This Day in Labor History: December 1, 1868. A young black former Union soldier named John Henry was among a group of convicts sent from Richmond to West Virginia to blast a railroad tunnel, where he would soon die. Let's talk about the real John Henry!
In the aftermath of the Civil War, southern states had no money to hold prisoners. Contracting them all out, or at least the black ones, to coal companies became very common by the late nineteenth century.
But the first industry to seek free labor from black prisoners was the railroad. Between September 1871 and September 1872, for instance, the Virginia State Penitentiary leased out 380 black prisoners to the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad, of which 48 died on the job.
Among the black men contracted out to the C&O in these years was a very small man named John Henry. He was from Elizabeth City, New Jersey. Only 5 feet, 1 inch tall and born in 1847, he was sentenced to ten years in prison for housebreaking and larceny in November 1866.
Henry was probably completely innocent, but welcome to America.
Like many northern black men, Henry joined the Army to help other black people fight for freedom. While a few actually fought, mostly they were forced to do the most menial labor, such as gravedigging.
After the Civil War ended, both black soldiers, quickly mustered out of service, and freedmen were gathered to bury the many bodies around Richmond. One was John Henry. He may have done other tasks as well, but we don’t have those records.
The Freedmen’s Bureau was established by 1866 but the quality of the officials running it varied widely. In Prince George County, Virginia, it was headed by a guy named Charles Burd who had been shot in the head at First Manassas and was never the same.
Meanwhile, many black workers were striking by 1866. Like many Freedmen’s Bureau officers, Burd was completely unsympathetic with the freed slaves, identifying with the white South and filled with racism. Burd’s own letters are filled with him complaining about the ex-slaves.
is own successor in the job accused him of being a policeman for hire for employers, calling out his men to put down any kind of organized labor activity by black people. It seems that John Henry was one of the men arrested by these government-employed thugs.
It’s hard to say if he was actually guilty of any crimes, but what we do know is that black men were thrown into prison for anything, especially resisting forced labor. Burd happily enforced Virginia’s Black Code and Henry was probably caught up in this and thrown into prison.
Burd himself was soon fired but this was no help to Henry, sentenced to ten years in the Virginia State Penitentiary, which almost no one could survive.
Henry arrived in the pen on November 16, 1866. If he didn’t already have a scar on him, the guards gave him one to identify him if he fled. The overwhelming majority of prisoners were black, up to 80 percent by early 1867 as Virginia sought to imprison as many as possible.
The prison, now ruled by the military, was shocking. A Radical Republican named Burnham Wardwell was in charge of it and he was horrified at the brutality. But like most Radicals, he strongly believed in the free market.
Seeing life in the prison as a torture chamber, needing to find a way to fund the state, and hoping to find some other option for prisoners, the free market it was. He instituted the convict lease system.
Meanwhile, Collis Huntington, the rapacious railroad capitalist from California, had bought the C&O and he also had introduced the use of nitroglycerin to blast holes through mountains.
Between explosives and new steam drills, Huntington felt he could build a new railroad system in Appalachia if he could get some sweet convicts he could kill without consequence. It was on December 1, 1868 that Henry became one of Huntington’s expendable workers.
The famous “John Henry” songs talk of him competing with a steam drill. Well, Huntington was using those steam drills in 1870 and 1871 while also not using them exclusively.
So a battle between Henry and the steam drill is at least possible and given the centrality of that to the legend, is probably more likely true than not, whatever the result of it.
But we don’t know much. Henry probably died in 1873. His body was shipped back to the state pen in Richmond, where it was dumped in a mass grave that then went undiscovered for well over a century.
Given that about 10 percent of the workers died every year in these convict camps, he was far from alone. Over 100 convicts alone died building the Lewis Tunnel, including Henry. Maybe it was silicosis, maybe an accident, maybe murder by the guards.
We can’t really know precisely how the John Henry story became one of the most important ballads in American musical history.
But we do know how these things spread, which basically is that workers created songs, crafted them existing chants or melodies, and then spread them around when they moved to new jobs, which was frequently.
That seems to be the case with the John Henry stories, which makes extra sense since it was a railroad story at a time that this was a growing industry. By the early twentieth century, folk collectors knew of the song and many versions were published.
The truth of the various stories isn’t relevant and naturally was mixed with other stories, other worker deaths, other melodies. In any case, this utterly obscure and oppressed black worker became one of the most famous laborers in all of American history and remains so today.
One wonders what he would have thought of this if he ever could have known.
I borrowed heavily from Scott Nelson’s excellent 2006 book, Steel Drivin’ Man: John Henry, The Untold Story of an American Legend for this thread. Definitely recommend. Great for classes as well.
Back tomorrow for a discussion of the 1946 Oakland General Strike.
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My Civil War class for the spring is full. Always love getting a lot of dudes in a class ready to learn about battles when in fact they are going to learn about slavery and the Black freedom struggle.
Where does this Civil War class begin?
Charlottesville.
Other fun themes of this class include abolitionists engaging in genocide against the tribes and the war methods we love Sherman for in Georgia being used to massacre Native villages in the aftermath.
Was the Black Bloc part of the Seattle planning in the months leading up to it? What was its relationship with the labor and environmental orgs planning it?
Being a stakeholder requires, you know, solidarity with the other organizations who had done this planning.
But for too many of these Black Bloc types, solidarity means "support me when I do whatever I am going to do" not "I am going to do the work to support you."
Anarchists love this kind of shit. But let's look at the 3 biggest anarchist moments in US history--the Haymarket bombing, the Berkman failed assassination attempt on Frick, and the WTO protests.
Each one was anarchists hijacking other labor movements without permission.
This Day in Labor History: November 30, 1999. Protests began in Seattle, Washington against the World Trade Organization. Let's talk about this fascinating moment, how anarchists blew up months of planning by labor, the fascist cop reaction, and what the future could have been!
The WTO meetings offered unions, environmentalists, and various social and economic justice activists from around the world a forum to voice their rejection of the neoliberal free trade agreements of the late 20th century.
These had undermined American unionism, allowed corporations the mobility to flee meaningful labor agreements or environmental restrictions, and thrown millions of farmers and indigenous peoples off their lands as cheap American agricultural goods flooded world markets.
This Day in Labor History: November 28, 1901. A strike among Cuban cigar workers in Tampa, Florida collapsed after workers inspired by the Cuban revolutionary Jose Martí sought to create a cross-racial organization to resist employer oppression and fight for Cuban nationalism!!
Tampa was a small town in the late nineteenth century. But a growing cigar industry began transforming it into a locally important center. The center of cigar production was in an area called Ybor City.
It was founded by a Cuban cigar manufacturer named Vicente Martinez Ybor, who moved production north in the 1880s to avoid the growing tension in Cuba between the Spanish government and nationalists that would eventually lead to American intervention in 1898.
This Day in Labor History: November 26, 1931. Cigar factory owners in Ybor City, Florida, initially a company town but by this time a neighborhood in Tampa, banned cigar makers from having people read to workers on the job. The workers struck for their readers!!
While U.S. economic investment in Cuba had started fairly early in the 19th century, it wasn’t until the 1860s that the nation saw any significant Cuban migration back to the U.S.
Naturally enough, when that started, much of it was based in Florida, which at the time was a rural economic backwater, as well as to New York. In the Tampa area, Cubans made up much of the workforce of the growing cigar industry.
This Day in Labor History: November 25, 1865. Mississippi the Black Code. Designed to recreate slavery, this signified the South’s massive resistance to the freeing of their labor force and the lengths to which it would go to tie workers to a place under white control.
The impact of slavery’s end is hard to overestimate. But the Emancipation Proclamation did not free any slaves immediately and the ratification of the 13th Amendment did not take place until well after the war’s end.
The federal government was woefully unprepared, both in manpower and ideas, for ensuring that the rights of ex-slaves were respected after the war.