Cast in Bondage
Copper neck tags evoke the experience of American slaves hired out as part-time laborers
- By Victoria Dawson
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2003, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
The system also created a category of slaves whose privileges threatened the status quo. "[Urban] slaves had more access to education, opportunities for self-hire and self-purchase, and the privilege of ‘live-out’ in separate sections of town, away from all the watchful eyes of masters," writes historian Theresa Singleton of Syracuse University in "The Slave Tag: An Artifact of Urban Slavery," a 1984 journal article. "All of these conditions tended to undermine masters’ control over slaves."
In the seaport of Charleston, one of the wealthiest and most important cities in the South, the city treasurer’s office issued all badges, with fees set according to the category and skill of the laborer. The most common occupations were servants and porters, though Charleston slaves also worked as skilled artisans (such as furniture makers and silversmiths), fishermen and fruit vendors.
Badges were made of copper alloy, cut or pressed from a mold, or occasionally fashioned by hand into various sizes and shapes, most typically squares or diamonds, ranging in size from about 1.5 square inches to 3 square inches. Each was punctured with a hole and was probably worn around the neck on a string or chain.
In addition to the three slave hire badges owned by the Smithsonian, another 100 or so, dating from 1800 to 1864, are in various museums around the country, and another few hundred are believed to be in the hands of private collectors. Prices for badges have soared in recent years, in part because of a burgeoning interest in African-American memorabilia. Recently, a huckster’s (fruit vendor’s) badge, dated 1803, fetched $26,450 at auction in Baltimore, Maryland.
Their power far transcends monetary value. "Imagine," Michael Hodder says, "this badge as it hung around the neck of a man. Imagine how it felt against his chest, how it felt to present it whenever someone demanded. At the end of the day, did the slave hang up the badge in his hut or did the master keep it? What happened if a slave lost his badge? What happened at the end of the year? Was the badge returned to the city marshal’s office, turned in, taken to a local mill, melted and then reused?" The only certainty is the profound inhumanity—and likely brutality—evoked by such an artifact.
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Comments (3)
I have a slave tag that I would like to have valued. Whom could I contact with the specific information?
Posted by renae winters on December 9,2011 | 10:43 PM
Curious. Did you get any further response or information?
I am a Texas history..I am an Afro-american Texan. Just found out there was such a thing.
Posted by L.R.Silver on October 7,2009 | 09:59 AM
I have a slave neck tag, it is 8 sided. The date is 1838 and it has eagle in the front of the badge. The front also has peach point plantation engraved Texas. On the opposite it has sugar cane, cotton-pecans, no. 58. any information that you can provide would be appreciated. exetta akhund
Posted by exetta on May 23,2009 | 08:45 PM