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How slavery persisted in the South long after the Civil War and the Thirteenth Amendment [View all]
The Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution abolished slavery and involuntary servitude in the United States except as punishment for a crime. Legally, this marked the end of chattel slavery. In practice, however, many African Americans continued to experience severe forms of coercion and unfreedom, particularly in the South, through a variety of legal and extralegal systems.
Here are the principal ways this occurred:
1. Convict leasing
One of the most notorious systems was convict leasing.
Southern states arrested large numbers of African Americansoften for minor or selectively enforced offenses such as:
Vagrancy
Loitering
Breaking labor contracts
"Insulting gestures"
Those convicted could be leased to:
Mines
Railroads
Plantations
Lumber camps
Private companies paid the state for prisoners' labor.
Conditions were frequently brutal. Because companies did not own the workers, they often had little incentive to preserve their health, and mortality rates in some camps were extremely high.
2. Black Codes
Immediately after the Civil War, many Southern states enacted Black Codes, which restricted the freedom of formerly enslaved people.
These laws often:
Limited employment options.
Restricted movement.
Penalized unemployment.
Required labor contracts.
Imposed harsher penalties on Black defendants than on white defendants for similar conduct.
Congress responded by passing civil rights legislation and, later, the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, but enforcement varied over time.
3. Debt peonage
Many African Americans became trapped in debt peonage.
A laborer might:
Borrow money or supplies.
Owe money to a landlord or merchant.
Be prevented from leaving until the debt was paid.
In practice, some debts continually grew because of high interest rates or manipulated accounting, making escape difficult.
Congress outlawed peonage, but it persisted illegally in some areas into the early 20th century.
4. Sharecropping
Sharecropping was not slavery, but it could create long-term economic dependence.
Typically:
A landowner provided land, seed, and tools.
The tenant farmer received a share of the crop.
Because many farmers had to buy supplies on credit, poor harvests or unfair accounting could leave them perpetually indebted.
Many Black and poor white farmers found it difficult to acquire land or improve their financial position under this system.
5. Racial violence and intimidation
Organizations such as the Ku Klux Klan and similar groups used violence to:
Intimidate Black voters.
Prevent economic independence.
Enforce racial hierarchy.
Suppress political participation.
Lynchings and other forms of terror continued for decades after Reconstruction.
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