Arguments Against Confederate
Symbols - And Why They Fail
Argument
"Confederate symbols should not be honored because they are cruel
reminders of the by-gone era of slavery and slave-trade."
Slavery was
a legal institution in this country for over 200 years. Africans were
brought here by northern slave traders to be used in northern industry,
long before the antebellum South or the Confederacy ever existed. The
first American colony to legalize slavery was Massachusetts in 1641,
only 17 years after the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock. "The
slave trade became very profitable to the shipping colonies and Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, Connecticut and New Hampshire had many ships in the triangular
trade," (72). "The moral argument against slavery arose early
in the New England shipping colonies but it could not withstand the
profits of the trade and soon died out." (73).
Thomas Jefferson
condemned the slave trade in the original draft of the Declaration of
Independence, but the New England slave traders lobbied to have the
clause stricken. In a short eleven year period form 1755 to 1766, no
fewer than 23,000 slaves landed in Massachusetts. By 1787, Rhode Island
had taken first place in the slave trade to be unseated later by New
York. Before long, millions of slaves would be brought to America by
way of 'northern' slave ships. After all, there were no Southern slave
ships involved in the triangular slave, it was simply too cruel.
William P. Cheshire, the senior editorial columnist for the Arizona
Republic recently noted, the New England Yankee who brought slaves to
America, "were interested in getting money, not in helping their
cargo make a fresh start in the New World." He adds that northern
slave ownership "isn't widely known - American textbooks tend to
be printed in Boston, not Atlanta - but early New Englanders not only
sold blacks to Southern planters but also kept slaves for themselves
as well as enslaving the local Indian population," (74).
Slavery did
not appear in the deep South until northern settlers began to migrate
South, bringing with them their slaves. It was soon discovered that
while slaves were not suited to the harsh climate and working conditions
of the north, they were ideal sources of cheap labor for the newly flourishing
economy of the agricultural South. Of the 9.5 million slaves brought
to the Western Hemisphere from 1500 - 1870, less than 6% were brought
to the United States. This means that our Hispanic, British and French
neighbors to the south owned over 94% of the slaves brought to the New
World. In the South, less than 7% of the total population ever owned
a slave. In other words, over 93% of Southerners did not own any slaves,
(75).
Attempts to
outlaw the slave trade in the north only increased the profits of smuggling.
In 1858, only two years prior to the birth of the Confederacy, Stephen
Douglas noted that over 15,000 slaves had been smuggled into New York
alone, with over 85 vessels sailing from New York in 1859 to smuggle
even more slaves. Perhaps it was their own guilt that drove the abolitionists
of the day to point an accusing finger at the South, while closing their
eyes to the slavery and the slave trade taking place in their own back
yards.
For more than
200 years, northern slave traders mad enormous profits that furnished
the capitol for future investments into mainstream industries. Who is
more responsible for slavery in America, the Southern plantation owner
who fed and clothed his slaves, or the New England "Yankee"
slave trader who brought the slaves here in the first place?
From 1641,
when Massachusetts first legalized slavery, until 1865, when the Confederate
struggle for independence ended, slavery was a legal institution in
America that lasted over 224 years. The Confederate battle flag flew
for 4 of those 224 years, but the U.S. flag and its colonial predecessors
flew over legalized slavery for ALL of those 224 years. It was the U.S.
flag that the slave first saw, and it was the U.S. flag that flew on
the mast of New England slaves ships as they brought their human cargo
to this country. It is clear, that those who attack the Confederate
flag as a reminder of slavery are overlooking the most guilty and hateful
of all reminders of American slavery, the U.S. flag.
Bibliography:
72. The Concise Dictionary of American History, (Scribner & Sons),
p.876
73. Ibid
74. The Arizona Repblic, June 11, 1995
75. Rober William Fogel and Stanley L. Engerman, Time on the Cross -
The Economics of American Negro Slavery (New York: Norton, 1974), p.14