- Fecha
- 1976-02-01 
- Autores
- William Cohen 
- Resumen
- THE THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT FORMALLY ENDED SLAVERY, BUT THE 
 legacy of bondage proved stubbornly persistent. Seventy-five years
 after emancipation black forced labor remained common in many
 areas of the South. While historians of the South have devoted
 much attention to the oppressive effects of sharecropping, tenantry,
 the crop-lien system, and peonage, few have addressed themselves
 to the larger system of involuntary servitude within which these
 factors operated. From a legal standpoint this system comprised a
 variety of state laws aimed at making it possible for both individuals
 and local governments to acquire and hold black labor virtually at
 will. Beyond this, involuntary servitude was a creature of custom
 dependent upon community attitudes which sanctioned the use of
 forced labor. Occasionally such attitudes even allowed whites to
 compel labor from Negroes without the pretense of a legal
 justification.
- Journal title
- The Journal of Southern History 
- Volumen
- 42 
- Número
- 1 
- Page numbers
- 31-60 
- Editor
- Southern Historical Association 
- Archivos adjuntos
- Conexiones
- Los sectores económicos
- General relevance - all sectors 
- Tipos de contenido
- Políticas pasadas 
- Los grupos destinatarios
- Los investigadores 
- Relevancia geográfica
- Estados Unidos 
- Esferas de la actividad
- Historia 
- Idiomas
- Inglés 

