On Slavery – 3
[This post continues the series On Slavery (1 here and 2 here).]

"Flogging the Negro" (Cropped) Full Image Reference NW0213, as shown on www.slaveryimages.org, sponsored by the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities and the University of Virginia Library.
Kenneth Stampp in his book, The Peculiar Institution: Slavery in the Ante-Bellum South, suggests that some owners of slaves were conflicted about the need to apply punishment in the control of slaves and yet most felt fully justified in imposing that control. He sites on numerous occasions the willingness of owners to overlook the cruelty of overseers if they met or exceeded production goals. This head-in-the-sand approach to ethics undoubtedly had many causes but the most obvious was greed.
Owners also considered their slaves to have a “duty” to their master by virtue of the fact that they were, after all, his property and that the master provided and cared for them. But the most prevalent justification for imposing control on the slaves was to achieve maximum production from them as a labor force. Poor performers, for whatever reason, were seen as impacting the bottom-line.
SEARCH WIG-WAGS
History Blogroll
- 60 Years War (TJ Linzy)
- A Student of History
- A. Lincoln Blog
- Airminded (Brett Holman)
- Alexander Rose
- American Civil War Forum Blog
- Battlefield Wanderings
- Behind AotW
- Birmington "On War"
- Blog Them Out of the Stone Age
- Boatswains and Bacteremia
- Bull Running
- Civil War Book Review
- Civil War Bookshelf
- Civil War Literature
- Civil War Memory
- Civil War Women
- Civil Warriors
- Crossed Sabers
- elektratig
- Go where the fire is hottest
- History Rhymes
- Hoof Beats and Cold Steel
- Kings of War (Kings College London)
- Lincoln Studies
- My year of living Rangerously
- of Battlefields and Bibliophiles
- Old Virginia Blog
- Ranting of a Civil War Historian
- Renegade South
- Soldier Studies
- Teaching the Civil War with Technology
- The Civil War Augmented Reality Project
- The Long Way Home (David Laskin)
- The Tipsy Historian
- TOCWOC
- Touch the Elbow
Wig-Wags Bookstore















