Black America : $b A study of the ex-slave and his late master
| Language | en |
|---|---|
| First published | 2025-12-27 |
| Rights | Public domain in the USA. |
| Gutenberg ID | #77558 |
Description
"Black America" by Sir W. Laird Clowes is a sociopolitical study written in the late 19th century. It examines the post-Emancipation South, contrasting the legal grant of citizenship to formerly enslaved people with entrenched white resistance that blocks their political power, while mapping the demographics, economics, and politics of the “Black Belt.” Drawing on first-hand reporting, it offers a stark assessment of Reconstruction, its abuses and collapse, and canvasses controversial remedies, including colonization, for the ongoing racial crisis. The opening of the work explains the author’s commission to survey the Southern “Negro Problem,” his claim to impartial inquiry, and his central finding: constitutional equality exists on paper, but in practice white supremacy nullifies Black political power, especially in lowland regions where Black populations outnumber whites. He marshals census data to chart rapid Black growth, the geography of the Black Belt, and the gap between generous suffrage laws and the reality of exclusion, intimidation, and electoral control; he notes economic and climatic forces that concentrate races apart, minimal Black migration, and projections of rising Black majorities. He then recounts Reconstruction from Washington’s policies to on-the-ground outcomes, describing military rule, Black enfranchisement and white disfranchisement, and, state by state (notably Alabama, the Carolinas, Georgia, Florida, Mississippi, and Louisiana), the corruption, debt, armed militias, and election fraud associated with carpetbag regimes until Democratic “redemption” restored fiscal order—often by force. At the start of the third chapter, he restates the legal rights of Black citizens, recalls the Civil Rights Act’s judicial defeat, and outlines the Southern white rationale for denying equality—bolstered by pseudo-scientific claims—while citing even some Northern voices that tacitly accept the region’s de facto rule by the white minority. (This is an automatically generated summary.)