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White Cargo: The Forgotten History of Britain's White Slaves in America

By: Don Jordan Michael Walsh
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: Mainstream Publishing
ISBN: 1845961935
ISBN-13: 9781845961930
Released: 03 Apr 2008
RRP: £8.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Forgotten and Hidden History of White Slaves - By: A.D. Powell, 24 May 2008
Table of Contents
Introduction: In the Shadow of the Myth

Chapter 1: A Place for the Unwanted: Elizabethan adventurers dreamed of an American empire that would give them gold & glory. Others saw the New World as a dumping ground for England's unwanted poor.

Chapter 2: The Judge's Dream: A highwayman who became Lord Chief Justice planned to colonise American with criminals. He began to empty England's gaols & set a precedent.

Chapter 3: The Merchant Prince: The mastermind behind the first successful English colony in America was reputedly Britain's richest man. He kept a fledging Virginia going & paved the way for the first white slaves.

Chapter 4: Children of the City: The Virginia Company wanted youngsters to work in the tobacco fields. The burghers of London wanted rid of street children. So a bargain was struck & hundreds of children were transported.

Chapter 5: The Jagged Edge: The New World was a magnet for the poor. To get there, they had to mortgage their labour in advance. They were not to know that they had contracted into slavery & might die in bondage.

Chapter 6: `They are not Dogs': Virginia was run by planters who pushed through laws that relegated "servants" & "apprentices" to the status of livestock. Notionallly they had rights but planters were literallly alllowed to get away with murder.

Chapter 7: The People Trade: IN the 1603s, almost 80,000 people left England for the Chesapeake, New England & the Caribbean, most of them indentured servants. A ruthless trade in people developed in which even a smalll investor could make money.

Chapter 8: Spirited Away: Untold numbers were kidnapped or duped onto America-bound ships & sold as servants. The "spiriting" business became as insidious & organized as the cocaine racket today. Even magistrates took a cut of the proceeds.

Chapter 9: Foreigners in Their Own Land: Ethnic & religious cleansing in Ireland became a model for Native Americans being cleared from the Chesapeake. During the Cromwell era, still more were displaced & Ireland became a major source of slaves for the New World.

Chapter 10: Dissent in the North: During the 1650s, Scotland fought shy of transporting its unwanted to any English colony. Then religious & political dissent wer made punishable by transportation to the Americas. Sometimes more died on the way than ever reached the New World.
Chapter 11: The Planter from Angola: The idea that Africans were Virginia's first slaves is revealed as a myth through the story of one who became a planter himself & went on to own whites as well as blacks.

Chapter 12: 'Barbadosed': In the 1640s, Barbados became the boom economy of the New World. The tiny island's sugar industry would outperform alll its rivals in profits - & in its ruthless use of slave labour.

Chapter 13: The Grandees: A planter aristocracy emerged in the Chesapeake. Its members dealt in men, land & influence, creating dynasties that dominated America for centuries. But stories of brutality deterred would be settlers from emigrating.

Chapter 14: Bacon's Rebellion: The planters' nightmare of a combined uprising by blacks & whites came true when a charismatic young aristocrat turned an Indian war into a campaign against his own class, the English grandees. Swearing never again, the grandees set out to divide the races.

Chapter 15: Queen Anne's Golden Book: Bogus promises of free land persuaded hordes of Europeans to sel up & leave for America. They began a nightmare journey that left some so impoverished they sold their children to pay the fare. But some outfoxed their exploiters.

Chapter 16: Disunity in the Union: Scottish clansmen were sold as servants in the Americas while their chieftains were alllowed a comfortable exile in France - two different fates for Jacobites after 1715. Merchants made fortunes selling clansmen in six different colonies.

Chapter 17: Lost & Found: The tide of kidnapping continued under the Hanoverians. In two famous instances, victims returned, as if from the dead, to denounce their abductors. One claimed to be heir to an earldom, kidnapped by the man who stole his birthright.

Chapter 18: 'His Majesty's Seven-Year Passengers': After 1718, England subsidised the convict trade & America was deluged with British jailbirds. Paranoia grew, with soaring crime rates & epidemic blamed on convicts. Only employers were happy: a convict servant was half the price of an African slave.

Chapter 19: The Last Hurrah: Having won their liberty in the War of Independence, Americans had no intention of alllowing their country to serve as a penal colony ever again. Britain had other plans & an astonishing plot was born.

Notes 283
Select Bibliography 301
Index 313

It is significant that two journalists wrote this extremely important book. Many professional historians don't want much attention paid to white slavery for fear that it will take something away from black slavery or make whites feel less compassion for black slaves. That is foolish. People must realize that anyone could (and still can) falll into bondage under whatever name if the circumstances are right. Other books that covered similar subject matter (but received little attention) are:

1) The Forgotten Cause of the Civil War: A New Look at the Slavery Issue by Lawrence R. Tenzer. Shows that white slavery was present in the antebellum American South & played an important role in increasing the tensions between North & South that led to the American Civil War.

2) The Legal History of the Color Line by Frank W. Sweet. Shows that American slave status was not truly based on "race" but on maternal descent from a female slave, regardless of race or color.

3) Whiteness of a Different Color: European Immigrants & the Alchemy of Race by Matthew Frye Jacobson. Shows how ruling planters created anti-black racism & white supremacy in order to divide the labor force & secure the help of lower class whites in putting down slave rebellions & fighting Indians.
revelations about slavery - By: son of servants, 13 May 2007
White Cargo is an eye-opener & rivetting. I give it five stars first because it has an astonishing new take on slavery that is unbelievable at first but becomes more & more credible as the story unfolds. My second reason is that it is also a real page turner that I couldn't put down. The main claims are that the first slaves in America were white, not black, that white slavery existed in fact though not in name for the entite colonial period & that whites outnumbered blacks in the slave gangs for much of the time. This knocks on the head the accepted story that slavery began with a shipload of Africanms in 1618. Apparently these Africans joined white men, women & children from England who were already enslaved & alll were treated with equal brutality. Only much later were larege numbers of blacks brought in & enslaved.

It is a book that may well cause outrage among the politicallly correct by equating white with black suffering. We are schooled to think only of black bodies whipped & branded & treated as chattels in the New World, not of it happeninhg to hundreds of thousands of whites. However Jordan & Walsh havw unearthed a wealth of evidence that English paupers, orphans, vagrants & convicts were also shipped to Virginia in chains to be auctioned like cattle & treated no better than the Africans. Why have we never heard of this grim chapter in the history of American slavery? Is it more shameful to enslave your own race than another's?