PART 7
Depending on the response to this post, this will be the final installment in this Yankee Myth, and perhaps the entire series. This myth has turned out to be the most in-depth of all the ones covered here on GBO. I feel that this is due, in large part, to the sensitivity of the issue, making it necessary to cover it so thoroughly. As I said in the beginning of this thread, no other issue in American History has been abused more than the history of African servitude. I still stand by those words, and I challenge anyone reading this series to refute them, especially given the examples posted here.
Part 7 will cover three separate topics directly relating to Race Relations In The Old South. Each topic, being somewhat short in and of itself, will help to further demonstrate just how wrong the North has been about the South in this subject area. Anyone seeking the reality of the events of 1861 - 1865 and beyond should not overlook this very important part of our history.
GEORGIA SLAVE DEFENDS SLAVERY
In 1861, a slave named Harrison Berry wrote and published a pamphlet entitled "
Slavery and Abolitionism, as Viewed by a Georgia Slave." This statement flies in the face of the currently held opinion about slavery. First, the idea that a slave could read and write in 1861 is something that most abolitionists conveniently overlook. Second, the very idea that a slave, literate or not, would freely defend the system of African servitude strikes at the heart of a very sacred Yankee myth. Yet, here we have, in black and white, the very words of a slave as he attacks "fanatical abolitionists."
Berry's story is unique and inspirational. Harrison Berry was born a slave in Jones County, Georgia, in November 1816 as the property of David Berry. When his master's daughter married S.W. Price, Harrison Berry was given to her as a wedding gift. At the age of ten, Harrison began working in the law offices of John V. Berry, one of David Berry's sons. "These employments were such as to leave a good deal of time at his own disposal, which he was induced to improve in learning to read and write." As he grew up, he was trained as a shoemaker, and spent much time, with the assistance of the berry family, in improving his reading ability.
He was induced to write upon the subject of Slavery from a firm conviction that Abolitionist agitators are the worst enemies of the slave, and from the settled opinion that slavery is according to Divine Law. He believes, furthermore, that Southern slaves are in a much better condition than if they had remained in their native land, and this opinion has been formed after a fair and impartial examination of the subject in the light of history, philosophy, and religion.Thus wrote H.C. Hornaday in the introduction to Berry's pamphlet on slavery.
In his own words, Berry tells the world that "...
I am a Slave, and have been all my life, and therefore, claim the opportunity, at least, of knowing what Slavery is, and what it is not." Berry goes on to state that he was moved to write upon the subject of the agitation for the abolition of slavery by watching how the "
evil dangerous and highly detrimental" attacks by the Abolitionists were hurting the very people they pretended to help. He makes it clear that he is writing his pamphlet for the Northern Abolitionists who did not understand the nature of Southern Slavery. Berry's defense of the South echoed other Southern voices raised during the war. After the war, he became a prominent preacher and continued to write on subjects such as theology.
SLAVE PREACHER DEFENDS HIS MASTER
From Richmond, Virginia, comes the story of one of the South's greatest preachers. Without the benefit of formal training the Rev. John Jasper made his impression on the world not as a political activist, or a civil rights leader, but as a proven warrior of the Christian Church.
Jasper was born a slave in Virginia. For many years as a young man he felt the call to be a Christian. His master, Samuel Hargrove, whom he called "Mars Sam," was a good Christian man and did his utmost to encourage his slaves in Christian ways. During his life as a preacher, Rev. Jasper had only kind and gracious comments about his former master. He gave this account of how his master responded to the news of his giving his life to the Lord:
Little aft'r I hear Mars Sam tell de overseer he want to see Jasper. Mars Sam was a good man; he was a Baptis', an' one of de old Fust Church down here, an' I was glad when I hear Mars Sam want to see me. "John, what was de matter out dar jes' now?" ... I sez to him: "Mars Sam, ever since the fourth of July I been cryin' after de Lord, six long weeks, an' jes' now out dar, God tuk my sins away, an' set my feet on a rock... de fires broke out in my soul, an' I jes' let go one shout to de glory of my Saviour."
"John, I believe dat way myself. I luv de Saviour dat you have jes' foun', an' I want to tell you dat I do'n complain 'cause you made de noise jes' now as you did." He walk over to me an' give me his han', an' he say: "John, I wish you mighty well. Your Saviour is mine an' we are bruthers in de Lord." ...Mars Sam well know de good he dun me.
During the war, and while John Jasper was still alive, he could often be found at the Confederate hospitals in Richmond, preaching to the sick and wounded Confederate soldiers. Is it any wonder that after the war his church was often filled with both black and white people who came to hear this dynamic preacher?
The warm and cordial relations between John Jasper and his master lasted until Sam's death. Even after the war, Jasper would often tell the story of his Christian master from the pulpit of his church.
Jasper often thought of his old master as he preached. His feelings for his former master were well stated when he said:
Oft'n as I preach I feel that I'm doin' what my old marster tol' me to do. If he was here now I think he would lif' up dem kin' black eyes of his, an' say: "Dat's right, John; still tellin' it; fly like de angel, an' wherever yo go carry de Gospel to de people." Farwell, my ol' marster, when I lan' in de heav'nly city, I'll call at your mansion...
The story of the Reverend John Jasper stands out as a clear indictment of the falsehood told about the South and its system of African servitude. The close relationship between black Christians such as John Jasper, and white Christians such as Samuel Hargrove, was not unusual in the Old South. The warm relations between black and white people are manifested in stories all across the South. The history of the Palestine Baptist Church, Simpson County, Mississippi, relates such a story. The Palestine Baptist Church was organized in 1786 (one year before the United States Constitution was ratified) by twelve men, eleven white and one black. The church has served the community from that date to the present. In 1858 the church had 175 members, 100 white and 75 black. These black members were a vital part of the ongoing evangelical work of the church. The significance of the black members of the church is obvious: the first Baptist church west of the Mississippi River, for example, was established in Louisiana by Joseph Wills, a black preacher. Some historians have taken note of this close relation between the Christians of the two races and the increasing number of black church members in the Old South.
The Baptists did this less by deliberate missionary efforts than by accepting Negro members on a basis of Christian Brotherhood that seems strange to the 20th century South. There were many instances where gifted Negroes were allowed to preach to congregations of both races. These stories of a warm and close relationship between black and white people in the Old South are Not isolated stories. There are Many others.
BILL YOPP, FORMER SLAVE AND CONFEDERATE SOLDIER
Bill Yopp was born a slave in Laurens County, Georgia, near Dublin. As a young man he and Thomas Yopp played and grew up together. When war broke out, Thomas Yopp volunteered in Company H, Fourteenth Georgia Regiment. Bill asked and received permission to go with his master to the war. Bill served his master as cook and assisted him during sickness and when his master was wounded.
As the war progressed, Thomas Yopp was promoted to rank of captain of his company. Capt. Yopp and Bill were sent to what is now West Virginia, where Bill was often between the lines of the Confederates and United States Armies. Had bill wanted to run away from Capt. Yopp and the Confederate army he could have done so without any problem, but as Bill said, "I had no inclination to go to the Union side, as I did not know the Union soldiers and I did know the Confederate soldiers, and I believed then as now, tried and true friends are better than friends you do not know." Note how Bill, the slave of a Confederate soldier, describes the Confederate soldiers as "tried and true friends."
Even after Yankee-induced freedom, Bill and Many other ex-slaves stayed loyal to their former masters. During this time many former masters were worse off than the freed slaves. Many such white people were protected and fed by their former slaves. In the story of Bill Yopp an author relates how Bill and other ex-slaves cared for their former masters:
...During the transition period, many of the ex-slaves, Bill among them, supplied the white families with freewill offerings of such supplies as they had. In some plantations for a year or more this writer knows of instances where negroes brought food each Saturday to the families of their former owners.Charles W. Hampton,
Bill Yopp, Narrative of a Slave (DeKalb Litho and Advertising, Avondale Estates, GA: 1969), p.10
Bill Yopp
Just before the outbreak of World War I, Capt. Yopp was admitted to the Confederate Soldiers' Home in Atlanta, Georgia. Bill made many visits to Capt. Yopp and all the old soldiers at the home. At Christmas, Bill would visit the home and would bring gifts of food and money to the residents. In fact, Bill would regularly be seen in and around Atlanta shining shoes for ten cents. He soon earned the nickname "Ten Cent Bill." He earned enough money shining shoes that, before long, he had more money than the men whose shoes he was shining. That Christmas, Bill approached the head of the soldiers' home and told him of his offer to give the money to the veterans. The administrator assisted Bill in placing the money into envelopes to be given out to the veterans. When they opened their envelopes, each veteran found inside three crisp $1.00 bills, a hefty sum at that time. Afterword, Bill was taken into the chapel, where he gave a speech to the veterans. The Confederate veterans were so overwhelmed by Bill's generosity that in honor of his affection and gifts to them, the Confederate veterans had a medal struck and presented it to Bill. By a unanimous vote, the board of trustees offered Bill a permanent residence at the Confederate Soldiers' Home.
Above: Bill Yopp, former slave and Confederate veteran, visiting his former master and lifelong friend, Captain Thomas Yopp, at the Confederate Veterans Home in Atlanta. Bill brought gifts not only to his former master (as shown here) but also to all the elderly Confederate veterans in residence there.
Bill Yopp, former slave, Confederate veteran, and friend of the old soldiers of the South, died on June 3, 1936, and was buried in the Confederate Cemetery in Marietta, Georgia. It is this author's humble opinion that a more
deserving Southern Gentleman and true Confederate would be hard, if not impossible, to find.