Liam Hogan Profile picture
Feb 14, 2017 39 tweets 10 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
Excerpt from an Act to authorize the impressment of slaves and other personal property for military purposes (Mississippi, 1863) #ACW
Rather than printing individual notices, a newspaper in Louisiana published a register of runaway slaves. (Sugar Planter, 15 March 1856)
"It shall not be lawful for any negro or mulatto to intermarry with a white person, within this State..."
"...and all such marriages, are hereby enacted and declared to be absolutely void and of no effect." (Delaware, 1807)
"No free negro or free mulatto shall hereafter come into this State..." (Delaware, 1863) #ACW
Those already resident were barred from:
Owning a weapon
Holding meetings
Voting
Holding public office

They were also put under curfew.
"Free"
"It shall be the duty of the patrol to keep good order and decorum among negroes at public places"

Slave Patrols in North Carolina (1824)
An act to prohibit the publication, circulation, or promulgation of the abolition doctrines (Arkansas, 1850)
"Free negroes incapable of owning a slave" unless the enslaved person was a member of their family (Kentucky, 1851)
"It shall not be lawfull for any negroe...to carry or arme himselfe with any [weapon] of defence or offence..." (Virginia, 1680)
An Act to prevent the future Migration of Free Negroes or Mulattoes to this Territory (Florida, 1826)
An Act to prevent trading with Free Persons of Color in this State (Florida, 1856)
An Act to permit Free Persons of African descent to select their own Masters and become Slaves (Florida, 1858)
An Act to prohibit the practice of permitting slaves to act as if they were free persons of color (Tennessee, 1839)
From the 1850s to the outbreak of the Civil War, legislative provisions for voluntary enslavement were passed in nine slaveholding states.
Dr Emily West: "Essentially, all southern states were moving toward the enslavement of their free people of color." (Family Or Freedom, 26)
George Fitzhugh: "Human interest, self-interest [and] consistency all require that we should enslave the free negro." (1851)
As West points out, the white supremacist ideology re: enslavement or expulsion of the free black population gained momentum post-Dred Scott
Taney's Dred Scott ruling (1857) declared that African Americans, whether free or enslaved, were not and could never be citizens of the U.S.
Taney also ruled that Congress did not have the authority to limit slavery in the federal territories. The Slave Power cld expand unchecked.
"..hereafter all slaves in this state, acquiring a right to freedom...shall be transported to the western coast of Africa" (Tennessee, 1854)
The racist taunt of "go back to Africa" is thus the shortened version. The slaver's demand was for complete subjugation or else expulsion.
Free blacks denied the vote in Virginia as they "always did, and ever will...favour the slaves" (1736) encyclopediavirginia.org/Denying_Free_B…
I've just stumbled upon an extraordinary law that was passed in Georgia (1808).
It stated that "all free negroes" who resided in the large towns and cities of the state were now subjected "to the same police...."
"...regulations and restrictions, as slaves are..."
"An Act to punish all owners of slaves" and guardians of *free persons of color* for allowing them "to live alone" (Georgia, 1857)
"Enforce Obedience or Kill Them."

Anti-Slavery Bugle, 4 Sep 1852. #PatrickHarmon
Legacies. Early 20th century death notices in Louisiana newspapers that laud how the deceased adhered to white supremacist ideology.
Fewer than four in 10 students surveyed (39 percent) understood how slavery “shaped the fundamental beliefs of Americans about race and whiteness.”

theatlantic.com/education/arch…
"One of the reasons that schools don't teach the civil rights movement particularly effectively is because we don't do a very good job of teaching the history that made it necessary, which is our long history of slavery." https://t.co/opf7D9MZB8?amp=1
A discussion in a Scottish newspaper of how the planters in Barbados used castration to punish those involved in a slave revolt (Caledonian Mercury, 7 December 1731)
Until it was repealed in 1861, runaway slaves in Arkansas who were captured and not claimed by their owners were condemned to a penitentiary for life.
In 1851 Delaware banned "free negroes" from coming into the state, and banned those resident from attending *any* political meetings.

The aim? "[Guarding] against the evils of a large free negro population"
"To establish an uniform rule of naturalisation" for "any alien, being a free white person" (U.S. Statute, 1790)
In 1793 the U.S. Congress enacted their first fugitive slave law which required every state to forcibly return slaves who had escaped from other states to their owners. It included a $500 penalty levied against rescuers.
Kentucky (1799): An act directing the county courts to appoint Patrolers "to visit negro quarters [and] suspected places of unlawful assemblies of slaves...any slave found without a pass...shall receive any number of lashes on his or her back, at the discretion of the captain."
Kentucky (1827): A resolution requesting the President of the United States to call the attention of the British Government to the subject of slaves who make their escape into the provinces of Canada.

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More from @Limerick1914

Jul 19, 2018
The Chinese Exclusion Act and the Geary Act are the origins of the exclusionary concept of "illegal immigration" (based on ethnicity/race) in U.S. history. The former was heavily influenced by an Irish immigrant and the latter was authored by a second-generation Irish American.
In 1850 there were slaveowners with the surname “Reilly” in Mississippi, Washington D.C., Georgia, North Carolina, Kentucky, Louisiana, South Carolina and Virginia.
While Bill O'Reilly's ancestors became naturalised U.S. citizens without restriction, the Supreme Court Dred Scott ruling of 1857 declared that African Americans, whether free or enslaved, were not and could never be citizens of the United States.
Read 15 tweets
Jul 14, 2018
| ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄|
It benefits the far-right
if Nazi Germany is viewed
as an anomalous outlier
rather than an
ethno-nationalist model
|___________|
(\__/) ||
(•ㅅ•) ||
/   づ
#HistorianSignBunny
| ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄|
“Cultural Marxism" is a derivative
of "Cultural Bolshevism", a Nazi term used to label all perceived threats to the "purity" of the Herrenvolk
|___________|
(\__/) ||
(•ㅅ•) ||
/   づ
| ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄|
Nazism was partly influenced by the
work of American white supremacists, eugenicists and official racist U.S. immigration policies.
|___________|
(\__/) ||
(•ㅅ•) ||
/   づ
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Read 8 tweets
Jul 10, 2018
Memorial to the White Rose movement at @LMU_Muenchen #munich
Thomas Mann (1943)
“Freedom“ written by Sophie Scholl on the back of her indictment paper
Read 5 tweets
Jul 5, 2018
One review I read stated that “the show was informative, linked Irish slaves into the story and explained very well the Underground Railway.” 👀
The reductionist fallacy of “slavery is slavery” should be strongly resisted in this context as racialised chattel slavery in the Americas was arguably unique in world history and its legacies still affect millions of people.

Compare, yes. Equate, never. Be specific, always.
“I saw the play myself and saw the casting in the context that slavery doesn’t have only one color, it wasn’t just in the cotton fields”

Such historical erasure is also used by racists to try to reduce racial slavery to just another form of forced labour nytimes.com/2018/07/12/art…
Read 6 tweets
Jul 3, 2018
"Political Correctness" is a politically correct term for anti-racism, anti-sexism and anti-fascism.
"Cultural Marxism" is a far-right conspiracy theory and a derivative of "Cultural Bolshevism", a term used by the Nazis to describe all perceived threats to the moral and cultural "purity" of the Herrenvolk.
Ron Paul: "In a multitude of ways, [Murray] Rothbard's work has given not only me but all of us the ammunition we need to fight for the American dream of liberty and prosperity for all mankind."
Read 6 tweets
Jun 26, 2018
United States Supreme Court: "A free negro of the African race, whose ancestors were brought to this country and sold as slaves, is not a "citizen" within the meaning of the Constitution of the United States." (1857)
U.S. Supreme Court: “If the applicant is a white person within the meaning of this section he is entitled to naturalization; otherwise not.” (1923)
“[We do not] suggest the slightest question of racial superiority or inferiority. What we suggest is merely racial difference, and it is of such character and extent that the great body of our people instinctively recognize it and reject the thought of assimilation.”
Read 14 tweets

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