44^ HIM & ifc \IlcKs buret 1a. • ' ^^3S-3: Class LjJ^ 'fxS ^ , Book .^ A : - >/'^ T A RESPECTING THE ONDITION S( TREATMENT OP . . ..~.--^''-. SLAVES, /A THE CITY OF VICK-SBUIIG-H' II\ THE STATE OF MlSSIS^IFF^j / / / MY JOSEPH HEN^Y. PRINTED AT MEP* A, Ohio, The following Statement of Facts was ta- ken down in writing by me, from the verbal relations of the narrator, Mr. Henry, who examined the manuscript and pronounced it to be correct in all respects. CHARLES OLCOTT, Medina, May 3d, 1839, IL STATEMENT Or PACTS, &.C. (rs^jss) I Joseph Henry, ]ate of the city of Rochester, in the conn- ty of Monroe, and state of New York, but now a temporary re- sident of Medina, in the county of Medina and state of Ohio, do hereby, at the request of several citizens of this latter place, make the following Statement of Facts that came within my personal knowledge, or were matters of public and general no- toriety, respecting the Condition and Treatment of Slaves in Yicksburgh and its vicinity, in the state of Mississippi. I slate nothing but what I believe to be strictly true, without any ex- aggeration whatever. I went to Vicksburgh in the month of October; 1838, and remained there till the month of March, 1839, a period of five and a half months ; and during that time improved every convenient opportunity in my power, to acquire a correct know- ledge of the condition and treatment of slaves, in that place and its neighborhoodi The few fads I shall relate from hearsay, I had from persons who could not be mistaken, and in whose veracity 1 had the utmostconfidence ; and they are besides, most of them, matters of public notoriety in Vicksburgh, which no- body there would pretend to dispute. 1 have no doubt but that every one of them might, if necessary, be fully substantiated in courts of law. These facts, however, are intended only to ap- ply to the condition and treatmeat of slaves in Vickiburgh and its vicinity; though I have no doubt, from the facts I have heard from others, but that they are equally well adapted to il- lustrate the condition and treatment of slaves in most parts of our slave states ; with the exception perhaps of those parts of Virginia and Kentucky that border on the Ohio river. As to the General Treatment of ihe slaves, 1 say, it is very bad ; though there are a good many exceptions in the city, of the house servants and waiters, most of whom are mulattoes or other mongrels. I have known many cases where I thought these slaves wore as we/1 treated as lliey could be in their cir- cumstances. But many of the house servants are treated with great cruelty. They are frequently hi'-ed out by their masters, and are then apt to be cruelly treated, because it is for the in^ (4) terest of thoie wlio hire them, to extort as much labor from ihem as possible. Some hire their time of their masters at so much per day, and then seek their own employment, in which case thev may chance to fare better . I have seen house eerv- ants kicked, cuflcd, struck and beaten in the streets, and have heard a great many stories of such treatment. They are mat- tcrs of every day's occurrence in Vicksburgh ; and are so per- fectly common in that city, that nobody thinks of taking any special notice of them. To kick and beat a slave in the streets for any reason ichatevcr, is considered as indicative of a man of spirit and a gentleman in Vicksburgh. And this is easily and safely done, for no slave ever dares to make the least resistance to such treatment, because it would instantly cost him his life it"* 1)0 should. The slaves are considered and treated like horses and cattle and other brute animals. And I suppose they were better treated during the cool months I was in Vicksburgh, than tiicy were during the hot summer months when there is much more business and labor to be done. But by all accounts I could obtain, the general treatment of the field or plantation slaves, and those who labor as mechan- ics, IS much worse. I did not often go on to the plantations, and saw no slave cruelties on them myself. I understood that punishments were seldom inflicted before strangers ; but that they were generally inflicted at night, and only in the presence of the slaves. But this is not always the case. The drivers will sometimes knock slaves down in tlie fields, and let them lie; and I understood that whipping of such slaves for oflences, when no white persons are near, is as common as that of horses r:id cattle. As to the Condition of the slaves, I say, that it is wretched in tiio extreme, and miserable beyond description. The slaves are not such ignorant creatures as many uorthern people sup- j)ose. They appear fully to realize and feel the horrors and miseries of their dreadful condition. Whenever they have r-jafidenee to express their feelings on the subject, their con- Riant cry is "O ! that we were free !" They have the greatest anxiety to escape, though they seldom dare reveal their plans for that purpose to others, for fear of treachery. I have heard slaveholders admit this intense anxiety in their slaves to escape; but pretend to wonder at it, and maintain that they aie better fjffas they are, than they would be to be set at liberty. None of their reasons, however, convinced me, though I was obliged to seem to concur in them; for there is not the slightest freedom (5) of speech against slavery allowed in Vicksburgh. Any ex- pressions of detestation, ot even dislike to it, /rem a straiigor, uttered in the presence of slaveholders or their fViciids, won!.! probably cost him his life in this horrid place. A man must b*; as cautious of what he says in that place respecting slavery, ;rs he would respecting piracy and robbery among pirates and roli- bers. The slaves know as well what liberty is as others do, because they see others constantly fa tise enjoyment of it ; and being on the constant wMtch if possible to obtain it, their ovsv,- ers are excessively jealous of any intercourse between thein and strangers. This is so well understood; that few strangers dare speak to slaves at all in the presence of other white people, for fear of difficulty. The slaveholders are extremely jealous of the northern people, for fear they may be abolitionists; and will frequently enter into conversation on the subject of aboli- tion with northern strangers, for the purpose as is understood f.'^ learnini? their sentiments. And should a strani^er be so impru- dent as to acknowledge himself an abolitionist in their presence, he would most surely be mobbed and murdered, unless he in:- mediately made his escape. Every tongue disposed to condem : the practice of slavery, is entirely silenced in Vicksburgh, ai. i as 1 understood throu^jhout the extreme south. As to the Piimshmenis of the slaves, bv far the most commo:; mode so far as my observation extended, was whipping v/ith a raw hide such as northern people drive horses with. VVhip= ping with this instrument is just as common for every misde. meanor of slaves, or what is considered or pretGiided to be such, as it. is for northern horses ; and it is generally far more severe and cruel than the whipping of horses. And slaves whocomm;L such af^^nces are almost sure to receive a whipping. From fifty to one hundred lashes are most commonly given. \Vheii a slave is to be punished, he is commonly stripped entirely na- ked and tied up by the wrists, in which situation the punishment is inflicted, the blows being laid on as hard as the operator can slrike, cutting through the skin and drawing blood at every lash, and he the whipper paying no regard to the shrieks, yells and entreaties of the victim. Sometimes a greater number even a;; many as five hundred lashes are given, ijut not often. I nevei- witnessed a case of slave punishment by whipping myself, part-, ly because such punishments as I before observed as are secret as possible; but from the numerous cases of sucli--ptrntshments I have heard related by negro drivers and others who said they Ijad witnessed them, I have no doubt but that they are as -e)rc-m:in of the sliop had Dick tied up to bo f]ogf;ed. But while ho w..-ntjo a house after a wiiip, Dick broke iSosu and ran a- •'.ay. Some negroes were sent afier him, but were unable to -^kc hrm. Afier a short absence Diok returned, and conceal, nig himseli under the Ht-or of the shop durincr the day time, sun- ported himseh nearly a forln:ght, by crawlingout at nin-ht and ^^eahng provisions. Spiiler at last discovered his retre°at, and -•'7/-i h.m in the evening as he crawled out at a hole under i-'_^shop. He instantly took 'Dick into the foundry, ordered ■-:! the s.aves belonging to it to attend, and invited the white ..-Mids to witness the punishment. He then had Dick swun- -jn by the wrists to the heavy crane used for raising iron on to the m common report, that the plantation overseers and drivers were very cruel to the slaves, flogging them with iho • : 'I'e severity for the slightest offences. The culti- va*. is the most common employment of slaves, in the country round about Vicksburgh. Each slave has his stint, and if this be not fully performed, he is sure of a severe flogging at night. Even slave women giving suck to children are thus Hygged, I was credibly informed of one oversser in the s'.ate ofMiiis'ssippi, who in the season of 1 337, killed no less than six slaves on one plantation with bis own hand. Nor do slaves working m mechanical employments fare any better. From such cases as these, the general treatment ofthe field slaves mar be correctly inferred ; though there is a difference to some little extent on different piantalioDS, accordmg to the different dispositions of the overseers. In general, the more strict, rigid and cruel an overseer is, the better he is liked for that horrid employment. I understood that runniug away was the offence, tjt which the severest punishments were inflicted. As lolhe Mode of Labor of the slaves, they are obliged to rise at the first dawn of day aiid commence their labor : they then labor all day except at meal times, under the directions and whips of the overseers, so long as ii is light enough to see to work and sometimes later, when they are mustered at their quarters, their tasks weighed or measured, aad the delinquents if any flogged. They then retire to their cabins to cook and cat their victuals, and sleep Lill the blowing of the horn in the morning, when they rise and labor as before. There is very little variation in their employments, fare and sufferings, the year round, and that little is caused merely by tlie variations of the seasons or by accident. I had {he best opportunity to ob* serve the modes of working slaves, in the foundry which I have mentioned. In ibis foundry, the slaves were compelled to be- gin to work long before the white hands began, and were obli. ged to work long after the white hands had quit. They bt^gan to work as soon as they conhl see in the morning, and Morked as long as tiiey could see at night j and tliis I understood to be the general mode of working slaves who were able to labor, without any exceptions, unless they were accidental. A!] tliis labor is of course performed under the terrors of the whip, and of the most barbarous punishments which their hardened and (») gf i^Ba&s£tzTsisl kind, aad eaJ^ aar ^sree o^ pnyrociijaa aisKi^s, I ndesaSoc^i w'^ be : of:. ^ - . i- s Lis 3 so w^rm- i^ie tsssl r - V : : . ^ 5 iT^r^ sIlieM ^erk^i icrk-' T'. i^'^1;2^ iZii r._. :: - . am wjMSiii Jk-ar ar^ iK ^irt^i^T: sjjrr'is ir aur tT ■fPici^fT ru-nen:- r»2itrn_ _~S S^S^ESBBBf (10) mistresses. But I have no evidence or reason to believe, that the field slaves who compose the vast majority, are ever belter dressed than as I iiavc described iheni, except by mere accident. They never wear any shoes and stockings, and but seldom any hats, except in the winter season. But many ofthe women have a sort of handkerchief lied round llicir heads when at work. — All the slave women on the plantations able to labor, are oblig- ed to work witli the men in the fields, under the whip. Those who have children at the breast will place them in the corners ofthe fences or under shady trees, and suckle them occasion- ally through the day. These women all have their tasks as- signed ihem, and those who do not complete them, are sure to be as severely flogged as the male delinquents are. 1 did not live in Vicksburgh during the hot season, and can- not therefore speak from experience, but I have often heard slaveholders and others say there, that white people can never cultivate the soil in that hot climate ; and this opinion I believe to be true. They appear to consider the negroes formed to en- dure that climate, and to argue that if the soil of such climates is cultivated at all, it must be cultivated by black people. — Nevertheless I have heard slaveholders say, they would be perfectly willing their slaves should be sent to Africa, j^'i'ovided they could be paid for them ; but not otherwise. I never knew one profess his willingness to have them sent away without com- pensation ; nor do 1 believe that any considerable number of ihcm ever can be induced to do so. N'or did 1 give them any credit fur sincerity, when I heard them say they were willing to stii them for that purpose. My own opinion is, that if all the present slaves were to be sent out of the most southern slave states, and no more be imported to supply their places, the slaveholders in those places would be ruined, and perhaps come to actual starvation ; and of this belief I think the slave- holders also are. I do not believe that any other than colored laborers can cultivate the soil of those states. I understood that most ofthe slaves contracted Marriages ot a certain kind and to a certain extent, and that these marriages are generally celebrated with some sort of form. But it is un- derstood that they are to last so loitg only as their masters are willing ihey should. When slave husbands and wives were to be sold, they W(ire separated by the sales, with as liltleceremo- ny as so many hogs or sheep, one to one purchaser, and the o- Iher to another. And the same with slave parents and children. They are commonly sold at public auction : and though I have (11) frequently been near places in VIcksburgh where large num. bers were sold, I never could summon fortitude enough to at- tend one of these horrid exhibitions of the crime of m.anstealing. Hero, according to common report, husbands and wives and pa- rents and children, were torn from each other, with no more remorse or pity or regard to the feelings and interests of the slaves, than those of cattle, horses, and other br-iite animals. — The reason of this is, that they are legally regarded as brutes in all respects, so far as human beings can be so regarded. — Naturally the slaves are human beings ; legally they are brutes, and hence are in many respects worse trealed than brutes are. Perhaps they are in a// respects werse treated than brutes; for many kinds of treatment are just and humane tov/ards bruteo, wdiich are cruel towards human beings. The slaves have no more legal conti'ol over their own child^ ren, or lii^al right to exercise such control, than a cow has over her calf, or a hen over her cliickens ; and most oi them do not have a chance to exercise as much control over their offspring, as the brutes do over theirs. The children grow up to be what their parents have been, slaves, vv^ithout education or good mo- rals, and to be insulted, abused, and perhaps finally v^'crked. whipped, or otherwise tortured \o death. Nor does their color make any difference in their legal condition or treatment, nOr often in their actual condition— except that the mixture of the white color sometimes mitigates their cruel treatment; and sometimes it may aggravate it, especially on the plantations, it being understood that mulatto slaves have more pride and stub- borness than others. It is well known I suppose to most read- ers, that a large proportion of the slaves are the offspring of the slaveholders themselves. This relationship much produce great- er mildness of treatment in many cases, though v/icked custom forbids any such distinction, one slave being legally entitled to no better treatment than another. For this reason 1 account for the fact, that a greater proportion of the house slaves are of the mixed color than of the field slaves. I have seen slaves of every shade of color, from jet black to clear white. As hand> some a woman as I ever saw is a slave in Vicksburgh, or was so when I left that place. Not the slightest trace of the negro color, features, or other peculiarities, was discoverable on her .person. On the contrary her features were beautifully regu- lar, and her color remarkably white and clear. But her two- tlier having been a slave when she was born, she, of course, r/as a ^lave also, These facts show that color is no obstacif (12) to slavery, as many northern people seem to think it is, but ren- der it probable that if the latter conliuues long enough in this country, whiteness of skin will make no more difference with it^ tlian it anciently did in Greece and Rome, or than it now does in Russia and Turkey. As to the Morals of the slaves, I will state one fact that will be a complete key to them. I should think that \wo thirds of the population of Vicksburgh are slaves, and that at least one half ©f these, and perhaps more than one half, are mulattocs or other mongrels, many of them nearly white. And as no slave is ever permitted to marry a white person, the morals of most of the slave women may easily be guessed at. It is well un- derstood in Vicksburg,that most of these women are prostitutes, rendered such by the vices and tyranny of the white men. The morals of these men may also be correctly inferred from the same fact. It is well understood that many perhaps the majori- ty of these men are recklessly licentious, their habitual viola- tions of the seventh commandment being proportional to the fa- cilities they possess for such violations. Prostitution never in"* jurestlie character of a slave wo'Tian, for a slave has no good character to lose for /i/»i5e7/'. A good character uoes hi ?ii no good, though it may his master, in case he wishes to sell him, Besides, the cohabitation of the 'breeding wenches' with white incn is profitable to their owners, mulatto slaves being the most valuable ; and I have no doubt but this kind of licentiousness js cncou raged for this very reason ; and 1 suppose there is as much of it in Vicksburgh, as in any other place of equal size in the slave states. 1 do not mean to insinuate that there are no virtuous people in this modern Sodom. On the contrary I think there are many such, and some even among the poor slaves. A con- siderable number of the citizens and some of the slaves, are pi- ous persons and professors of religion ; and I believe that many if nottlie whole of these, are fi-ee from the gross licentiousness with which they are surrounded. Most of the white women al- .so are understood lobe free from this vice. But many perhaps the majority of the white as well as coloured men, are known by reputation at least, to indulge in the most beastly licentiousness, •.vilhout apparent shame or remorse. Nor does such conduct appear to injure the cliuracter or social standing of the white men, any more than of the colored ones. It is considered no I sin or disgrace at all in such characters. I heard gentlemen 4 of the first respectability and highest standing in society charg- pd with this vice, nor did tw ciiarge appear to afTect their good (13) Dame and reputation in the least. It is in fact so co/nmon n. vice among the me?i in the slave states, that probably few a- mong the majority could impeach their neighbors' character for this vice, without impeaching their own also. Fellowship in the worst of crimes has united the slaveholders in defence of their own characters, and enabled the vilest of men, by uphold- ing the rest, to keep themselves in countenance. While at Vicksburgh I heard it repeatedly stated in conver- sation as a curious fact, that the tvhite women there had but few children; and this statement I believe to be true, as I sav/ but few white children in that city. I ascribe this want of fe- cundity to the habitual indolence of these women. Manual la- bor is so disgraceful there, that no southern white will perform any such labor if it can be avoided. The slaveholders endeav- or to have all the work of every description done by the slaves, so far as ihey are capable. Any voluntary act of common mjx^ nual labor instantly degrades a white person there. The few poor white laborers in Vicksburgh, most of whom are northern mechanics, have no more political or social importance than the slaves. The slaveholders will apparently no more associ- ate with them on terms of equality or familiarity, than they will with their own slaves. They consider ^nd treat them on all occasions as persons degraded to the lowest rank in society ; and such, J should judge, is their habitual state of feeling tow' ards the whole of the northern people, except those who are a- Die to live, and do live, without laboring themselves. Our southern slaveholders are as a body, and without any exception that I ever knew, the proudest and haughtiest aristocrats that 1 eversaw, andare as unprincipled and cruel as thev are proud and haughty. At the north labor is honorable ; at' the south it IS disgraceful ; and the relative conditions of the two countries correspond with this difference of sentiment. There are bu^*- few appearances in the slave states, so far as I have seen them,' ot that wealth and comfort, the indications of which are so common m all parts of the free states. Nor so far as mv ob servation extends, do the slaveholders have as many of the comforts of hfe. and live as well, as the generality of the nort! ern people poor as well as rich, do.^ The slaveholders a Vicksburgh, and their families, dress very richly, and appear inlZT '''li^'T'}}^y ^' possible ; but not withstanding Teir boasted wealth, which chiefly consists of 'niggers,' they did not ' %TiiZiV''' '^"'^^ -J-ostof thenonhe;n peop edo i3ut li the white women at the south do not breed fast, this B (14) cannot be said with trutli of all the coloured ones. I cannot say wiili any certainty how it is on the plantations, for I did not often visit thenfand iieard less about them I suppose than if 1 Iiad, but from what I saw and heard in Vicksburgh, 1 have no doubt but that the process ofslave Amalgamation which cau- ses so much alarm at the north, is progressing in that city at a most rapid rate ; and as I understood, at a similar rate all over the slave states. The infamous causes of this increase are so obvious, that I need not again allude to them. And this prac- tice is pursued in Vicksburg with a degree of boldness and di-s- ref^1rd of shame and modesty, that shocks a stranger to south- ern society, and v/ould seem to be enough to cause the devil liimself to blush. I understood that as many mulattoes were raised as possible, they being the most profitable to their own^ ors. Nor is there any way to stop this process or its rate, so long as slavery itself continues ; for the slave women are en- tirelv in the power of their masters and overseers. And 1 know it is held for law in Vicksburgh and its neighborhood, to be death for a slave to make any resistance to a white person, let the provocation be what it may. This is i\\e general rule; though I will not say that resistance by a slave woman to a white man who should attempt to ravish her, would cause her instant death, because I never knew a case of the kind occur. — But when we consider how easy it is for the white men who have all the power on their side, to intimidate by threats the slave women who have no power on theirs, the various ways these men have to revenge themselves in case of refusal, and the fact that no slave can be a witness against a white person, it may safely be said, that the slave women have no protection for their cha'stity in the slave states, any more than they have for their other rights, though they desire it ever so much.— Hence the rapid amalgamation inseparable from a state of sla- very, in all parts of the slave states. Nor is there any possible ^vay to stop this amalgamation, but to abolish slavery. Were the rights of the slave women restored to them and protected by law, as those of the wh\te women are, amalgamation would receive an immediate check, regular marriages would take place among the coloured i)eoplc, and the process be greatly retarded if not stopped entirely. As it is, the slaves must soon outnumber the whites in the extreme southern states, as they already do in some parts of th<^m ; and when this superiority is carried the dav will not be far distant, when the 'horrors oi St. Domingo' will be infallibly renewed in those states, unless (15) a voluntary emancipation first takes place. Whatever may be said to the contrary, I know from report and observation, that the slaveholders do now stand in fear of their own slaves, as their patrols, their loaded arms, and the barbarous means of subjection they use fully prove. What renders this predictiou so certain to my mind is, that the slaves are compelled to be enem.ies of their barbarous country. As to the Education or instruction of slaves, there is none that properly deserve to be called such. The two great objects of their existence is, like those of brutes, their labor and bree- ding, both intended solely for the benefit and profit of their own-' ers. To promote these great objects, the slaves are kept as ig- norant as possible, for the more ignorant they are, the more profitable they must he as slaves. Among free laborers this rule is reversed ; but it is true as applied to slaves. It would be impossible to keep a large body of educated slaves in sub- jection in this enlightened country ; and hence special laws are enacted and special pains taken, to keep them all as ignorant as possible. And were there no laws or customs to prevent their instruction, they are allowed no time for such a purpose, unless it be on the Sabbath ; and worn out as they must be with the toils of the preceeding week, it is not to be supposed they v/ill be much inclined, to go to their worst enemies for instruc- tion. I know that some of the house slaves can read, for I have heard them. But I should think that very few of them possessed this ability, and that none of them can write. They are never allowed to attend ordinary schools of any description ; but I understood they might attend Sunday schools if they plea- sed, though 1 suspect they seldom do attend them. I have fre- quently been to these latter schools in Vicksburgh, but never saw a coloured person in them. The slaves hi Vicksburgh have preaching for their special bpnefit, every Sunday in the afternoon, when they assemble by themselves ; but never with the white people ; though it was understood they might go into the vvhite churches if they wished to. The preachers on these occasions as I understood, exhort the slaves to obey the com- mands of God \n general, but those of their masters mi-) articular; great pains being taken to impress them with a sense of the du- ties they owe to their masters. I have no doubt the preachers inculcate in the slaves, a knowledge of their obligations to obey the commands of God, so far as they dare to. "But it will not do for them to preach up the full extent of these obligations to the slaves, because entire obedience to the Divine commands, (10) every where conflicts with the laws and customs of slavehold* jng. Hence the base subserviency of all the preachers of every (ieiiomination at the soutli, to the wicked customs, relations and interests of slavery ; muny of the preachers bemg slaveholders like the rest. Hence too the reason why neither the masters nor the slaves, over have the whole Gospel fully preached to ihcm ; and why, however pious they may be, they never fully .ind correctly understand ihe whole Gospel, but are even the best of tiicm, very imperfect ch)'istians indeed. Slavery is the ^^reatcst hindrance to the spread of the Gospel in this country that I ever witnessed. The reason is that it is hostile to the Gospel in every respect; and because it prevails, a great share of the most important part of the Gospel, to wit, our duties to God, are either totally or partially suppressed in the slave states, especially among the poor ignorant slaves. Also duties to men loo are for obvious reasons, seldom disseminated among the .slaveholders by the preachers, in the true spirit and meaning cfthe Gospel ; and what little is laught is so perverted, as to make a wrong impression and give a wrong bias to the mind. 'l"he little christian instruction slaveholders receive from the pulpit, respecting their dutiesto their slaves, is in the mildest and most soothing terms, to treat them with justice and humanity. But no preacher at the south ever dares to denounce the prac. tice of slavery itself, or theconstant breaches of the Divine Law occasioned by it, in the true spirit of the Gospel, under fear of death or the greatest persecution. So far as I could observe or learn from report, all the southern preachers are to a great, er or less extent, mere sycophants to the spirit of slavery, which controls all moral and political sentiments at the soutli, and moulds and perverts them to its own support and justificatioD. No preacher dares make from the pulpit in Vicksbuigh, a true and faithful application of the 5Slh chapter of Isaiah, and other similar passages of Scripture ; nor so far as I know or believe, in any other part of the slave slates. Such an application would probably cost the preacher his life. And in relation to liie particular sin of slavery, I should think it probable there is not a single fiithful preacher in the slave states, and very ^qw if any in the free states. As to free people of colour as they are called, I heard of none in Vicksburgh, and understood that none were permitted to remain in the state of Mississippi, with- cut a guardian to be responsible for their good behaviour.— And as hardly any of the slaves can read or write, they of course have no books, newspapers, pamphlets or manuscriptSj (17) not even Bibles or other religious books, In any of their cabins' or 'quarters.' The General Appearance of the slaves is humble and sub- missive in the extreme. And though they arc very lively anJ animated in their social parties, because it is the only enjoy- nient they have, it is evident they are as completely broke to the yoke, as horses and cattle are. None of them dare to offer the least insolence or mak^ the least resistance to any white person, let the provocation be what it may, on account of the terrible punishmeni which certainly await such transgressions of slave custom. These are the people who are literally 'dumb and have no helper.' Most of the slaves in the ciiy and on the plantations that { saw, were rugged, stout and hearty, and nee- ded to bes'Ljch to endure their hardships, privations and oppres- sions. They seem to be exactly fitted to endure tiiis hot cli- mate. Negroes labor out doors and enjoy good health here ; but white persons do not. It is the universal opinion in Vicks- burgh so far as I could ascertain, that white people cannot work outdoors and live in that climate. All the slaveholders that ! heard speak on the subject, agreed in this opinion, excepting only as to the Spanish population, who it was thought could endure field labor. It is my opinion that the whole state of Mississippi would again grow up to briars and bushes, were it attempted to be cultivated bj' any other than negro or perhaps Spanish labor. The slavery of negroes has produced a complete slavery of opinion and speech, on the merits of negro slavery, not only in Vicksburgh, but as I believe throughout the entire south. No freedom of' s^peech or of the press, nox free discussion, of those merits, or rather demerits, whether ni public or in private, h permitted in Vicksburgh. The slightest disapprobation of sla- very there, would endanger any person's life, especially if h« were a stranger. Those at the north who pretend that the slaveholders are willing to discuss the subject of slavery, in an>j way, are entirely mistaken. The subject of slavery is scarce- ly ever mentioned in Vicksburgh, so unwilling are the people there to discuss it. On my first arrival, 1 was warned by my friends not to mention the subject at all, or to appear to notic^j the barbarities practised around me, lest my imprudence should bring me into trouble and perhaps cost me my life. I was e-* ven advised to waive the subject, and not converse about it,^ v/hen spoken to by the slaveholders respecting it, for fear of their treachery ; and these rules I soon found it necessary to b3 (18) tibsTTvc, ill violaiion of my feelings, in order to preserve my li;l'. And I wouKi ;,Mve the same advice to all strangers intend- ing to visit the souihern country. Much as is said respecting t!ie sacrcdness of constitutional rights, the slaveholders pay not ihe sligljtcst regard to them, where they think the free exercise of those riii'nts would endanirer their slavery. In such a state of society and sentiment, the state o^ Religion may I)e easily conjectured* The great majority of the people of Vickshurgh appear to have little or no sense of religion or religious duties and obligations. Still there are a number of jToCcssors ofr<.ligion there, both among the slaveholders and i;!aves, the majority I should think of the latter class. When tiio wcafher is fair, most of the white people attend church on the sabbath, but if it rams there is seldom any preaching ; and considerable pains are taken by many of the citizen^, to estab- lisli what they call a good stale of society in the city, which seem, cd to me to be the next thing to an attempt to establish 'good so. cicty' in hell. I for one would rather attempt to establish 'good society' in Algiers, than in Vicksburgh, or in any other I'urt of the surrounding country that I have seen. There is very little attention paid to literature and learning in the city. I understood but few schools existed there ; and the ^q\w books and pamphlets read by most of the white inhabitants, are, so far as came to my knowledge, of the most frivolous, light and fooliiih, or obscene kind, suited only to the depraved tastes of i!io \iiYy depraved population v/ho read them. As to 'politics, 1 heard hardly any thing said respecting them ; and observed that there were but very few local newspapers in circulation, and should think, from these facts, that the poorer class of wiiiics at least, had but litile to do with politics at all. The difference between the north and the south, in this respect, is very striking. It is frequently pretended at the Dorlii, that the abolitionists in describing ihe horrors of slavery, greatly exaggerate them in their descriptions. But I saw enough of these 'horrors' to satisfy me, that this pretence is not true. On the contrary, so f'lr from having exaggerated, the abolitionists have never rela. ted the half of these liorrors. No person can conceive of their aggravation and greatness, without having witnessed them. — Nor do I believe that I witnessed a fair exhibition of the great- est of these horrors. 1 understood, while in Vieksburgh, that the customary barbarities on the plantations, were much great •■ cr than those in the city, and were incredible to people at a dis» (19) tance, except upon the strongest testimony. Not havin