow, but they were
kicked aside, and the plough never stopped.
Down in the guard-house, there’s where the blood
ran.”
With such foundations a kingdom must
in time sway and fall. The masters moved to
Macon and Augusta, and left only the irresponsible
overseers on the land. And the result is such
ruin as this, the Lloyd “home-place": great
waving oaks, a spread of lawn, myrtles and chestnuts,
all ragged and wild; a solitary gate-post standing
where once was a castle entrance; an old rusty anvil
lying amid rotting bellows and wood in the ruins of
a blacksmith shop; a wide rambling old mansion, brown
and dingy, filled now with the grandchildren of the
slaves who once waited on its tables; while the family
of the master has dwindled to two lone women, who
live in Macon and feed hungrily off the remnants of
an earldom. So we ride on, past phantom gates
and falling homes, past the once flourishing
farms of the Smiths, the Gandys, and the Lagores, and
find all dilapidated and half ruined, even there where
a solitary white woman, a relic of other days, sits
alone in state among miles of Negroes and rides to
town in her ancient coach each day.
This was indeed the Egypt of the Confederacy, the
rich granary whence potatoes and corn and cotton poured
out to the famished and ragged Confederate troops
as they battled for a cause lost long before 1861.
Sheltered and secure, it became the place of refuge
for families, wealth, and slaves. Yet even then
the hard ruthless rape of the land began to tell.
The red-clay sub-soil already had begun to peer above
the loam. The harder the slaves were driven the
more careless and fatal was their farming. Then
came the revolution of war and Emancipation, the bewilderment
of Reconstruction, and now, what is the
Egypt of the Confederacy, and what meaning has it for
the nation’s weal or woe?
It is a land of rapid contrasts and
of curiously mingled hope and pain. Here sits
a pretty blue-eyed quadroon hiding her bare feet; she
was married only last week, and yonder in the field
is her dark young husband, hoeing to support her,
at thirty cents a day without board. Across the
way is Gatesby, brown and tall, lord of two thousand
acres shrewdly won and held. There is a store
conducted by his black son, a blacksmith shop, and
a ginnery. Five miles below here is a town owned
and controlled by one white New Englander. He
owns almost a Rhode Island county, with thousands
of acres and hundreds of black laborers. Their
cabins look better than most, and the farm, with machinery
and fertilizers, is much more business-like than any
in the county, although the manager drives hard bargains
in wages. When now we turn and look five miles
above, there on the edge of town are five houses of
prostitutes, two of blacks and three of
whites; and in one of the houses of the whites a worthless
black boy was harbored too openly two years ago; so
he was hanged for rape. And here, too, is the
high whitewashed fence of the “stockade,”
as the county prison is called; the white folks say
it is ever full of black criminals, the
black folks say that only colored boys are sent to
jail, and they not because they are guilty, but because
the State needs criminals to eke out its income by
their forced labor.
Immigrants are heirs of the slave
baron in Dougherty; and as we ride westward, by wide
stretching cornfields and stubby orchards of peach
and pear, we see on all sides within the circle of
dark forest a Land of Canaan. Here and there
are tales of projects for money-getting, born in the
swift days of Reconstruction, “improvement”
companies, wine companies, mills and factories; most
failed, and foreigners fell heir. It is a beautiful
land, this Dougherty, west of the Flint. The
forests are wonderful, the solemn pines have disappeared,
and this is the “Oakey Woods,” with its
wealth of hickories, beeches, oaks and palmettos.
But a pall of debt hangs over the beautiful land;
the merchants are in debt to the wholesalers, the
planters are in debt to the merchants, the tenants
owe the planters, and laborers bow and bend beneath
the burden of it all. Here and there a man has
raised his head above these murky waters. We
passed one fenced stock-farm with grass and grazing
cattle, that looked very home-like after endless corn
and cotton. Here and there are black free-holders:
there is the gaunt dull-black Jackson, with his hundred
acres. “I says, ’Look up! If
you don’t look up you can’t get up,’”
remarks Jackson, philosophically. And he’s
gotten up. Dark Carter’s neat barns would
do credit to New England. His master helped
him to get a start, but when the black man died last
fall the master’s sons immediately laid claim
to the estate. “And them white folks will
get it, too,” said my yellow gossip.
I turn from these well-tended acres
with a comfortable feeling that the Negro is rising.
Even then, however, the fields, as we proceed, begin
to redden and the trees disappear. Rows of old
cabins appear filled with renters and laborers, cheerless,
bare, and dirty, for the most part, although here
and there the very age and decay makes the scene picturesque.
A young black fellow greets us. He is twenty-two,
and just married. Until last year he had good
luck renting; then cotton fell, and the sheriff seized
and sold all he had. So he moved here, where
the rent is higher, the land poorer, and the owner
inflexible; he rents a forty-dollar mule for twenty
dollars a year. Poor lad! a slave
at twenty-two. This plantation, owned now by
a foreigner, was a part of the famous Bolton estate.
After the war it was for many years worked by gangs
of Negro convicts, and black convicts then
were even more plentiful than now; it was a way of
making Negroes work, and the question of guilt was
a minor one. Hard tales of cruelty and mistreatment
of the chained freemen are told, but the county authorities
were deaf until the free-labor market was nearly ruined
by wholesale migration. Then they took the convicts
from the plantations, but not until one of the fairest
regions of the “Oakey Woods” had been
ruined and ravished into a red waste, out of which
only a Yankee or an immigrant could squeeze more blood
from debt-cursed tenants.
No wonder that Luke Black, slow, dull,
and discouraged, shuffles to our carriage and talks
hopelessly. Why should he strive? Every
year finds him deeper in debt. How strange that
Georgia, the world-heralded refuge of poor debtors,
should bind her own to sloth and misfortune as ruthlessly
as ever England did! The poor land groans with
its birth-pains, and brings forth scarcely a hundred
pounds of cotton to the acre, where fifty years ago
it yielded eight times as much. Of his meagre
yield the tenant pays from a quarter to a third in
rent, and most of the rest in interest on food and
supplies bought on credit. Twenty years yonder
sunken-cheeked, old black man has labored under that
system, and now, turned day-laborer, is supporting
his wife and boarding himself on his wages of a dollar
and a half a week, received only part of the year.
The Bolton convict farm formerly included
the neighboring plantation. Here it was that
the convicts were lodged in the great log prison still
standing. A dismal place it still remains, with
rows of ugly huts filled with surly ignorant tenants.
“What rent do you pay here?” I inquired.
“I don’t know, what is it,
Sam?” “All we make,” answered Sam.
It is a depressing place, bare, unshaded,
with no charm of past association, only a memory of
forced human toil, now, then, and before
the war. They are not happy, these black men
whom we meet throughout this region. There is
little of the joyous abandon and playfulness which
we are wont to associate with the plantation Negro.
At best, the natural good-nature is edged with complaint
or has changed into sullenness and gloom. And
now and then it blazes forth in veiled but hot anger.
I remember one big red-eyed black whom we met by the
roadside. Forty-five years he had labored on
this farm, beginning with nothing, and still having
nothing. To be sure, he had given four children
a common-school training, and perhaps if the new fence-law
had not allowed unfenced crops in West Dougherty he
might have raised a little stock and kept ahead.
As it is, he is hopelessly in debt, disappointed,
and embittered. He stopped us to inquire after
the black boy in Albany, whom it was said a policeman
had shot and killed for loud talking on the sidewalk.
And then he said slowly: “Let a white
man touch me, and he dies; I don’t boast this, I
don’t say it around loud, or before the children, but
I mean it. I’ve seen them whip my father
and my old mother in them cotton-rows till the blood
ran; by ” and we passed on.
Now Sears, whom we met next lolling
under the chubby oak-trees, was of quite different
fibre. Happy? Well, yes; he laughed
and flipped pebbles, and thought the world was as
it was. He had worked here twelve years and
has nothing but a mortgaged mule. Children?
Yes, seven; but they hadn’t been to school
this year, couldn’t afford books
and clothes, and couldn’t spare their work.
There go part of them to the fields now, three
big boys astride mules, and a strapping girl with
bare brown legs. Careless ignorance and laziness
here, fierce hate and vindictiveness there; these
are the extremes of the Negro problem which we met
that day, and we scarce knew which we preferred.
Here and there we meet distinct characters
quite out of the ordinary. One came out of a
piece of newly cleared ground, making a wide detour
to avoid the snakes. He was an old, hollow-cheeked
man, with a drawn and characterful brown face.
He had a sort of self-contained quaintness and rough
humor impossible to describe; a certain cynical earnestness
that puzzled one. “The niggers were jealous
of me over on the other place,” he said, “and
so me and the old woman begged this piece of woods,
and I cleared it up myself. Made nothing for
two years, but I reckon I’ve got a crop now.”
The cotton looked tall and rich, and we praised it.
He curtsied low, and then bowed almost to the ground,
with an imperturbable gravity that seemed almost suspicious.
Then he continued, “My mule died last week,” a
calamity in this land equal to a devastating fire
in town, “but a white man loaned me
another.” Then he added, eyeing us, “Oh,
I gets along with white folks.” We turned
the conversation. “Bears? deer?”
he answered, “well, I should say there were,”
and he let fly a string of brave oaths, as he told
hunting-tales of the swamp. We left him standing
still in the middle of the road looking after us, and
yet apparently not noticing us.
The Whistle place, which includes
his bit of land, was bought soon after the war by
an English syndicate, the “Dixie Cotton and Corn
Company.” A marvellous deal of style their
factor put on, with his servants and coach-and-six;
so much so that the concern soon landed in inextricable
bankruptcy. Nobody lives in the old house now,
but a man comes each winter out of the North and collects
his high rents. I know not which are the more
touching, such old empty houses, or the
homes of the masters’ sons. Sad and bitter
tales lie hidden back of those white doors, tales
of poverty, of struggle, of disappointment. A
revolution such as that of ’63 is a terrible
thing; they that rose rich in the morning often slept
in paupers’ beds. Beggars and vulgar speculators
rose to rule over them, and their children went astray.
See yonder sad-colored house, with its cabins and fences
and glad crops! It is not glad within; last
month the prodigal son of the struggling father wrote
home from the city for money. Money! Where
was it to come from? And so the son rose in the
night and killed his baby, and killed his wife, and
shot himself dead. And the world passed on.
I remember wheeling around a bend
in the road beside a graceful bit of forest and a
singing brook. A long low house faced us, with
porch and flying pillars, great oaken door, and a
broad lawn shining in the evening sun. But the
window-panes were gone, the pillars were worm-eaten,
and the moss-grown roof was falling in. Half
curiously I peered through the unhinged door, and
saw where, on the wall across the hall, was written
in once gay letters a faded “Welcome.”
Quite a contrast to the southwestern
part of Dougherty County is the northwest. Soberly
timbered in oak and pine, it has none of that half-tropical
luxuriance of the southwest. Then, too, there
are fewer signs of a romantic past, and more of systematic
modern land-grabbing and money-getting. White
people are more in evidence here, and farmer and hired
labor replace to some extent the absentee landlord
and rack-rented tenant. The crops have neither
the luxuriance of the richer land nor the signs of
neglect so often seen, and there were fences and meadows
here and there. Most of this land was poor, and
beneath the notice of the slave-baron, before the war.
Since then his poor relations and foreign immigrants
have seized it. The returns of the farmer are
too small to allow much for wages, and yet he will
not sell off small farms. There is the Negro
Sanford; he has worked fourteen years as overseer
on the Ladson place, and “paid out enough for
fertilizers to have bought a farm,” but the owner
will not sell off a few acres.
Two children a boy and
a girl are hoeing sturdily in the fields
on the farm where Corliss works. He is smooth-faced
and brown, and is fencing up his pigs. He used
to run a successful cotton-gin, but the Cotton Seed
Oil Trust has forced the price of ginning so low that
he says it hardly pays him. He points out a
stately old house over the way as the home of “Pa
Willis.” We eagerly ride over, for “Pa
Willis” was the tall and powerful black Moses
who led the Negroes for a generation, and led them
well. He was a Baptist preacher, and when he
died, two thousand black people followed him to the
grave; and now they preach his funeral sermon each
year. His widow lives here, a weazened,
sharp-featured little woman, who curtsied quaintly
as we greeted her. Further on lives Jack Delson,
the most prosperous Negro farmer in the county.
It is a joy to meet him, a great broad-shouldered,
handsome black man, intelligent and jovial. Six
hundred and fifty acres he owns, and has eleven black
tenants. A neat and tidy home nestled in a flower-garden,
and a little store stands beside it.
We pass the Munson place, where a
plucky white widow is renting and struggling; and
the eleven hundred acres of the Sennet plantation,
with its Negro overseer. Then the character
of the farms begins to change. Nearly all the
lands belong to Russian Jews; the overseers are white,
and the cabins are bare board-houses scattered here
and there. The rents are high, and day-laborers
and “contract” hands abound. It is
a keen, hard struggle for living here, and few have
time to talk. Tired with the long ride, we gladly
drive into Gillonsville. It is a silent cluster
of farmhouses standing on the crossroads, with one
of its stores closed and the other kept by a Negro
preacher. They tell great tales of busy times
at Gillonsville before all the railroads came to Albany;
now it is chiefly a memory. Riding down the street,
we stop at the preacher’s and seat ourselves
before the door. It was one of those scenes
one cannot soon forget: a wide, low, little
house, whose motherly roof reached over and sheltered
a snug little porch. There we sat, after the
long hot drive, drinking cool water, the
talkative little storekeeper who is my daily companion;
the silent old black woman patching pantaloons and
saying never a word; the ragged picture of helpless
misfortune who called in just to see the preacher;
and finally the neat matronly preacher’s wife,
plump, yellow, and intelligent. “Own land?”
said the wife; “well, only this house.”
Then she added quietly. “We did buy seven
hundred acres across up yonder, and paid for it; but
they cheated us out of it. Sells was the owner.”
“Sells!” echoed the ragged misfortune,
who was leaning against the balustrade and listening,
“he’s a regular cheat. I worked for
him thirty-seven days this spring, and he paid me
in cardboard checks which were to be cashed at the
end of the month. But he never cashed them, kept
putting me off. Then the sheriff came and took
my mule and corn and furniture ”
“Furniture? But furniture is exempt from
seizure by law.” “Well, he took
it just the same,” said the hard-faced man.