海角大神

Slave traders may not have been social outcasts after all

Historian Joshua Rothman uses the lives of three prosperous slave traders to explode myths about pre-Civil War American society. 

|
Basic Books
"The Ledger and the Chain: How Domestic Slave Traders Shaped America" by Joshua D. Rothman, Basic Books, 512 pp.

At the heart of historian Joshua Rothman鈥檚 amazing, disturbing new book 鈥淭he Ledger and the Chain鈥 is the slaying of a persistent myth. Rothman looks at a typical view of pre-Civil War American society 鈥 that people North and South, in all walks of life, grudgingly accepted the presence of slave-traders in their midst but scorned them and considered them soiling presences in any civilized gathering 鈥 and he seeks to dispute and displace that view.聽

鈥淪lave traders,鈥 he writes, 鈥渨orked in open collusion with legions of slaveholders, bankers, merchants, lawyers, clerks, judges, sheriffs, and politicians, who all recognized their indispensability, and as in most occupations, their standing, both in society and the business world, depended on perceptions of their integrity and reliability.鈥 The claim that slave traders were reviled social outcasts was, he insists, mostly a myth.聽

In order to flesh out his case, Rothman makes the masterful dramatic stroke of putting three prosperous slave traders front and center: Isaac Franklin, John Armfield, and Rice Ballard. 鈥淭he Ledger and the Chain鈥 is in large part a biographical study of these men, both as individuals and as symbols of Rothman鈥檚 larger argument. Readers watch them preen and hustle and manage their finances, and although Rothman regularly reminds us that these men were very comfortable with 鈥渢he intimate daily savageries of the slave trade,鈥 he does an eye-opening job of making these three vile men three-dimensionally human. They gorge on onions, they dote on their families, they form deep friendships, all while engaged in 鈥渁n undertaking as intricate as it was diabolical.鈥澛

The business of enslaving other human beings was highly lucrative. According to Rothman, in the first 60 years of the 19th century American slaveholders sent roughly 1 million Black people from the Upper South to the Lower South, a trade that dwarfed the size of the North American transatlantic slave trade from Africa. By 1860, Rothman writes, the market value of the slave trade was worth more than the country had invested in manufacturing, railroads, and banks combined.聽聽

And Rothman鈥檚 central and most damning point is that a mass of wealth and commerce so enormous could be laundered into many kinds of respectability if the broader society that benefited from it was willing to look the other way, to rationalize, and to accommodate. Franklin, Armfield, and Ballard were able to enter the finest emporiums and drawing rooms precisely because the industry of men like them helped to build those clean, well-lit rooms. 鈥淭heir America incentivized entrepreneurialism, financial risk, and racial slavery, and no one made more of the junction among those things than they did,鈥 writes Rothman about his unholy trio. 鈥淭hey became some of the richest men in the country as a result.鈥

The thoroughness of Rothman鈥檚 research occasionally seems to work against him. He asserts that the vast amounts of money commanded by men like Franklin, Armfield, and Ballard bought them acceptance in genteel Southern society. But his own narrative often gives the impression that most people they met in the course of their business dealings actually did scorn them. Maybe these men were just uncouth (or maybe it had something to do with all those onions), but it seems possible that there was also a deeper stain on their characters than Rothman is willing to admit.

In his own exhortative prose, that stain isn鈥檛 just professional 鈥 it鈥檚 intensely personal. Slavery wasn鈥檛 just merely what these men did, he insists, it was who they were. Being a slave trader required more than a simple willingness to hurt and terrorize enslaved people. 鈥淚t required a commitment to those things, an enthusiasm for them 鈥 the collaborative pleasure they took in inflicting pain on the enslaved helped make them successful.鈥澛

That success was enormous, and as Rothman notes, it arose as much through ledgers and bills of exchange as it did through whips and chains. 鈥淲e do not really understand American history if we do not understand the slave trade,鈥 he writes, 鈥渁nd we do not really understand the slave trade if we do not understand those who made it work.鈥澛

鈥淭he Ledger and the Chain鈥 is a stunning, unsettling account of a guilt shared more widely and more enthusiastically than many Americans like to think. Everyone knew what men like Franklin, Armfield, and Ballard did for a living, but their money spoke louder than their sin.聽

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
What is the Monitor difference? Tackling the tough headlines 鈥 with humanity. Listening to sources 鈥 with respect. Seeing the story that others are missing by reporting what so often gets overlooked: the values that connect us. That鈥檚 Monitor reporting 鈥 news that changes how you see the world.
QR Code to Slave traders may not have been social outcasts after all
Read this article in
/Books/Book-Reviews/2021/0528/Slave-traders-may-not-have-been-social-outcasts-after-all
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe