did not resist, would lead to the destruction of the
remaining few privileges they possessed. The resistance
was very general, but without violence; whole gangs
leaving the fields on the afternoon of Friday; refusing
to take any other afternoon, and sometimes leaving
the estates for two or three days together. They
fortunately had confidence in me—and I
succeeded in restoring order, and all would have been
well,—but the managers, no longer alarmed
by the fear of rebellion or violence, began a system
of retaliation and revenge, by withdrawing cooks,
water-carriers, and nurses, from the field, by refusing
medicine and admittance to the hospital to the apprentice
children, and by compelling old and infirm people,
who had been allowed to withdraw from labor, and mothers
of six children, who were exempt by the slave law
from hard labor, to come out and work in the field.
All this had a natural tendency to create irritation,
and did do so; though, to the great credit of the
people, in many instances, they submitted with the
most extraordinary patience, to evils which were the
more onerous, because inflicted under the affected
sanction of a law, whose advent, as the herald of
liberty, they had expected would have been attended
with a train of blessings. I effected a change
in this miserable state of things; and mutual contract
for labor, in crop and out of it, were made on twenty-five
estates in my district, before, I believe, any arrangement
had been made in other parts of the island, between
the managers and the apprentices; so that from being
in a more unsettled state than others, we were soon
happily in a more prosperous one, and so continued.
No peasantry in the most favored country on the globe,
can have been more irreproachable in morals and conduct
than the majority of apprentices in that district,
since the beginning of 1835. I have, month after
month, in my despatches to the governor, had to record
instances of excess of labor, compared with the quantity
performed during slavery in some kinds of work; and
while I have with pleasure reported the improving
condition, habits, manners, and the industry which
characterized the labors of the peasantry, I have not
been an indifferent or uninterested witness of the
improvement in the condition of many estates, the
result of the judicious application of labor, and
of the confidence in the future and sanguine expectations
of the proprietors, evinced in the enlargements of
the works, and expensive and permanent repair of the
buildings on various estates, and in the high prices
given for properties and land since the apprenticeship
system, which would scarcely have commanded a purchaser,
at any price, during the existence of slavery.
I have invariably found the apprentice willing to
work for an equitable hire, and on all the sugar estates,
and several of the plantations, in the district I
speak of, they worked a considerable portion of their
own time during crop, about the works, for money,
or an equivalent in herrings, sugar, etc., to
so great a degree, that less than the time allotted
to them during slavery, was left for appropriation
to the cultivation of their grounds, and for marketing,
as the majority, very much to their credit, scrupulously
avoided working on the Sabbath day.