They Wrote Laws to Keep Black People Enslaved Forever. Here’s How.

A man can write a law. He can write it on fine paper in careful ink with the authority of a colonial government behind it. He can write it to say who is human and who is not. In early America, they did exactly that. They wrote codes, slave codes, laws so precise, so detailed, so deliberately constructed that every possible path to freedom for an enslaved person was mapped out in advance and then sealed shut.
They did not just enslave people. They built a legal architecture to make enslavement permanent. Tonight, we are going to read those laws. We are going to name the people they were written to destroy. And we are going to answer one question, a question that gets asked in whispers in classrooms, in churches, and around kitchen tables across this country.
Why didn’t they just leave? The answer is not simple. The answer is not comfortable, but the answer is real. And tonight you will know it. Virginia, 1640. The colony is barely 30 years old. The English have come to plant tobacco, extract wealth, and build a new world on land that was never theirs to take. And they have a labor problem.
Indentured servants, mostly poor white Europeans, are working the fields. But indentured servants have contracts. Their servitude ends. And when it ends, they want land. They want rights. They want a share of what they helped build. The planters look around at their growing estates, at their mounting debts, at the restless men who have served their time and now want something in return.
They needed a labor force that would never end, never negotiate, never leave. And so they looked south to the ships, to the men and women being dragged in chains from the coast of West Africa, from Angola, from Senagambia, from the Gold Coast. People who had families, languages, kings, histories stretching back thousands of years.
people the colonists had already decided were worth less than the tobacco they would plant with their bare hands. The first laws came slowly, then all at once. By 1662, Virginia had passed a law tying the legal status of a child, free or enslaved, to the status of the mother, not the father, the mother. It was called partistor ventrum.
What is born follows the womb. With four Latin words, they had found their solution. Every child born of an enslaved woman was enslaved from the moment of birth for life, regardless of who the father was. This is where the system begins. This is the root. And from this root, a tree would grow, dark, wide, and deeply poisoned that would shadow the lives of millions of human beings for the next 230 years.
The slave codes were not one law. They were a system built colony by colony, decade by decade, sealed and reinforced with each passing year. By the mid700s, every southern colony had its own version, but the bones were the same. Let us walk through what they actually said, what they actually did. First, they defined race as a legal category.
Before the slave codes, the word slave in English law referred to a condition, a status that could theoretically change. The codes changed this. They attached enslavement permanently to African ancestry, to blackness, to blood. A person could be one quarter African or 1/8 and still by law be enslaved. Virginia’s 1705 slave code made it explicit.
Anyone with one African grandparent was considered black under the law and therefore property. Second, they made it illegal to teach an enslaved person to read or write. Knowledge was power. They knew it. South Carolina’s 1740 Negro Act made it a criminal offense to teach a slave to read. Georgia followed, North Carolina followed.
Fine and imprisonment for the teacher, punishment often brutal for the student. Why? Because a man who cannot read a map cannot plan an escape. A woman who cannot write cannot send a letter. A child who cannot read the law cannot understand that the law is what cages her. Illiteracy was not an accident of slavery. It was a weapon of it.
Third, they stripped enslaved people of the right to testify in court. The slave codes were not one law. They were a system built colony by colony, decade by decade, sealed and reinforced with each passing year. By the mid700s, every southern colony had its own version. But the bones were the same. Let us walk through what they actually said, what they actually did.
First, they defined race as a legal category. Before the slave codes, the word slave in English law referred to a condition, a status that could theoretically change. The codes changed this. They attached enslavement permanently to African ancestry, to blackness, to blood. A person could be one quarter African or 1/8 and still by law be enslaved.
Virginia’s 1705 slave code made it explicit. Anyone with one African grandparent was considered black under the law and therefore property. Second, they made it illegal to teach an enslaved person to read or write. Knowledge was power. They knew it. South Carolina’s 1740 Negro Act made it a criminal offense to teach a slave to read. Georgia followed.
North Carolina followed. Fine and imprisonment for the teacher. Punishment often brutal for the student. Why? Because a man who cannot read a map cannot plan an escape. A woman who cannot write cannot send a letter. A child who cannot read the law cannot understand that the law is what cages her. Illiteracy was not an accident of slavery.
It was a weapon of it. Third, they stripped enslaved people of the right to testify in court. Sixth, they made resistance a capital offense, striking a white person, attempting to escape, repeatedly, hiding in the woods, what they called outing, for more than 20 days. All of these could carry the death penalty. And the economic logic was this.
Enslavers were compensated by the colonial government for enslaved people who were executed by the state. The system protected itself financially. Kill the body, get paid by another. This was not a system that happened by chance. Every crack was sealed. Every exit was locked. It was designed to be inescapable. We have spent time with the laws.
Now we must spend time with the people. Her name was Lucy. We know this because her name appears in a plantation inventory from 1743 in Prince George County, Virginia. Listed between a plow and two barrels of salt pork. Her age is recorded as 26. Her occupation field hand. Her value 40 sterling.
She is listed directly below her mother, Bet, aged 44, described as past prime work, and directly above her daughter, unnamed in the record, referred to only as suckling, infant, female, three generations, one column of a ledger, less space than a farm tool. We do not know Lucy’s African name. We do not know what language she dreamed in.
We do not know who her father was or if she ever knew him. We do not know if the child she was nursing would survive her first winter. What we know is what the law allowed us to know. Her age, her labor capacity, her monetary value, everything else. The woman was erased by design, but there were others, and some of their stories survived.
Venture Smith was born in Guinea around 1729. He was the son of a prince. His father’s name was Sangum Furo. He was 6 years old when he was captured, 11 when he arrived in Rhode Island. Venture Smith wrote his own autobiography published in 1798. One of the earliest slave narratives in American history.
In it, he describes a particular detail that pierces the soul. The day his enslaver beat his wife Meg for a minor infraction and Venture Smith, a large and powerful man had to stand and watch because to intervene was to risk his life because the law said his wife’s body was not his to defend. This is what the slave codes produced in the intimacy of daily life.
the systematic dismantling of the masculine and feminine roles that human beings have always used to build family, dignity, and identity. A father who could not protect his child. A mother who could not keep her children. A husband who could not shield his wife. A wife whose body did not legally belong to herself.
Consider Solomon Northup, born free in New York in 1807, a skilled carpenter, a violinist, a father of three. In Tat 1841, he was invited to Washington DC by two men who said they needed a musician for a circus. They drugged him, chained him, sold him into Louisiana. And the law, the law said he was property now because he was black because he had no papers in his possession.
Because no court in Louisiana would hear a black man’s testimony against white men. Solomon Northup spent 12 years in slavery before a white man believed him enough to write a letter on his behalf. He did not escape the slave codes. A white man’s letter did. These stories are not exceptions. They are the rule repeated in plantation after plantation, county after county, generation after generation.
Families separated at auction. Children sold away at 4 years old. Husbands and wives assigned to different plantations and permitted to see each other only on Sunday evenings if the weather was good and if the enslaver allowed it. and always always the spectre of the law watching, ensuring the system held. 1739 Stono, South Carolina, a rice plantation colony, late September, just before dawn, a man named Jimmy, Angolanborn, likely Catholic, certainly literate, led a group of approximately 20 enslaved people to a firearm store near the Stoneo River. They killed the
two storekeepers, took the weapons, and they marched. They were heading for Spanish Florida, where the Spanish crown had promised freedom to enslaved people who escaped British territory and converted to Catholicism. They gathered more followers as they moved. By midday, the group had grown to near 100.
They were beating drums, carrying a banner, shouting the word liberty as they marched liberty. in a colony whose legal codes had made that word illegal for them to even possess. The Stono Rebellion was crushed before nightfall. The colonial militia caught them in a field. Some were killed in the battle. Some were captured, tried summarily, and executed.
Their heads were mounted on fence posts along the road. A deliberate message to every enslaved person who might have to pass them on the way to work. But the Stono Rebellion changed American law. Within a year, South Carolina had passed the Negro Act of 1740, one of the most comprehensive and brutal slave codes in colonial American history.
It limited the number of enslaved people a single person could hire out. It imposed a 10-year moratorum on importing new enslaved Africans, not for humanitarian reasons, but because the planters feared that newly arrived Africans were harder to control. It made it a criminal offense to teach an enslaved person to write, and it made it nearly impossible for an enslaver to voluntarily free an enslaved person without approval from the colonial legislature.
Jimmy led 100 people toward liberty and in response the colony built higher walls around everyone who remained. This pattern repeated throughout the history of slavery. Every act of resistance was met not merely with punishment of the participants, but with new legislation designed to close whatever gap had allowed the resistance to happen in the first place.
Gabriel’s rebellion 1800 Virginia. Gabriel Proser, a skilled blacksmith, organized what historians estimate was one of the largest slave rebellions ever planned on American soil. Hundreds of men. The plan, March on Richmond, take the governor hostage, negotiate for freedom. It was betrayed before it began. Two men fearful of the consequences told the governor Gabriel was caught, tried, and hanged, as were 26 others.
Virginia’s response. They tightened the pass system. They restricted the movement of free black people. They limited which trades enslaved people could legally learn. Denmark VZY 1822, Charleston, South Carolina. A free black man who had purchased his own freedom. He organized a rebellion, one that by some accounts involved thousands of co-conspirators across the city and surrounding plantations betrayed again.
Vasy and 35 others hanged. South Carolina’s response, they passed the Negro Seaman Act, requiring free black sailors to be imprisoned in Charleston whenever, their ships docked in port so they could not contaminate the local enslaved population with stories of freedom. Nat Turner, 1831, Southampton County, Virginia.
A preacher, a man who believed he had received divine instruction. His rebellion lasted 48 hours and resulted in the deaths of 55 white Virginiaians. The retaliation was savage. More than 200 black people were killed by white mobs in the aftermath, most of whom had nothing to do with the rebellion. Virginia’s response and the South’s a wave of new legislation restricting black religious gatherings, outlawing black preachers, further restricting education, and a continentwide hardening of pro-slavery ideology from a necessary evil to a
positive good. Every rebellion they crushed, they built a better cage with the wreckage. Let us read the record. Let us look at what they actually wrote. Virginia 1705, an act concerning servants and slaves. Section one of this act states in substance, “All servants imported and brought into this country by sea or land who were not Christians in their native country shall be accounted and be slaves.” Read that carefully.
Not all Africans, all non-Christians. It was written broadly enough to enslave Muslim and traditional religionists, but narrow enough to spare the growing number of enslaved people who had converted to Christianity. Except it wasn’t, because later in the same act, they closed that door, too. Conversion to Christianity after arrival would not under any circumstances confer freedom.
The law anticipated the escape route and sealed it in the same breath it opened. South Carolina 1740. The Negro Act section 45 reads in substance. Any person who shall teach or cause any slave to write or shall use or employ any slave as a scribe in any manner of writing whatsoever, such person shall forfeit 100 current money.
100 That is roughly the value of a mid-range enslaved adult at the time. The price of knowledge was the price of a person. Georgia 1755. Slave Code. Section 7. No slave shall be allowed to rent or hire any house, room, store, or plantation, or to keep any boat or to buy or sell any goods, wares, or merchandise without the express permission of their master or owner.
This one is crucial and often overlooked. It was not just freedom they were denied. It was commerce, economic personhood, the ability to accumulate anything, to own anything, to participate in the basic human transaction of exchange. They could not rent a room. They could not sell a basket of vegetables grown in their own garden.
They could not keep a boat to fish the river that ran past the field where they labored. They were made economically invisible. Not just legally invisible, economically invisible. Louisiana 1806. An act prescribing the rules and conduct to be observed with respect to negroes and other slaves. This act required enslaved people to render obedience to their masters and all their family.
It defined insolence as grounds for punishment, a term so vague it could mean anything an enslaver chose it to mean. It also required that all manumissitions, the legal freeing of enslaved people, be approved by a judge and recorded in a public register. Any manumission that did not follow this exact procedure was null and void.
an enslaver could promise you freedom with their dying breath. And unless the paperwork was filed correctly, witnessed correctly, and approved correctly, that promise meant nothing. Legally, nothing. And then there are the personal records, the plantation journals and account books.
Consider the 1808 inventory of the Randolph plantation in Virginia. It lists among the assets Tom male age 35 blacksmith value $450. Celia female age 28 house servant value $400. Moses male age 14 field value $250. Maria female age 7 not yet useful value $100. Infant George male age 6 months value $50. Maria is 7 years old. She has a value.
Infant George is 6 months old. He has a value. They are not children in this document. They are depreciating assets. And their value would grow predictably like compound interest. As they became old enough to labor. They were not born. They were produced. And from their first breath, the system was already calculating what they were worth.
The consequences of the slave codes were not abstract. They arrived in the lives of specific people on specific days with devastating and permanent effect. Consider what happened to families under the slave codes. An enslaved person had no legal standing to form a marriage that the law would recognize. A wedding between two enslaved people and these ceremonies did occur with the enslavers permission was a social and spiritual act.
It had no legal standing whatsoever. This meant that when a plantation was sold to pay a debt, to settle an estate, to satisfy a mortgage, the law was under no obligation to keep families together. Historians estimate that between 1820 and 1860 in the domestic slave trade from the upper south to the lower south, Virginia, Maryland, and Kentucky to Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana, approximately 1th3 of all first marriages among enslaved people were destroyed by sale.
1/3. Between 1820 and 1860, over 800,000 enslaved people were forcibly relocated. Hundreds of thousands of families were torn apart by commerce. The children historians who have worked through the slave sale records from New Orleans, the largest domestic slave market in American history, have found that children under the age of 13 were sold separately from their mothers in I more than 12% of recorded sales.
A child of four, of six, of nine, sold alone into the hands of a stranger in a different state. And the law, the slave codes made this not only legal but routine, a business transaction recorded in a ledger filed with the courthouse. Consider too what happened to the labor. The economic logic of the slave codes created a particular cruelty in the deep south after 1800 when cotton became the dominant crop following the invention of the cotton gin.
Cotton required brutal sustained labor under a sun that could kill. The task system of coastal South Carolina gave way to the gang labor system of the Mississippi Delta, where enslaved people were driven in rows, sun up to sun down, under the supervision of an overseer with a whip. Production quotas were set. If you did not meet your quotota, you were beaten.
If you met your quotota, your quotota was raised. There was no ceiling. There was no upper limit of what could be demanded of a body that was legally property. And the legal status consequences were generational because of partis sequentrum because status followed the mother. Every child born of an enslaved woman was enslaved from birth regardless of the father regardless of what the father looked like, regardless of whether the father was the enslaver himself. And this happened.
This happened constantly. The 1860 census recorded approximately 400,000 people classified as mulatto biracial among the enslaved population. The number of enslaved people who were directly fathered by white men, including their own enslavers, was substantial, and every one of those children inherited not their father’s status, not their father’s name, not their father’s freedom, but their mother’s chains.
The law that made rape invisible also made its children slaves. Both cruelties in the same sentence. And yet, And yet they resisted. Not always with weapons, not always with rebellion. Often, most often with something quieter, harder to see, and impossible to fully crush. They slowed down their work.
Historians call it feigned incompetence. A deliberate, calculated slowing of labor. An enslaved field who normally picked 300 pounds of cotton in a day might pick 150 if something had angered the enslaver or if he was protecting a sick fellow worker or simply because his body needed rest that he was never freely given. The enslavers noticed and they punished for it.
But they could never fully stamp it out. They broke tools. An iron plow blade accidentally struck a stone. A set of rains unknowingly let go of during a critical moment. A field fire carelessly started too close to the barn. Frederick Douglas, whose narrative gave the world one of the clearest windows into what enslavement meant, wrote with careful precision about the way enslaved workers subtly, deniably, deliberately undermined the wealth producing capacity of the very system that held them.
They could not always fight the law, but they could make the law expensive to enforce. They learned to read in secret despite the criminal penalties, despite the risk. Enslaved people in both the upper and lower south learned to read in cellers, in church closets, in corn cribs at night. They taught each other. Nat Turner was literate, almost certainly self-taught.
Frederick Douglas learned the letters of the alphabet by trading bread to white boys in Baltimore. Harriet Jacobs, who wrote her autobiography, Incidents in the Life, of a slave girl, described how literacy gave enslaved people the ability to read their own contracts, to forge passes, and to understand the legal machinery that held them.
Knowledge was resistance. Every letter learned was an act of defiance against the code that made learning a crime. They prayed in secret. After Nat Turner’s rebellion, many southern states made it illegal for enslaved people to hold religious gatherings without a white person present. They held them anyway. The hush harbors, secret nighttime worship services held deep in the woods, voices kept low, sentinels posted to watch for patrols, became one of the most important institutions in African-Amean history. Indeed, those
forests they developed a theology of liberation. They identified with Moses and the children of Israel. They sang coded spirituals. Steal away to Jesus was not just a hymn. It was sometimes a signal that a meeting was planned or that Harriet Tubman was nearby. They used the legal system. wherever they could find purchase in it.
Some enslaved and formerly enslaved people filed freedom suits, legal petitions claiming they should be free because of a free ancestor or because they had been taken into free territory. Dread Scott was not the first. He was the most famous. and his case in 1857 when the Supreme Court ruled that black people had no rights which the white man was bound to respect became the darkest moment in American judicial history.
But before him, hundreds of others had tried. Some had won. Elizabeth Freeman, known as Mum Bet, sued for her freedom in Massachusetts in 1781, arguing that the state’s new constitution, which declared all men are born free and equal, should apply to her. She won, and she helped end slavery in Massachusetts.
One woman, one argument, one crack in the wall. And of course, there was the Underground Railroad. not a railroad at all, but a network of black churches, black families, free black communities, and some white abolitionists stretching from the deep south to Canada. Harriet Tubman, who called herself Moses, made 19 trips back into slave territory after her own escape.
She guided approximately 70 people to freedom. She said she could have guided more if they had believed they could go. She later said, “I never ran my railroad off the track, and I never lost a passenger, not one in 19 trips. Through territory where her capture would mean death, the slave codes ended legally with the 13th amendment in 1865.
But the logic of the slave codes did not end in 1865. It transformed. The Black Codes of 1865 and 1866 arrived within months of emancipation, passed by the same southern state legislatures that had administered slavery. They required black workers to sign annual labor contracts or face arrest for vagrancy. They prohibited black people from owning land in certain areas.
They prohibited black people from being in towns after dark without a pass. A pass, the same mechanism, different paper. Slavery ended. The logic that produced it was preserved in new clothing and handed to the next generation. Convict leasing followed. Ponage followed. The sharecropping system which trapped formerly enslaved families in debt cycles that functioned economically almost identically to enslavement followed. Jim Crow laws.
The legal segregation of every public institution in the south followed. and then pie vers Ferguson 1896 the Supreme Court ruling on a Louisiana railroad segregation law declared separate but equal constitutional black Americans would not see a Supreme Court reversal of that ruling until 1954 58 years two full generations and the slave code’s most lasting legacy may be the one we are least comfortable naming the wealth gap for 246 years of American slavery, 1619 to 1865, the labor of millions of black Americans, produced wealth that was
extracted from them and transferred to white Americans, to white institutions, and to the American economy as a whole. There was no reparation. There was no land transfer. There was famously Sherman’s special field order number 15, the 40 acres and a mule, which was revoked by President Andrew Johnson within months of being issued.
He formerly enslaved received nothing but their freedom. and their freedom. Without resources, without land, without legal protection that was actually enforced, without the ability to vote, without terror for nearly a century, their freedom was precarious from the first day. What this means today is contested.
How it should be addressed is contested. But the historical fact that a wealth transfer of staggering proportion occurred and was never corrected is not contested by serious historians. It is documented in the very ledgers that recorded Lucy and Tom and Celia and little Maria aged seven and infant George aged 6 months. The slave codes did not just imprison the people who lived under them.
They shaped the country we live in today. the streets we drive on, the neighborhoods we live in, or the wealth we have or do not have. We began with a question. Why didn’t they just leave? Now you know the answer. They did not leave because the law said that leaving without permission was a crime.
That any white person who saw you on the road could stop you, beat you, and return you. That the man who returned you would be paid. That you would be punished often brutally when you arrived. That if you ran again, the punishment would be worse. that if you ran three times, you could be legally killed.
They did not leave because they had no map, no money, no legal name that belonged to them, no document that proved they were human. They did not leave because the children they had nursed and loved and sunk to sleep might be sold to a different state. The very next morning, if the enslaver learned they had tried to escape, they did not leave because the system in the slave codes had anticipated their desire for freedom and built a wall around it, stoned by legislative stone for more than 200 years.
They did not leave because freedom had been made a crime for them and survival had been made dependent on their compliance. And some of them left anyway because human beings, when compressed hard enough by the weight of injustice, find cracks in every wall. Harriet Tubman left. Frederick Douglas left. Venture Smith negotiated his own purchase and left.
Elizabeth Freeman argued her way out. Dreadscott tried and failed and tried again. The 100 who marched with Jimmy toward the Stono River left knowing what might happen. Because liberty, even dangerous liberty, was worth more than comfortable captivity. The slave codes were the most powerful legal architecture of oppression in American history. And they were not enough.
They were not enough because the people they were designed to destroy were not destroyable. The slave codes were laws. But behind every law there was a human being whose life that law was trying to control, diminish or erase. Tonight we looked at the law and we looked through it at the people.
At Lucy and Venture Smith and Solomon, Northup and Nat Turner and Harriet Tubman, at infant George, valued at $50. We looked at the system they lived inside and at the cracks they found in it. This history is not comfortable, but it is yours. It belongs to every American to understand how this country was built and on whose labor and at whose cost.
In the next episode of Dark Truth, we go deeper into the specific legal mechanisms used to separate families at auction, the domestic slave trade that moved hundreds of thousands of people from the upper south to the lower south and the records that survivors left behind. It is called the auction block. how they sold families and called it commerce.