Part I. The Breach: 1. The weeping time; 2. The auction and American history; Part II. Linked Fates: 3. Pierce Butler and his grandfather's legacy; 4. Mr. and Mrs. Butler; 5. More than 'hands': African rhythms and work on the Butler plantations; 6. Faith on the Butler estates; 7. A family divided; a nation divided; Part III. Healing the Breach: 8. Reconstruction and reconnecting threads; 9. Out of the silence: descendants restore family names; Epilogue: History and the democratization of memory; Appendix; Index.
This book traces the lives of slaves before, during, and after the largest slave auction in US history in 1859.
Anne C. Bailey is an Associate Professor of History and Africana Studies at Binghamton University, State University of New York.
'Here is a graceful chronicle of a wretched moment in history. This
is a work of restoration, culling a crucial narrative from the
silences of the past. But most crucially, this is a restoration of
the humanity to those enslaved black people who were so commonly
denied it.' William Cobb, Columbia University
'The Weeping Time offers a remarkable prism through which to
explore the human dimensions of slavery and reconstruction in the
American South. Using the March 1859 auction of some 440 slaves in
Savannah, Georgia as a focal point, Anne C. Bailey explores the
history of the slave owning Butler family, the history of the
Butler plantations on the Georgia Sea Islands, and the post-slavery
experiences of the slaves sold at that auction to illuminate
broader themes of race in American history. She offers a moving and
engaging social history of an understudied aspect of American
slavery.' Thomas Dublin, Co-editor, Women and Social Movements in
the United States and Bartle Distinguished Professor, State
University of New York, Binghamton
'Bailey's engrossing saga reminds us that the auction block was a
crucial shared experience that shaped the consciousness of millions
of African Americans. The Weeping Time is about the largest slave
auction in American history, but it is also a remarkably vivid
story of individual lives forever transformed when people are
treated as property.' Clayborne Carson, Stanford University,
California
'A meticulously researched and beautifully told story of slavery.
Bailey makes us see and feel the experiences of those enslaved on
the Butler plantation and their descendants.' Mary Frances Berry,
Geraldine Segal Professor of American Social Thought, Professor of
History, Professor of Africana Studies, University of
Pennsylvania
'The black body on slavery's auction block was at once commerce,
exhibit, and spectacle; it was also the stuff of mourning,
memorialization and mobilization. Such is the grand and grave
subject of this absorbing book on the mother of all slave auctions
in the United States, a tale told with verve and an eye for detail.
A bedrock work.' Michael West, Binghamton University, State
University of New York
'Bailey has written a powerful study of African chattel slaves sold
at huge profit, on the eve of the Civil War, to brokers from New
York to Louisiana. Her approach to the experience of the auction
block, like her portrayals of the modern black family, intent today
on assembling fragments of their fractured past, is both
interdisciplinary and humane. This outstanding contribution to
understanding American capitalism should be compulsory reading in
American history courses.' Herbert P. Bix, Emeritus Professor of
History and Sociology, Binghamton University, State University of
New York
'The Weeping Time: Memory and the Largest Slave Auction in American
History chronicles the sale of 436 men, women and children from the
Butler Plantation of Georgia's Sea Islands in 1859. … Remarkably,
Bailey has been able to trace the historical record of 50 people
from 10 families sold during the Butler auction. … As a historian,
Bailey is determined to keep lifting that blanket of silence and
uncover the humanity of people it obscures.' Jim Higgins, Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel
'Bailey's powerful volume not only recounts America's largest slave
auction, but resurrects personalities long forgotten. Historians
who seek a deeper understanding of all that slavery entailed in
antebellum America and who desire a clearer understanding of the
resiliency of African Americans both during and after the Civil War
will find Bailey's study not only revealing but inspirational.'
Jonation A. Noyalas, Civil War News
'The Weeping Time is a valuable addition. Bailey's approach to
overcoming the historical memory breaches shaping African American
memory and persuasive epilogue will appeal to scholars, graduate
students, public history practitioners, and African American
descendant communities.' Hilary N. Green, The Journal of North
Carolina Association of Historians
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