Against Our Will: Men, Women, and Rape (35 page)

BOOK: Against Our Will: Men, Women, and Rape
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  1. Field laborer, house servant and breeder woman were the principal economic roles of the female slave, but she was also used by her white owner for his own sexual-recreational pleasure, a hierarchical privilege that spilled over to his neighbors ("I believe it is the custom among the Patriarchs to make an interchange of civilities of this kind," wrote a correspondent in Missouri to a New York newspaper in 1859) , and to his young sons eager for initiation into the mysteries of sex. The privilege, apparently, was also ex pected by visitors. "Will you believe it, I have not humped a single mulatto since I am here," an aide of Steuben's wrote to a friend in condemnation of the lack of hospitality at George Washington's Mount Vernon.

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    The sexual privilege also filtered down to lower-class white males in the planter's employ ( overseers with the power of the whip and craf t workers with access to the plantation ) and to certain black male slaves ( "drivers") who were also handed the whip and directed to play an enforcer role within the system. At the top of the hierarchy, setting the style, was the white master.

    Nehemiah Caulkins testified:

    This same planter had a female slave who was a member of the Methodist Church; for a slave she was intelligent and conscientious. He proposed a criminal intercourse with her. She would not comply. He lef t her and sent for the overseer, and told him to have her flogged. It was done. Not long after, he renewed his proposal. She again refused. She was again whipped. He then told her why she had been twice flogged, and told her he intended to whip her till she should yield. The girl, seeing tha t her case was hopeless, her back smarting with the scourging she had received and dreading a repetition, gave herself up to be the victim of his brutal lusts.

    Solomon Northup, a shanghaied New York freedman who was forced to spend twelve years on a Louisiana plantation and later published his narra tive of bondage, wrote a sympathetic descrip tion of a field slave, Patsey, who had to endure her master's "attentions."

    Patsey was slim and straight. She stood erect as the human form is capable of standing. There was an air of lof tiness in her movement that neither labor, nor weariness, nor punishment could destroy. Truly, Patsey was a splendid animal, and were it not that bondage had enshrouded her intellect in utter and everlasting dark ness, would have been chief among ten thousand of her people. She could leap the highest fences, and a fleet hound it was indeed that could outstrip her in a race. No horse could fling her from his back. She was a skillful teamster. She turned as true a furrow as the best, and at splitting rails there was none who could excel her. . . . Such lightning-like motion was in her fingers as no other fingers ever possessed, and therefore it was that in cotton picking time, Patsey was queen of the field.

    Yet Patsey wept of tener, and suffered more, than any of her companions. She had literally been excoriated. Her back bore the scars of a thousand stripes; not because she was of an unmindful and

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    rebellious spirit, but because it had fallen to her lot to be the slave of a licentious master and a jealous mistress. She shrank before the lustful eye of one, and was in danger even of her life at the hands of the other, and between the two, she was indeed accursed. . . . but not like Joseph, dared she escape from Master Epps, leaving her garment in his hand. Patsey walked under a cloud.
    If
    she uttered a word in opposition to her master's will, the lash was resorted to at once, to bring her to subjection; if she was not watchful when about her cabin, or when walking in the yard, a billet of wood, or a broken bottle perhaps, hurled from her mistress's hand, would smite her unexpectedly in the face. The enslaved victim of lust and hate, Patsey had no comfort of her life.

    Northup described one incident in the field when he and Patsey were hoeing side by side. Patsey suddenly exclaimed in a low voice, "D'ye see old Hog Jaw beckoning me to come to him?"

    Glancing sideways, I discovered him in the edge of the field, motioning and grimacing, as was his habit when half-intoxicated. Aware of his lewd intentions, Patsey began to cry.
    I
    whispered her not to look up, and to continue her work as if she had not observed him. Suspecting the truth of the matter, however, he soon staggered up to me in a great rage.

    "What did you say to Pats?" he demanded with an oath.
    I
    made him some evasive answer which only had the effect of increas ing his violence.

    "How long have you owned this plantation, say, you
    d-d
    nig ger?"

    Master Epps chased Northup across the field and then re turned to Patsey. "He remained about the field an hour or more.

    . . . Finally Epps came toward the house, by this time nearly sober, walking demurely with his hands behind his back, and at tempting to look as innocent as a child."

    Patsey's story had a terrible ending. The jealous Epps became convinced that his slave had had relations with a white neighbor. He ordered her stripped, staked and beaten into listlessness. "In deed, from that time forward she was not what she had been. . . . She no longer moved with that buoyant and elastic step-there was not that mirthful sparkle in her eyes that formerly distin-

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    guished her. The bounding vigor-the sprightly, laughter-loving spirit of her youth, was gone."

    Narratives such as Northup's, published by the Northern abolitionist press in the nineteenth century, and oral histories of former slaves that the Federal Works Projects Administration col lected in the nineteen thirties cast cold light on the life-style of slavery. When the female. ex-slave was asked to tell of her experi ences, not surprisingly she did not dwell on sex. "Them was tribbolashuns," and a combination of propriety, modesty and acute shame on the part of narrator and recorder must have conspired to close the door on any specific revelations. ( Male ex-slaves, because of a freer convention among men, were permitted to discuss the sexual abuse of females. )

    But horror at the sexual abuse of enslaved black women was a recurring theme among white female abolitionists. The Grimke sisters of South Carolina and Margaret Douglass and Lydia Maria Child, among others, did not let it rest. They spoke and pamphle teered relentlessly (but alas, delicately-so dictated the times ) out of a strong sense of identification with their black sisters in bond age. Margaret Douglass, a Southern white woman who was con victed and jailed in Virginia for teaching black children to read, wrote from prison in 1853:

    The female slave, however fair she may have become by various comminglings of her progenitors, or whatever her mental and moral acquirements may be, knows that she is a slave, and, as such, power less beneath the whims and fancies of her master.
    If
    he casts upon her a desiring eye, she knows that she must submit; anq her only thought is, that the more gracefully she yields, the stronger and longer hold she may perchance retain upon the brutal appetite of her master. Still, she feels her degradation, and so do others with whom she is connected. She has parents, brothers, sisters, a lover, perhaps, who all suffer through her and with her.

    The politically keen Mrs. Douglass, writing to a white audi ence, then added these lines:

    White mothers and daughters of the South have suffered under this custom for years; they have seen their dearest affections

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    trampled upon, their hopes of domestic happiness destroyed. I cannot use too strong language on this subject, for I know it will meet a heartfelt response from every Southern woman. They know the facts, and their hearts bleed under its knowledge, however they may have attempted to conceal their discoveries.*

    Mrs. Douglass' analysis went further:

    Will not the natural impulses rebel against what becomes with them a matter of force? For the female slave knows that she must submit to the caprices of her master; that there is no way of escape. And when a man, black though he may be, knows that he may be compelled, at any moment, to hand over his wife, his sister, or his daughter, to the loathed embraces of the man whose chains he wears, how can it be expected he will submit without feelings of hatred and revenge taking possession of his heart?

    The slave's revenge took many forms-although white retri bution was swif t and certain. A traveler through the South wrote in
    1856:

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