With only one exception, I have never before posted two articles by the same person on one day. The exception occurred several years back, when I discovered the brilliant teacher-blogger Peter Greene and devoted an entire day to his insightful, humorous writings. Heather Cox Richardson stands alone as a historian who posts a timely commentary almost every day. Consider subscribing to her blog. You will be glad you did.
Heather Cox Richardson wrote this post to recognize the historical roots that link contrasting visions of slavery and labor. We live in a society now that has no slavery yet has crippled organized labor and tolerates horrible working conditions. Some states, notably Arkansas and Iowa, have weakened child labor laws, so young teens are permitted to toil in dangerous jobs. Parental rights, you know. Texas legislators recently declined to pass a law requiring employers to provide 15 minutes for water breaks for employees working outdoors in a historic heat wave.
On March 4, 1858, South Carolina senator James Henry Hammond rose to his feet to explain to the Senate how society worked. “In all social systems,” he said, “there must be a class to do the menial duties, to perform the drudgery of life.” That class, he said, needed little intellect and little skill, but it should be strong, docile, and loyal.
“Such a class you must have, or you would not have that other class which leads progress, civilization and refinement,” Hammond said. His workers were the “mud-sill” on which society rested, the same way that a stately house rested on wooden sills driven into the mud.
He told his northern colleagues that the South had perfected this system by enslavement based on race, while northerners pretended that they had abolished slavery. “Aye, the name, but not the thing,” he said. “[Y]our whole hireling class of manual laborers and ‘operatives,’ as you call them, are essentially slaves.”
While southern leaders had made sure to keep their enslaved people from political power, Hammond said, he warned that northerners had made the terrible mistake of giving their “slaves” the vote. As the majority, they could, if they only realized it, control society. Then “where would you be?” he asked. “Your society would be reconstructed, your government overthrown, your property divided, not…with arms…but by the quiet process of the ballot-box.”
He warned that it was only a matter of time before workers took over northern cities and began slaughtering men of property.
Hammond’s vision was of a world divided between the haves and the have-nots, where men of means commandeered the production of workers and justified that theft with the argument that such a concentration of wealth would allow superior men to move society forward. It was a vision that spoke for the South’s wealthy planter class—enslavers who held more than 50 of their Black neighbors in bondage and made up about 1% of the population—but such a vision didn’t even speak for the majority of white southerners, most of whom were much poorer than such a vision suggested.
And it certainly didn’t speak for northerners, to whom Hammond’s vision of a society divided between dim drudges and the rich and powerful was both troubling and deeply insulting.
On September 30, 1859, at the Wisconsin State Agricultural Fair, rising politician Abraham Lincoln answered Hammond’s vision of a society dominated by a few wealthy men. While the South Carolina enslaver argued that labor depended on capital to spur men to work, either by hiring them or enslaving them, Lincoln said there was an entirely different way to see the world.
Representing an economy in which most people worked directly on the land or water to pull wheat into wagons and fish into barrels, Lincoln believed that “[l]abor is prior to, and independent of, capital; that, in fact, capital is the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed—that labor can exist without capital, but that capital could never have existed without labor. Hence they hold that labor is the superior—greatly the superior of capital.”
A man who had, himself, worked his way up from poverty to prominence (while Hammond had married into money), Lincoln went on: “[T]he opponents of the ‘mud-sill’ theory insist that there is not…any such things as the free hired laborer being fixed to that condition for life.”
And then Lincoln articulated what would become the ideology of the fledgling Republican Party:
“The prudent, penniless beginner in the world, labors for wages awhile, saves a surplus with which to buy tools or land, for himself; then labors on his own account for another while, and at length hires another new beginner to help him. This, say its advocates, is free labor—the just and generous, and prosperous system, which opens the way for all—gives hope to all, and energy and progress, and improvement of condition to all.”
In such a worldview, everyone shared a harmony of interest. What was good for the individual worker was, ultimately, good for everyone. There was no conflict between labor and capital; capital was simply “pre-exerted labor.” Except for a few unproductive financiers and those who wasted their wealth on luxuries, everyone was part of the same harmonious system.
The protection of property was crucial to this system, but so was opposition to great accumulations of wealth. Levelers who wanted to confiscate property would upset this harmony, as Hammond warned, but so would rich men who sought to monopolize land, money, or the means of production. If a few people took over most of a country’s money or resources, rising laborers would be forced to work for them forever or, at best, would have to pay exorbitant prices for the land or equipment they needed to become independent.
A lot of water has gone under the bridge since Lincoln’s day, but on this Labor Day weekend, it strikes me that the worldviews of men like Hammond and Lincoln are still fundamental to our society: Should our government protect people of property as they exploit the majority so they can accumulate wealth and move society forward as they wish? Or should we protect the right of ordinary Americans to build their own lives, making sure that no one can monopolize the country’s money and resources, with the expectation that their efforts will build society from the ground up?

Richardson is a national treasure. Several things struck me in this writing.
Hammonds used the term “mudsills” to describe those who did menial labor. He could not have imagined, indeed his European contemporaries in the north or in Europe itself could not have imagined the waste this attitude would produce before we Awoke to the beginnings of the conservation movement in the early 20th century. Favorite wood for mud sills? Walnut. Try to buy some now.
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I shop at a Home Depot that sells Walnut and other hardwoods One 3/4 inch thick walnut board, six feet long and five inches wide, costs more than $50.
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Another way to look at economy is to think of it as the darling of modern neoliberal thinkers, John Locke, thought of it. Locke suggested that the individual who took a resource and turned it into a useful item had natural ownership of the useful item and, by extension, the resource. His example came from the man who fashioned a stick into a tool.
So Locke, whose ideas have been used to justify all sorts of corporate piracy, felt that the exercise of imagination and actual labor was the main component of ownership. Naturally, this runs counter to the modern notion that ownership is a status that takes place with a rarefied legal framework.
Obviously, a carpenter cannot own every house he builds. It would be too complex. Economy is Supposed to solve the complexity. But corporate effort in the economy often attempts to organize it for maximum benefit for shareholders at the expense of the labor that produced it.
The result of this organization is to decrease the long-term benefit of rewarding the labor that is responsible for turning the stick into a plow handle. Long term, it would be better for the economy to make the labor more a part of the economy. This would lead to stability, lower risk, and widen markets. A laborer whose wages are higher ultimately create a pool of people who buy guitars from my nephew and fresh corn from my neighbor. Increasing the success of a corporation might mean some of the same effects due to shareholders (pension funds, etc) being more successful, but this would also subdue economic activity by other sectors of the economy.
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Both Hammonds and Lincoln were silent on the European exploitation of the new world and its aboriginal peoples. Wealth came from the ease of acquiring lumber, hides, and other natural products. By the time of their speeches, we were well on their way to over killing whales for oil, trees for tan bark, and farming in ways so wasteful that a massive effort at soil conservation would become an aspect of the Federal government.
One of the ironies of the conflict between these two visions of a country not a century old yet was that neither would have recognized their country a decade after the civil war.
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The first and largest corporate slaveowner in the Americas was the Catholic Church (Cushwa Center).
The Church is a leader in the school privatization campaign along side the Koch network.
Notre Dame’s ACE holds summits for school choice. At the site, review the demographics of the approx. 130 photos in the array of “People of ACE.”
Btw- Southbend is 25% Black.
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