dress, if it can be called dress, exhibit the most
haggard and squalid appearance. I have frequently
seen those of both sexes more than two-thirds naked.
I have seen from forty to sixty, male and female,
at work in a field, many of both sexes with their
bodies entirely naked—who did not exhibit
signs of shame more than cattle. As I did not
go among them much on the plantations, I have had
but few opportunities for examining the backs of slaves—but
have frequently passed where they were at work, and
been occasionally present with them, and in almost
every case there were marks of violence on some parts
of them—every age, sex and condition being
liable to the whip. A son of the gentleman with
whom I boarded, a young man about twenty-one years
of age, had a plantation and eight or ten slaves.
He used to boast almost every night of whipping some
of them. One day he related to me a case of whipping
an old negro—I should judge sixty years
of age. He said he called him up to flog him
for some real or supposed offence, and the poor old
man, being pious, asked the privilege of praying before
he received his punishment. He said he granted
him the favor, and to use his own expression, ’The
old nigger knelt down and prayed for me, and then
got up and took his whipping.’ In relation
to negro huts, I will say that planters usually own
large tracts of land. They have extensive clearings
and a beautiful mansion house—and generally
some forty or fifty rods from the dwelling are situated
the negro cabins, or huts, built of logs in the rudest
manner. Some consist of poles rolled up together
and covered with mud or clay—many of them
not as comfortable as northern pig-sties.”
TESTIMONY OF REV. PHINEAS SMITH
MR. SMITH is now pastor of the Presbyterian Church
in Centreville, Allegany county, N.Y. He has
recently returned from a residence in the slave states,
and the American slave holding settlements in Texas.
The following is an extract of a letter lately received
from him.
“You inquire respecting instances of cruelty
that have come within my knowledge. I reply.
Avarice and cruelty constitute the very gist of the
whole slave system. Many of the enormities committed
upon the plantations will not be described till God
brings to light the hidden things of darkness, then
the tears and groans and blood of innocent men, women
and children will be revealed, and the oppressor’s
spirit must confront that of his victim.
“I will relate a case of torture which
occurred on the Brassos while I resided a few miles
distant upon the Chocolate Bayou. The case should
be remembered as a true illustration of the nature
of slavery, as it exists at the south. The facts
are these. An overseer by the name of Alexander,
notorious for his cruelty, was found dead in the timbered
lands of the Brassos. It was supposed that he
was murdered, but who perpetrated the act was unknown.