From worker-brc-news@lists.tao.ca Mon Jul 23 06:50:25 2001 From: Rosalyn Baxandall <rosybax@aol.com> Subject: [BRC-NEWS] Convict Leasing in Alabama Sender: worker-brc-news@lists.tao.ca Precedence: bulk To: brc-news@lists.tao.ca Date: Mon, 23 Jul 2001 03:22:35 -0400 (EDT)
http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB995228253461746936.htm
BIRMINGHAM, Ala.—On March 30, 1908, Green Cottenham was arrested by the Shelby County, Ala., sheriff and charged with vagrancy. After three days in the county jail, the 22-year-old African-American was sentenced to an unspecified term of hard labor. The next day, he was handed over to a unit of U.S. Steel Corp. and put to work with hundreds of other convicts in the notorious Pratt Mines complex on the outskirts of Birmingham. Four months later, he was still at the coal mines when tuberculosis killed him.
Born two decades after the end of slavery in America, Green Cottenham died a slave in all but name. The facts are dutifully entered in the handwritten registry of prisoners in Shelby County and in other state and local government records.
In the early decades of the 20th century, tens of thousands of convicts—most of them, like Mr. Cottenham, indigent black men—were snared in a largely forgotten justice system rooted in racism and nurtured by economic expedience. Until nearly 1930, decades after most other Southern states had abolished similar programs, Alabama was providing convicts to businesses hungry for hands to work in farm fields, lumber camps, railroad construction gangs and, especially in later years, mines. For state and local officials, the incentive was money; many years, convict leasing was one of Alabama's largest sources of funding.
Most of the convicts were charged with minor offenses or violations of
Black Code
statutes passed to reassert white control in the
aftermath of the Civil War. Mr. Cottenham was one of more than 40
Shelby County men shipped to the Pratt Mines in the winter of 1908,
nearly half of them serving time for jumping a freight train,
according to the Shelby County jail log. George Roberson was sent on a
conviction for assault with a stick,
the log says. Lou William
was in for adultery. John Jones for gambling.
Subjected to squalid living conditions, poor medical treatment, scant
food and frequent floggings, thousands died. Entries on a typical page
from a 1918 state report on causes of death among leased convicts
include: Killed by Convict, Asphyxia from Explosion, Tuberculosis,
Burned by Gas Explosion, Pneumonia, Shot by Foreman, Gangrenous
Appendicitis, Paralysis.
Mr. Cottenham was one of dozens of
convicts who died at the Pratt Mines complex in 1908.
This form of government and corporate forced labor ended in 1928 and slipped into the murk of history, discussed little outside the circles of sociologists and penal historians. But the story of Alabama's trade in human labor endures in minute detail in tens of thousands of pages of government records stored in archives, record rooms and courthouses across the state.
These documents chronicle another chapter in the history of corporate involvement in racial abuses of the last century. A $4.5 billion fund set up by German corporations, after lawsuits and intense diplomatic pressure from the U.S. and others, began making payments last month to the victims of Nazi slave-labor programs during the 1930s and 1940s. Japanese manufacturers have come under criticism for their alleged use of forced labor during the same period.
Swiss banks agreed in 1998 to a $1.25 billion settlement of claims related to the seizure of Jewish assets during the Holocaust.
In the U.S., many companies—real-estate agents that helped maintain rigid housing segregation, insurers and other financial-services companies that red-lined minority areas as off-limits, employers of all stripes that discriminated in hiring—helped maintain traditions of segregation for a century after the end of the Civil War. But in the U.S., recurrent calls for reparations to the descendants of pre-Civil War slaves have made little headway. And there has been scant debate over compensating victims of 20th century racial abuses involving businesses.
The biggest user of forced labor in Alabama at the turn of the century was Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad Co., the U.S. Steel unit that owned the mine where Mr. Cottenham died. Dozens of other companies used convicts, too, many of them now defunct or absorbed into larger businesses. Executives at some of the corporate descendants say they shouldn't be asked to bear responsibility for the actions of executives long dead or the practices of businesses acquired decades ago.
U.S. Steel says it can find no evidence to suggest that the company
ever abused or caused the deaths of convicts in Alabama. U.S. Steel
spokesman Thomas R. Ferrall says that concerns voiced about convict
leasing by Elbert H. Gary, the company's chairman at the time,
helped set the stage for knocking the props out from under
the
system. We think U.S. Steel proper was a positive player in this
history ... was a force for good,
Mr. Ferrall says.
A headstone sits at the edge of what nearby residents call the
U.S. Steel cemetery
on the outskirts of Birmingham,
Ala. Hundreds of sunken graves lie behind the stone, located about 30
feet from a recently closed shaft into one of the company's Pratt
Mines.
The company's early presence in Alabama is still evident a few miles from downtown Birmingham. There, on a hillside overgrown with brush, hundreds of sunken graves litter the ground in haphazard rows. A few plots bear stones. No other sign or path marks the place. Only a muddy scar in the earth — the recently filled-in mouth of a spent coal mine — suggests that this is the cemetery of the Pratt Mines complex.
The convicts were buried out there,
says Willie Clark, an
82-year-old retired coal miner. He grew up in a house that overlooked
the cemetery and the sprawling mine operation that once surrounded
it. I heard my daddy talking about how they would beat the convicts
with pick handles. If they didn't like them, they would kill
them.
He and other older people living in the ramshackle Pratt City
neighborhood surrounding the old mining site still call the graveyard
the U.S. Steel cemetery.
There are no records of those buried
on the hillside. Mr. Cottenham could be among them.
When Mr. Cottenham died in 1908, U.S. Steel was still new to convict leasing. But by then, the system was decades old and a well-oiled machine.
After the Civil War, most Southern states set up similar penal
systems, involving tens of thousands of African-Americans. In those
years, the Southern economy was in ruins. State officials had few
resources, and county governments had even fewer. Leasing prisoners to
private individuals or companies provided revenue and eliminated the
need to build prisons. Forcing convicts to work as part of their
punishment was entirely legal; the 13th amendment to the
U.S. Constitution, adopted in 1865, outlaws involuntary
servitude—except for duly convicted
prisoners.
Convict leasing in other states never reached the scale of Alabama's program. By the turn of the century, most states had ended the practice or soon would because of opposition on humanitarian grounds and from organized labor. Convict leasing also wasn't well-suited to the still largely agrarian economies of most Southern states.
But in Alabama, industrialization was generating a ravenous appetite for the state's coal and iron ore. Production was booming, and unions were attempting to organize free miners. Convicts provided an ideal captive work force: cheap, usually docile, unable to organize and available when free laborers went on strike.
Under the convict-leasing system, government officials agreed with a company such as Tennessee Coal to provide a specific number of prisoners for labor. State officials signed contracts to supply companies with large blocks of men—often hundreds at a time—who had committed felonies. Companies entered into separate deals with county sheriffs to obtain thousands more prisoners who had been convicted of misdemeanors. Of the 67 counties in Alabama, 51 actively leased their convicts, according to one contemporary newspaper report. The companies built their own prisons, fed and clothed the convicts, and supplied guards as they saw fit.
In Barbour County, in the cotton country of southern Alabama, nearly 700 men were leased between June 1891 and November 1903, most for $6 a month, according to the leatherbound Convict Record still kept in the courthouse basement. Most were sent to mines operated by Tennessee Coal or Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co., another major industrial presence in Birmingham.
Sheriffs, deputies and some court officials derived most of their compensation from fees charged to convicts for each step in their own arrest, conviction and shipment to a private company. That gave sheriffs an incentive to arrest and obtain convictions of as many people as possible. They also had an incentive to feed the prisoners as little as possible, since they could pocket the difference between what the state paid them and what they spent to maintain the convicts while in their custody. Some convicts had enough money to pay the fees themselves and gain their freedom; the many who didn't were instead put to work. Company lease payments for the convicts' time at hard labor then were used to cover the fees.
In 1902 and 1903, the only period for which a complete prisoner ledger survives for Jefferson County, where Birmingham is located, local officials prosecuted more than 3,000 misdemeanor cases, the great majority of them yielding a convict to work in a Sloss-Sheffield mine.
One of those convicts was John Clarke, a black miner convicted of
gaming
on April 11, 1903. Unable to pay, he ended up at the
Sloss-Sheffield mines. Working off the fine would take 10 days. Fees
for the sheriff, the county clerk and even the witnesses who testified
in the case required that Mr. Clarke serve an additional 104 days in
the mines. Sloss-Sheffield acquired him at a rate of $9 a month,
Jefferson County records show. One month and three days later, he was
dead, crushed by falling rock,
according to the Alabama Board
of Inspectors of Convicts, the agency that monitored the system.
In an 1898 convict-board report, the largest category in a table
listing charges on which county convicts were imprisoned was Not
given.
In a 1902 report, one man was in the mines for
disturbing females on railroad car.
More than a dozen were
incarcerated for abusive and obscene language.
Twenty convicts
were digging coal for adultery, 29 for gambling. At any given time,
the convict board's reports show dozens of prisoners at labor for
riding a freight train without paying for a ticket. In 1914,
convict-board records show, five black men were in prison for
allegedly having sex with white women.
In 1895, Thomas Parke, the health officer for Jefferson County, investigated conditions at Sloss-Sheffield's Coalburg prison mine. There, Dr. Parke found 1,926 prisoners at toil. Hundreds had been charged with vagrancy, gambling, carrying a concealed weapon or other minor offenses, he reported. In many cases, no specific charges were recorded at all. Dr. Parke observed that many convicts had been arrested for minor infractions, fined $5 or $10 and, unable to pay, leased for 20 days to Sloss-Sheffield to cover the fine. Like Mr. Clarke, most of those prisoners then had another year or more tacked on to their sentences to cover fees owed to the sheriff, the clerk and the witnesses involved in prosecuting them.
The largest portion of the prisoners are sentenced for slight
offenses and sent to prison for want of money to pay the fines and
costs. ... They are not criminals,
Dr. Parke wrote in his formal
report. He asked whether a sovereign state can afford to send her
citizens, for slight offenses, to a prison where, in the nature of
things, a large number are condemned to die.
The company's explanation for the lethal conditions in its convict
mines: The negro dies faster,
Sloss-Sheffield's president
wrote in a letter to local officials a month later.
At Sloss-Sheffield's Flat Top mine a few miles north of
Birmingham, convicts reached the mine by shuffling through a long,
low-ceilinged shaft extending from inside the walls of their prison
compound, according to a 1904 map of the site. A special committee of
the Alabama Legislature studying the convict system in 1889 reported
that many convicts in the coal mines ... have not seen the sun
shine for months.
Another state inspector reported that at the
Flat Top mine prison, which had 165 inmates, there were 137
floggings
with a whip in one month of 1899.
In a 1904 report to acting Gov. Russell Cunningham, the state's
top prison official, J.M. Carmichael, reported that Sloss-Sheffield
had been required to move its prison
at the Flat Top mine to a
new location because of the death rate at the prison formerly
occupied by them.
Mr. Carmichael added: Hundreds and hundreds
of persons are taken before the inferior courts of the country, tried
and sentenced to hard labor for the county, who would never be
arrested except for the matter of fees involved. This is a condition
inexcusable, not to say shameful.
At the Pratt Mines complex where Mr. Cottenham later died, an observer
for a special Alabama legislative committee in 1897 wrote a report
describing 1,117 convicts, many wholly unfit for the work,
at
labor in the shaft. The men worked standing in pools of putrid
water. Gas from the miners' headlamps and smoke from blasts of
dynamite and gun powder choked the mine.
The convict board's death registers show that in the final decade
of the 19th century, large numbers of men died when diarrhea and
dysentery periodically swept through the Pratt Mines. Citing
inadequate food, beatings of miners and unsanitary conditions, state
inspectors periodically issued reports criticizing the mine's
operators, initially Pratt Coal & Coke Co. and later Tennessee
Coal, which acquired Pratt Coal in the late 1800s. An 1889 report by
Alabama legislators reported an immense amount of whipping
of
inmates at Pratt and other prison mines. An 1890 report from the
convict inspectors board described more sickness
at the Pratt
Mines than any other place.
Men were priced depending on their health and their ability to dig
coal. Under state rules adopted in 1901, a first class
prisoner
had to cut and load into mine cars four tons of coal a day to avoid
being whipped. The weakest inmates, labeled fourth class
or
dead hands,
were required to produce at least one ton a day. A
first-class state convict cost Tennessee Coal $18.50 a month in 1897,
according to a prison board financial report. A dead hand cost
$9. Twenty years later, the monthly rates had risen to $93.12 per
month for the strongest workers and $63.12 for the weakest.
As revenue from the lease system rose, companies took over nearly all
the penal functions of the state. The Alabama legislature enacted
elaborate statutes in the late 1800s regulating convict leases. The
rules required companies to pay a fine of $150 a head for
escapees. Company guards were empowered to shoot prisoners attempting
to flee and, well into the 20th century, to strip disobedient convicts
naked and whip them. State regulations mandated that a company
decently
inter any corpse not claimed by the prisoner's
family at a mine cemetery.
The demand for labor and fees has become so great that most of them
now go to the mines where many of them are unfit for such labor;
consequently it is not long before they pass from this earth,
wrote Shirley Bragg, president of the Board of Inspectors of Convicts,
in a September 1906 report to Alabama's governor. Is it not the
duty of the State to see that proper treatment is accorded these poor
defenseless creatures, many of whom ought never have been arrested and
tried at all?
This is the world U.S. Steel entered in 1907 when it bought Tennessee Coal. It was a big deal, engineered by Wall Street banker J. Pierpont Morgan and requiring the personal approval of President Theodore Roosevelt. Tennessee Coal was a huge enterprise that had used slaves to operate its mines in Tennessee during the Civil War, according to a 1966 doctoral thesis on the company written by Justin Fuller, an Alabama historian.
U.S. Steel Chairman Elbert H. Gary was widely regarded at the time as
a leader in progressive labor practices and business ethics. A former
county judge after whom the steel city of Gary, Ind., was named,
Mr. Gary told the author of a 1925 biography that he ordered an
immediate end to the use of convicts as soon as he learned of the
practice. Think of that!
Mr. Gary says in The Story of
Steel,
by Ida Tarbell. I, an Abolitionist from childhood, at
the head of a concern working negroes in a chain gang. ... I won't
stand for it.
Mr. Gary moved quickly to assert control over Tennessee Coal,
installing his own president of the unit. In testimony during a 1913
investigation into alleged corruption in Alabama's convict-leasing
bureaucracy, U.S. Steel executives, who weren't the subject of the
investigation, said Mr. Gary had directed them to abandon convict
leasing as soon as possible.
Judge Gary said whether the
hire of convicts was a good thing or a bad thing that he didn't
care to be connected with the penal system of the State of
Alabama,
Walker Percy, then division counsel for Tennessee Coal,
testified.
Still, according to state records and an internal company memo provided by U.S. Steel, the company continued to use more than 700 convicts already in the custody of Tennessee Coal under state and county contracts that weren't scheduled to expire for four more years. The company also entered into unspecified new convict-labor contracts after 1907, according to the company memo, written in 1913.
It isn't clear—and U.S. Steel today says it doesn't know — why the chairman's order to stop using forced labor in Alabama wasn't carried out promptly. Newspaper accounts and state records from the time indicate that Alabama officials were aware that Tennessee Coal was considering abandoning the practice, beginning immediately after the merger with U.S. Steel. In testimony from the 1913 inquiry, company executives cited the costs and logistics of recruiting and building housing for free miners as impediments to ending the use of convicts.
Whatever the reason, J.L. Walthall, the Shelby County sheriff who arrested Mr. Cottenham, and other law-enforcement officials continued regularly to ship convicts to the Pratt Mines. On Nov. 2, 1907, Sheriff Walthall received $373.50 from fees related to 65 cases, according to a county ledger. Adjusted for inflation, that figure would equal about $7,000 today.
The following February, a wave of pneumonia and tuberculosis killed
nine miners at the Pratt Mines. When Mr. Cottenham arrived from the
Shelby County jail in April, Sheriff Walthall had already shipped more
than 60 convicts to the Pratt Mines in the previous 12 months,
according to his records, now stored in a county building a few blocks
from the old stone courthouse in Columbiana. In March, six more
convicts died of tuberculosis, including Mr. Roberson, the Shelby
County man convicted of assault with a stick.
Mr. Cottenham, the youngest of nine children born to a widowed former
slave named Mary Cottenham, died Aug. 15, after a 13-day illness,
according to his death certificate. Nine others were killed at the
mine on Nov. 16. The cause listed in convict-board records was
asphyxiation.
A newspaper report at the time said 50 black
convicts had set fire to the mine and attempted to escape during the
ensuing chaos. Flames and collapsing coal trapped scores of convicts
as the fire incinerated timbers holding up the roof of the mine. Those
who died were roasted and suffocated,
the paper reported.
By the end of the year—the first full year of U.S. Steel control—58 convicts had died in the Pratt Mines.
Mortality rates gradually declined at the U.S. Steel operations as the
company improved conditions. U.S. Steel continued to run a recently
constructed, more sanitary prison for its No. 12 mine, where only
convicts worked. State inspectors rated one U.S. Steel prison the
best in the state.
In 1911, the number of deaths fell to 18.
But despite Judge Gary's pronouncements, nothing in the records indicates that U.S. Steel took any direct action to end its involvement in convict leasing. In the middle of 1911, for reasons that aren't specified in extant documents, Alabama officials began cutting the number of men convicted of state crimes that it supplied to U.S. Steel. Based on testimony in the 1913 investigation and a series of letters and memos transcribed into the record of that inquiry, U.S. Steel resisted giving up the prisoners under its control in the mines.
In a Nov. 24, 1911, letter to the convict board that was copied to
Alabama Gov. Braxton Comer, George C. Crawford, president of Tennessee
Coal, said the company's past treatment of convicts reflects
credit upon the humanity and intelligence
of those in charge of
the prisoners. The company planned to end its use of convicts
eventually, he wrote, but couldn't yet do so without detriment
to our operations.
Mr. Crawford added that U.S. Steel's
chief inducement for the hiring of convicts was the certainty of a
supply of coal for our manufacturing operations in the contingency of
labor troubles.
In June, when the number of convicts under lease from the state fell
below the 400 men Alabama was obligated to provide at any one time,
Tennessee Coal Vice President F.H. Crockard wrote convict bureau
President James Oakley to complain, asking him for 30 or 40 more
men,
according to testimony during the 1913 inquiry. When the
number of state prisoners at the company's disposal fell below 300
later that summer, the company's general mine superintendent, E.H.
Coxe, paid a personal visit to Mr. Oakley to demand more convicts,
according to the records.
As the end of Tennessee Coal's convict lease with the state approached in 1911, the company told Alabama officials that it wanted to begin negotiations to extend the contract for at least another year. The state responded that it intended to lease all the convicts to another mining company, ostensibly because it believed the other company would pay more for the prisoners.
I wish to enter a very vigorous protest against this action, as it
is manifestly unfair to us to take the men from us,
wrote Mr. Coxe
in a Sept. 25, 1911, letter to the official in charge of
convicts. We are paying the State a great big price for these
convicts, and it is certainly a hardship on us to deplete our
organization.
State officials were unswayed. On Jan. 1, 1912, state convicts held at the Pratt Mines were marched out under guard and turned over to overseers at Pratt Consolidated, an unrelated mining company, and immediately sent into that company's Banner mine. There, nine months earlier, a giant explosion and fire had killed nearly 130 convicts, all but a dozen of whom were black, according to the state's death records for that year.
The end of U.S. Steel's convict leases with the state in effect marked the beginning of the end of the company's involvement in the system. The records show that at least until late 1912, the company was using some county convicts. But after that year, no prisoners appear to have been leased by U.S. Steel. The Pratt Mines stayed open, worked by free miners.
Convict leasing, however, persisted. By 1910, as many as 5,000 state and county prisoners were under lease in Alabama at any given time. Thousands of African-American men sentenced to terms of less than a year were being cycled through the system. The threat of arrest and forced labor had become a fixture of black life in many rural areas of Alabama.
In Barbour County, that threat took the form of brothers William
M. and Robert B. Teal. In 1911, when term-limit law forced William to
give up his job as sheriff, Robert was elected to the job, and William
became chief deputy. The brothers just swapped places,
according to the local newspaper.
Based on jail records the brothers kept, the Teals typically arrested fewer than 20 people a month. Then suddenly, every few months, dozens of minor offenders were rounded up over a few days, charged with vagrancy, alcohol violations or other minor offenses. Nearly all were sentenced to hard labor and shipped to a mine within 10 days.
One day in the summer of 1912, Edwin Collins was being held in the county jail on the charge of eavesdropping. Another black man, Josia Marcia, was in for allegedly having sexual relations with a white woman. Louis Denham was jailed for vagrancy. Housed with them were Ad Rumph, Henry Demas, Jackson Daniels and Peter Ford, four African-American men accused in the murder of a sharecropper named George Blue.
Whatever evidence was presented against the various defendants has been lost, along with any record of their trials or whether the men had access to attorneys. By fall, though, all had been convicted and sentenced to varying terms of hard labor. Each of the accused murderers received between 20 years and life. Mr. Collins, the eavesdropper, received six months of hard labor; Mr. Denham, the vagrant, got five months. No sentence was recorded for Mr. Marcia.
The African-American men in the Barbour County jail bore all the
outward signs of grinding poverty. Will Miller, charged with a
separate murder, was logged into the state's Descriptive Record as
having one good tooth on top,
shot through top of right
shoulder,
badly burnt on back left leg.
Mr. Demas, 5-foot-9 and 150 pounds, bore scars across his
frame—the most prominent a six-inch gash stretching from above
his left eye down the side of his face. Messrs. Collins and Denham
apparently survived their terms; convict-board death records don't
mention them. Mr. Miller died the following April in a Pratt
Consolidated mine, killed by convict,
according to
convict-board records. In November 1916, Mr. Rumph died of
tuberculosis in a state prison hospital. Mr. Demas died the following
month of pneumonia, at Pratt Consolidated's Banner
mine. Mr. Daniels was killed July 27, 1917, while attempting to escape
from the Sloss-Sheffield mine at Flat Top.
By the 1920s, state officials, under growing humanitarian and union
pressures, were moving to end the worst abuses of the convict-leasing
system, eventually taking more direct control of the supervision and
punishment of convicts, though the convicts continued to work for
companies. Despite the state's attempted reforms, monthly memos
written by Glenn Andrews, a state medical inspector, record scores of
lashings for offenses such as cursing, failure to dig the daily quota
of coal and disobedience.
In one entry, two black inmates,
Ernest Hallman and R.B. Green, received five lashes each on March 12,
1925, for disobedience.
Others were put in chains and given up
to a dozen lashes for not working.
Reforms were often cursory, such as requiring that men be clothed
during their lashings. The fee system remained in force. Our jails
are money-making machines,
wrote state prison inspector
W.H. Oates, in a 1922 report.
In 1924, a white convict named James Knox died shortly after he was leased to Sloss-Sheffield to work in the mines. The cause of death stated on his death certificate was suicide. Later, a series of newspaper reports alleged that a coroner had determined that Mr. Knox died of heart failure while being tortured by guards, who held him upside down in a barrel of water. The resulting public outrage finally pushed state officials to ban the use of leased convict labor entirely in 1928, roughly six decades after it began.
Tallying the total number of convicts leased to companies in Alabama during the 60 years the system prevailed is impossible. Record-keeping deteriorated in the system's last decade, as much larger numbers of men were arrested. State officials took a complete headcount of prisoners only once every four years, meaning tens of thousands of prisoners entered and left the forced-labor system without ever being added to the totals.
Records of the headcounts, compiled in the convict board's periodic reports, show that at least 40,000 state prisoners were leased to private enterprises, most of them between 1900 and 1922. The relatively few records the convict board kept on the county system show that more than 20,000 additional prisoners were leased from local jails between 1890 and 1914. In the years that followed, the number of arrests by sheriffs ballooned—averaging 30,000 a year in 1924, 1925 and 1926—though state-prison-inspector records don't indicate how many of those prisoners were leased to companies. In the end, the total number of those sent into the mines over the 60-year span of the system probably far exceeded 100,000.
The number of convicts who died while in the custody of private companies is more difficult to determine. The convict-board records show nearly 4,000 fatalities in the years leading up to 1918. Complete death records weren't maintained after that. Based on the numbers that do exist, annual mortality rates among the prisoners ranged from 3% to more than 25%.
The convict board's records show that Alabama's forced-labor system generated nearly $17 million for the state government alone—or between $225 million and $285 million in today's dollars—in the first two decades of the century. The total amount collected by counties isn't known. A Birmingham newspaper reported in 1908 that U.S. Steel's unit in Alabama paid Jefferson County about $60,000 ($1.1 million in today's dollars) for county convicts in that year, under a four-year contract between the company and local officials.
Sloss-Sheffield continued leasing convicts until at least 1926. In 1952, the company was merged into U.S. Pipe & Foundry, another Birmingham industrial group, which was in turn acquired in 1969 by Jim Walter Corp., a Tampa, Fla., industrial company. Now called Walter Industries, the company is best-known as a manufacturer of inexpensive prefabricated homes.
Obviously, this was a dark chapter for U.S. business,
says Kyle
Parks, a spokesman for Walter Industries. Certainly no company
today could even conceive of this kind of practice.
Pratt Consolidated used convict labor until the abolition of the
system. By then, the company had merged with Alabama By-Products
Corp. The combined entity merged 60 years later with what is now
Drummond Coal Co., a privately held coal and real-estate company based
in Jasper, Ala., with mining operations in Alabama and South
America. I don't know how we could be tied back to something
that happened in the early part of the century,
says Drummond
spokesman Mike Tracy. Drummond wasn't even founded then.
U.S. Steel executives say that whatever happened at the company's
Alabama mines long ago, it would be impossible to appropriately assign
responsibility for any corporation's actions in so remote an
era. Is it fair in fact to punish people who are living today, who
have certain assets they might have inherited from others, or
corporate assets that have been passed on?
says Richard F. Lerach,
U.S. Steel's assistant general counsel. You can get to a
situation where there is such a passage of time that it simply
doesn't make sense and is not fair.
The company says it knows almost nothing about the U.S. Steel
cemetery
near where Willie Clark, the retired miner, grew
up. U.S. Steel still owns the burial ground, and it obtained a
cemetery property-tax exemption on the site in 1997. But officials say
they are unable to locate records of burials there or of the company
prison that once stood nearby. The only reference to the graveyard in
surviving corporate documents, they say, is a map of the property
marked with the notation Negro Cemetery.
Company officials
theorize that the graveyard was an informal burial area used by
African-American families living nearby, with no formal connection to
U.S. Steel.
Are there convicts on that site? Possibly, quite possibly,
says
Mr. Ferrall, the company spokesman. But I am unable to tell you
that there are.
Over the decades, Birmingham spread to surround the site: low-rent apartments on one side, shabby storefronts on another, an industrial site, a city park. In 1994, industrial archaeologist Jack Bergstresser stumbled across the cemetery while conducting a survey for the federal government to map the remains of nearby coke ovens, mine shafts and railroad lines.
Mr. Clark says that as a boy, he and other youngsters played among the unmarked graves, picking blackberries from the thorny vines that grew wild between the plots. Burials were rare by then. The older graves had begun to collapse, he says, exposing jumbles of human bones.
Though in his ninth decade, Mr. Clark, more than 6 feet tall, can still walk to the site from his home nearby and point out where the old mine shafts reached the surface and where dozens of company houses once stood.
What can you do about it now?
he says, stepping gingerly
through the trees and undergrowth. But the company ... ought to
clean that land up, or turn it back over to the city or somebody else
who can make some use of it, take care of it.