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El. knyga: Hirelings: African American Workers and Free Labor in Early Maryland

  • Formatas: 232 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Apr-2011
  • Leidėjas: Cornell University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780801460678
  • Formatas: 232 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Apr-2011
  • Leidėjas: Cornell University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780801460678

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In Hirelings, Jennifer Hull Dorsey re-creates the social and economic milieu of Maryland's Eastern Shore at a time when black slavery and black freedom existed side by side. She follows a generation of manumitted African Americans and their freeborn children and grandchildren through the process of inventing new identities, associations, and communities in the early nineteenth century. Free Africans and their descendants had lived in Maryland since the seventeenth century, but before the American Revolution they were always few in number and lacking in economic resources or political leverage. By contrast, manumitted and freeborn African Americans in the early republic refashioned the Eastern Shore's economy and society, earning their livings as wage laborers while establishing thriving African American communities.

As free workers in a slave society, these African Americans contested the legitimacy of the slave system even while they remained dependent laborers. They limited white planters' authority over their time and labor by reuniting their families in autonomous households, settling into free black neighborhoods, negotiating labor contracts that suited the needs of their households, and worshipping in the African Methodist Episcopal Church. Some moved to the cities, but many others migrated between employers as a strategy for meeting their needs and thwarting employers' control. They demonstrated that independent and free African American communities could thrive on their own terms. In all of these actions the free black workers of the Eastern Shore played a pivotal role in ongoing debates about the merits of a free labor system.

Recenzijos

Dorsey'sHirelingsis a well-developed study of how economic and social forces shaped the lives of free African Americans. It wil interest students of African American history, labor history, religious history, and Atlantic world emancipations.

- Jennifer Oast (The Journal of Southern History) In Hirelings Jennifer Hull Dorsey shows that blacks and whites made incremental changes in their lives that ended slavery yet maintained the claim some whites had on the fruits of the labor of most blacks. In this, one could say that Maryland's Eastern Shore was a laboratory for modern U.S. race relations.

(William and Mary Quarterly)

List of Illustrations
vii
Preface ix
Introduction 1(20)
1 Work
21(24)
2 Migration
45(16)
3 Family
61(21)
4 Dependency
82(18)
5 Community
100(18)
6 Recession
118(27)
Conclusion 145(16)
Notes 161(24)
Bibliography 185(18)
Index 203
Jennifer Hull Dorsey is Associate Professor of History and Director of the Center for Revolutionary Era Studies at Siena College in Albany, New York.