The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 2 of 4 eBook

American Anti-Slavery Society
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,105 pages of information about The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 2 of 4.

The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 2 of 4 eBook

American Anti-Slavery Society
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,105 pages of information about The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 2 of 4.

3.  Offences have not increased, but rather lessened.  The Solicitor-General remarked, that the comparative state of crime could not be ascertained by a mere reference to statistical records, since previous to emancipation all offences were summarily punished by the planter.  Each estate was a little despotism, and the manager took cognizance of all the misdemeanors committed among his slaves —­inflicting such punishment as he thought proper.  The public knew nothing about the offences of the slaves, unless something very atrocious was committed.  But since emancipation has taken place, all offences, however trivial, come to the light and are recorded.  He could only give a judgment founded on observation.  It was his opinion, that there were fewer petty offences, such as thefts, larcenies, &c., than during slavery.  As for serious crime, it was hardly known in the island.  The whites enjoy far greater safety of person and property than they did formerly.

Maj.  Colthurst, who is an Irishman, remarked, that he had long been a magistrate or justice of the peace in Ireland, and he was certain that at the present ratio of crime in Barbadoes, there would not be as much perpetrated in six years to come, as there is in Ireland among an equal population in six months.  For his part, he had never found in any part of the world so peaceable and inoffensive a community.

4.  It was the unanimous testimony that there was no disposition among the apprentices to revenge injuries committed against them. They are not a revengeful people, but on the contrary are remarkable for forgetting wrongs, particularly when the are succeeded by kindness.

5.  The apprentices were described as being generally civil and respectful toward their employers.  They were said to manifest more independence of feeling and action than they did when slaves; but were seldom known to be insolent unless grossly insulted or very harshly used.

6.  Ample testimony was given to the law-abiding character of the negroes.  When the apprenticeship system was first introduced, they did not fully comprehend its provisions, and as they had anticipated entire freedom, they were disappointed and dissatisfied.  But in a little while they became reconciled to the operations of the new system, and have since manifested a due subordination to the laws and authorities.

7.  There is great desire manifested among them to purchase their freedom.  Not a week passes without a number of appraisements.  Those who have purchased their freedom have generally conducted well, and in many instances are laboring on the same estates on which they were slaves.

8.  There is no difficulty in inducing the apprentices to work on Saturday.  They are usually willing to work if proper wages are given them.  If they are not needed on the estates, they either work on their own grounds, or on some neighboring estate.

9.  The special magistrates were all of the opinion that it would have been entirely safe to have emancipated the slaves of Barbadoes in 1834.  They did not believe that any preparation was needed; but that entire emancipation would have been decidedly better than the apprenticeship.

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The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 2 of 4 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.