Introducing My New Book, The Weeping Time
My new
book, The Weeping Time: Memory and the Largest Slave Auction in American History, is now available for advance purchase
on Amazon. After 10 long years, it will
see the light of day this fall. A big thank you to all who made this possible.
From time to time, I will share excerpts on this blog with particular attention
as to why memory of this period matters.
The book
is about the largest slave auction in US history which took place in Savannah,
Georgia in 1859. In the book, I analyze the operation of the auction and
trace the lives of slaves before, during, and after their sale. The personal papers of the Butlers, accounts
from journalists that witnessed the auction, genealogical records, and oral
histories help bring the auction to life. Demonstrating the resilience of
African American families, the book also includes interviews from the living
descendants of slaves sold on the auction block, showing how the memories of
slavery have shaped their lives today.
Here’s an
excerpt from the beginning of the book:
On March 2 and 3, 1859, Pierce Butler of the Butler Plantation
estates in the Georgia Sea Islands sold 436 men, women and children, including
thirty babies to buyers and speculators from New York to Louisiana. It was
the largest recorded slave auction in US
History. The sale had been advertised
for weeks in newspapers and magazines all across the country. The Savannah
Tenbroeck Racetrack was the venue, three miles shy of the
city. Eager potential buyers filled
every hotel in Savannah. The two-day auction netted for the highly indebted
Butler $303, 850, a phenomenal sum. On
the eve of the Civil War, this unprecedented sale was noteworthy not only for
its size but because of the fact that Butler plantation slaves had generally
not been sold on the open market. These
men and women had settled lives on Butler’s estates. Their lives as slaves were
difficult and burdensome to be sure, but together they had formed a community
with its own norms, values and customs – some of which were informed by their
African heritage. Now they were
displaced from their “home,” and separated from
their families. It is for this
reason the slaves called this auction, “The
Weeping time.”
In 1859,
these men, women and children were sold, and a new chapter of their families’
stories began. Immediately upon
Emancipation in 1863, some of these newly freed slaves set out on foot flocking
to plantations all over the south searching earnestly for their loved
ones. The only mementos they likely had
were memories of their last meeting – on the auction block. They pursued every avenue in search of those
whom they had lost. In some very special
cases, they found each other. Others remained in the communities of their masters, bought property, worked the land and built new lives for
themselves.
This is
their story.
Anne C.
Bailey
Pre-purchase on AMAZON here: The Weeping Time: Memory and the Largest
Slave Auction in American History (Cambridge University Press, 2017)
email: freedomlives4@yahoo.com
email: freedomlives4@yahoo.com
personal website: https://www.annecbailey.net
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Introducing My New Book, The Weeping Time
Reviewed by Unknown
on
June 10, 2017
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