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2 - Free labor, slave labor, wage labor

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 January 2010

John Ashworth
Affiliation:
University of East Anglia
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Summary

Slavery and free labor: The traditional view

On visiting the South, William Seward, the leading figure in the Republican party before the election of Lincoln, recorded his impressions:

It was necessary that I should travel in Virginia to have any idea of a slave State. …. An exhausted soil, old and decaying towns, wretchedly-neglected roads, and, in every respect, an absence of enterprise and improvement, distinguish the region through which we have come, in contrast to that in which we live. Such has been the effect of slavery.

By the 1850s many northerners shared Seward's view of the South. According to Republican Senator Henry Wilson of Massachusetts, free labor was so utterly superior to slavery that it could entirely offset the natural advantages of the South. “Freedom”, he told the Senate, “took the rugged soil and still more rugged clime of the North, and now that rugged soil yields abundance to the willing hands of free labor”. By contrast “slavery took the sunny lands and the sunny clime of the South, and it has left the traces of its ruinous power deeply furrowed on the face of your sunny land”. Since slaves had no incentive to work well, their labor was of poor quality and reluctantly given. Since they performed the menial tasks and were a degraded class, the tendency was for all manual labor to be despised.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1996

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