The Bahamas from Slavery to Servitude, 1783-1933

The Bahamas from Slavery to Servitude, 1783-1933

by Howard Johnson
ISBN-10:
0813018587
ISBN-13:
9780813018584
Pub. Date:
01/05/1997
Publisher:
University Press of Florida
ISBN-10:
0813018587
ISBN-13:
9780813018584
Pub. Date:
01/05/1997
Publisher:
University Press of Florida
The Bahamas from Slavery to Servitude, 1783-1933

The Bahamas from Slavery to Servitude, 1783-1933

by Howard Johnson

Paperback

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Overview

"A significant contribution to the history of the Caribbean and to the comparative study of slavery and transitions to free labor systems."—O. Nigel Bolland, Colgate University

"An extended and comprehensive history of the Bahamas. . . . Shifts the focus of interest from the islands’ elites to the common people . . . with special reference to the black population which has hitherto been largely ignored in historical writing."—Richard B. Sheridan, University of Kansas, Lawrence

In the only scholarly treatment of Bahamian socioeconomic history in the post-emancipation years, Howard Johnson begins by examining the last phase of slavery as one element in the foundation of later, and often more exploitative, labor systems. Looking at both urban and rural slave populations, Johnson discusses the systems of slave hire, apprenticeship, and indenture and highlights the ways in which the people of the Bahamas often exerted more autonomy and power as slaves than as a "free" people.
Following emancipation in 1838, an export economy based on cotton, salt, sponges, and pineapples spawned coercive credit and truck systems, which bolstered the dominance of a white mercantile elite that would exercise control until the early 1960s. Various government policies further perpetuated a "machinery of class slavery," making migration (primarily to Key West and, later, to Miami) one of the few escape routes available to the lower classes.
Throughout, Johnson relates historical developments in the Bahamas to those in neighboring Caribbean islands, Latin America, and the United States, making this an important sourcebook for all Caribbeanists. It will also be of interest to scholars of the historiography of slavery in the Americas and the transition from slavery to freedom or—in a post-emancipation system of domination like that of the Bahamas—from slavery to servitude.

Howard Johnson is associate professor in the Department of Black American Studies and History at the University of Delaware, editor of After the Crossing: Immigrants and Minorities in Caribbean Creole Society (1988), and author of The Bahamas in Slavery and Freedom (1991).


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813018584
Publisher: University Press of Florida
Publication date: 01/05/1997
Pages: 235
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.55(d)
Lexile: 1750L (what's this?)

Table of Contents

List of Tablesviii
Acknowledgmentsix
Introductionxi
1.The Bahamian Economy to 18151
2.The Self-Hire System and the Transition to Contractual Relations in Nassau33
3.The Restructuring of Agrarian Relations After 180047
4.Between Slavery and Freedom: The Liberated Africans and Unfree Labor62
5.The Establishment of a Dependent Tenantry84
6.The Credit and Truck Systems: The Control of Credit and Labor98
7.Race, Class, and Urban Policing119
8.Merchant Hegemony and the Making of Immigration Policy131
9.Labor Migration as Protest and Survival Strategy151
Conclusion165
Notes170
Bibliography200
Index213
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