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- The following is excerpted from _A History of the Hemp Industry in Kentucky_
- (Lexington: University of Kentucky, 1951), pp. 4, 24-30, 132-40, 196.
-
- SLAVERY IN THE HEMP INDUSTRY
- James F. Hopkins
-
- ... Without hemp, slavery might not have flourished in Kentucky, since other
- agricultural products of the state were not conducive to the extensive use
- of bondsmen. On the hemp farm and in the hemp factories the need for
- laborers was filled to a large extent by the use of Negro slaves, and it is
- a significant fact that the heaviest concentration of slavery was in the
- hemp producing area. Perhaps the nearest approach in Kentucky to the
- plantation on the southern scale was the large Bluegrass farm upon which
- hemp was one of the major crops and where virtually all manual labor was
- performed by slaves. On the other hand, since hemp does not require as much
- attention as must be given to cotton, the number of Negroes on a Kentucky
- farm was usually far less than the number necessary on a cotton plantation
- of comparable size. Consequently, owing to their high birth rate, the
- slaves increased faster than they were needed. Sale of surplus blacks to
- the lower South brought welcome revenue to Kentucky and led to the unwelcome
- charge that peopled in the state were engaged in the breeding of Negroes for
- market.
-
- Kentuckians sometimes referred to hemp as a "nigger crop," owing to a belief
- that no one understood its eccentricities as well or was as expert in
- handling it as the Negro. A Lexingtonian stated in 1836 that it was almost
- impossible to hire workmen to break a crop of hemp because the work was
- "very dirty, and so laborious that scarcely any white man will work at it,"
- and he continued by saying that the task was done entirely by slave labor.
- Among the slaves, the men held a monopoly on all the tasks connected with
- the production of fiber because, in the words of this observer, "Negro women
- cannot labor at hemp at all, and are scarcely worth anything." Another
- commentator a few years later concluded that "none but our strong able negro
- men can handle it to advantage." To a considerable extent that belief was
- based on fact, for the tasks connected with hemp culture were for the most
- part laborious and sometimes unpleasant, and such work was given to the
- slave or, after the Civil War, to the Negro tenant or "hired hand." As long
- as hemp was produced in the state, at least certain types of work, such as
- breaking the stalks, were largely reserved for the Negro. After years of
- repetition of these tasks, he did become expert at their performance, though
- the complaint was sometimes made that he was undependable. Among the slaves
- most in demand in Kentucky were those who were able to work in manufacturing
- establishments where hemp was turned into bale rope and bagging, but the
- agricultural skill which most contributed to the value of the Negro was the
- ability to hackle hemp fiber in preparing it for market.
-
- On many farms, of course, neither slaves nor, later, freedmen were available
- or desired, and in such cases the men of the family performed all tasks for
- themselves. If a landowner was not willing to do this work and would not
- depend on slaves, he could follow the example of Nathaniel Hart of Woodford
- County, who explained his decision as follows: For several years I turned
- my attention to the raising slaves were slight from 1830 to 1860. . . .
-
- THE FACTORIES IN OPERATION
-
- In the 1830's new machinery was introduced in the manufacturing of bale rope
- and bagging in Kentucky, though for years afterward many establishments
- continued using more primitive methods, depending on hand labor to do most
- of the work. Rope-making, before the industry was mechanized, was performed
- in a long, narrow building called a "ropewalk," whose dimensions varied from
- one establishment to another. A description written in 1873, possibly
- referring primarily to the walks found in New England, stated that they were
- "twelve or thirteen hundred feet in length." John B. McIlvaine's cordage
- factory in Carlisle, Kentucky, extended across "the whole square on Water
- street, from Main Cross to Second Cross," and Charles W. Turston's walk in
- Louisville was about 26 feet wide and 570 feet long in 1837 and seems to
- have been extended to 770 feet by 1849.
-
- The method of manufacturing has been described as follows:
-
- The first part of the process of rope making by hand, is
- that of spinning the yarns or threads, which is done in a
- manner analogous to that of ordinary spinning. The spinner
- carries a bundle of dressed hemp round his waist; the two ends
- of the bundle being assembled in front. Having drawn out a
- proper number of fibers with his hand, he twists them with
- his fingers, and fixing this twisted part to the hook of the
- whirl, which is driven by a wheel put in motion by an assistant,
- he walks backwards down the rope walk, the twisted part always
- serving to draw out more fibers from the bundle around his
- waist. . . . The spinner takes care that these fibers are
- equably supplied, and that they always enter the twisted parts
- by their ends, and never by their middle. As soon as he has
- reached the termination of the walk, a second spinner takes the
- yarn off the whirl, and gives it to another person to put upon
- a reel, while he himself attaches his own hemp to the whirl
- hook, and proceeds down the walk. When a person at the reel
- begins to turn, the first spinner, who had completed his yarn,
- holds it firmly at the end, and advances slowly up the walk,
- while the reel is turning, keeping it equally tight all the
- way, till he reaches the reel, where he waits till the second
- spinner takes his yarn off the whirl hook, and joins it to the
- end of that of the first spinner, in order that it may follow it
- on the reel.
-
- The next step in ropemaking was to "warp" the yarns or to stretch all of
- them to the same length and at the same time to put a "slight turn or twist"
- in them. If the cordage was intended for marine use, it was wound from one
- reel to another, meanwhile passing through a vessel containing boiling tar.
- If "white work" was desired, the tar was omitted. Finally, the last step,
- called "laying the cordage," was carried out:
-
- For this purpose two or more yarns are attached at one end
- to a hook. The hook is then turned the contrary way from the
- twist of the individual yarn, and thus forms what is called a
- strand. Three strands, sometimes four, besides a central one,
- are then stretched at length, and attached at one end to three
- contiguous but separate hooks, but at the other end to a single
- hook; and the process of combining them together, which is
- effected by turning the single hook in a direction contrary to
- that of the other three, consists in so regulating the progress
- of the twists of the strands round their common axis, that the
- three strands receive separately as their opposite ends just as
- much twist as is taken out of them by their twisting the contrary
- way, in the process of combination.
-
- During the first third of the nineteenth century most of the rope made in
- Kentucky was spun and twisted by hand and by the use of horse power at one
- end of the walk. In 1838 David Myerle, formerly of the firm of tiers and
- Myerle, Philadelphia, established upon a new principle a large steam-driven
- factory at Louisville. The method of manufacture had been invented earlier
- by Robert Graves of Boston, from whom Myerle had bought the patent right,
- and it:
-
- consisted, in part, in winding the threads upon revolving
- spools, from which they were conducted through a cast-iron
- tube of a diameter suitable for the size of rope required.
- In the opinion of officers of the United States navy and
- others the cordage made by the Graves machinery was stronger
- than that made by the old method.
-
- Myerle's establishment, called the Washington Steam Patent Cordage Factory,"
- included several buildings and was valued by him at $28,650. The ropewalk,
- housed in a frame building one story high, was 1,100 feet long and 25 feet
- wide. Down the length of the walk ran tracks on which the patented
- machinery operated as it spun the yearns and twisted them into rope. Three
- tons of cordage per day, or at least 600 tons annually, could be
- manufactured by this machinery.
-
- A factory for making bagging by machinery was established in Newport in
- 1832. Prior to that time most of the bagging had been made upon the old
- hand looms, but the new machines turned out a product that was claimed to be
- superior to that woven by manual labor. The cloth was strong, compact,
- uniform in texture, and consistently weighed twenty-six ounces to the yard.
- As first set up, the manufactory could process 450 tons of hemp annually,
- and the owners stated their intention shortly to add other machinery for
- making Kentucky jeans. The writer who described this plant said that "no
- doubt is entertained now of the practical success of this mode of
- manufacturing bagging of hemp, though heretofore it has been considered as a
- visionary speculation." In 1835 this enterprise employed two hundred
- workmen and was manufacturing wool and cotton in addition to hemp. Its
- total annual output was valued at over a quarter of a million dollars. At
- the same time a factory located at Covington was producing $25,000 worth of
- finished hempen goods each year.
-
- Andrew Caldwell of Lexington invented, and in 1841 began the operation of,
- machinery which received raw fiber, hackled it, spun it into thread, and
- then wove it into bagging. He claimed that its output was thirty yards per
- hour, which was far more than any other loom of the time could produce.
- Caldwell also professed to be able to manufacture bagging for three cents a
- yard, or at a saving of five or six cents over the cost of other methods of
- manufacturing. Most of the innovations in the manufacturing of hemp were
- adopted slowly by those engaged in the industry, probably because most of
- the changes did not yield the results claimed for them. Even in 1860 only a
- few factories were run by steam, most of them relied on horse power, and a
- few were still operated by hand.
-
- Only a comparatively few manufacturers specialized in either bale rope or
- bagging, and the majority of them produced both in their factories. One of
- the larger establishments, operated by Gratz and Bruce in Lexington,
- included for the manufacture of bagging a "Calender and Hemp House, capable
- of storing 60 tons of Hemp;" a hackling house 18 feet wide and 30 feet long;
- a "Factory" 195 feet long, 50 feet wide, and two stories high, "calculated
- for 12 spinners each story;" and, attached to the factory, a weaving house
- which contained spindles and looms. For making rope the company had a brick
- hemp house 40 feet long, 50 feet wide, and two stories high, capable of
- storing 200 tons of hemp, a brick spinning house 180 feet long and 32 feet
- wide, and a ropewalk "extending 100 fathom," or 600 feet.
-
- Slave labor was used to a large extent in the manufacture of hemp, the
- Negroes being owned by the operator of the business or hired by him for a
- period of time. In either case the task work plan was used to promote
- diligence, and the slave who applied himself could earn in the 1850's two or
- three dollars per week which he was free to spend as he chose. The price
- paid for the hire of such laborers varied according to the ability of the
- slave. In Louisville in 1834 one Negro, George, was hired for $30 per year,
- whereas Henry cost his employer $80 for the same period of time. Two years
- later the extremes were George, at $40, and Sullivan, at $180. "The
- exceedingly low price of twenty-five cents per day," was the figure set in
- 1836 by the Nicholasville manufacturer who, wishing to retire from business,
- offered to sell his factory and hire out his "thirty old hands well skilled
- in the manufacture of Hemp." Wishing to protect insofar as possible the
- valuable property he was hiring to another man, the owner of a slave
- sometimes required a contract which obligated the employer to treat the
- laborer well, clothe and feed him, "pay his taxes & physician Bill Should
- the Same be necessary, & return the Boy as usual well clothed at the End of
- the time" for which he was hired. Early in the nineteenth century Thomas
- Bodley and Company of Lexington wanted to hire ten Negro boys, from 12 to 15
- years of age, and five men, from 17 to 25, "the boys to spin & the men to
- weave and heckle in a Coarse Linen Manufactory." In the same year Tom, a
- ropemaker by trade, ran away from his master in Danville, and shortly
- afterward Thomas H. Pindell advertised a desire to purchase or hire several
- Negro boys, age 14 to 18, to work in a ropewalk. When John W. Hunt of
- Lexington decided to retire from the manufacture of bagging, he advertised
- an auction sale of 60 men, boys and women, "all the Negroes employed in said
- manufactory." Before 1861 only a few women were employed in the factories,
- where they may have served as cooks and housekeepers for the slaves who were
- housed and fed on the premises.
-
- David Myerle, who employed both whites and blacks at his factory near
- Louisville, stated that the cost of manufacturing cordage was one-third less
- with slave labor. Others must have been of somewhat the same opinion, since
- large numbers of Negroes were used in the factories. On the other hand
- there were certain disadvantages, one of which was the poor quality of
- product turned out by slave labor. Olmsted noted that the work was done
- "very crudely," and plantation owners complained frequently of the quality
- of Kentucky bailing materials. Additional troubles which faced the employer
- of slave labor in the factories are referred to in the following letter
- written by a foreman to his absent employer:
-
- I announce to you with pleasure, that we are doing as
- well I believe as could be expected, we have had manny of the
- boy's sick, and at this time there is three of the weavers off
- sick, we have .... from 2 to 3 of the spinners constantly off
- since you left home there complaints has been much as usual
- Roy has been sick ever since you started and I doubt very
- much wheather he lives much longer or not he is very low with
- an inflammation of the lungs. The boy's has all behaved well
- excepting Umphry who got offended and started off one evening
- and was caught and brought home the next night. I am in hopes
- that we shall do as well as if you were with us. . . . I this
- day finished making Mr. Colemans Eight thousand three hundred
- & eighteen yards of bagging which should of finished last week
- if health had been on our side.
-
- Other manufacturers of hemp also found that their workmen were susceptible
- to some kind of ailment of the lungs. Dr. J.L. Phythian, who served as
- physician at the state penitentiary during the Civil War, applied the name
- "hemp pneumonia" to what he described as "a very rapid and fatal disease"
- which seemed to affect mainly those prisoners employed in hackling the
- fiber. He attributed the trouble to "fine particles of dust settling upon
- and irritating the body" and prescribed, with complete success according to
- his own report, a thorough bath before bedtime for each person engaged in
- that work.
-
- One Kentucky manufacturer who had no worries regarding the purchase or hire
- of laborers was the keeper of the state penitentiary, who in the 1830's
- ceased being a salaried officer and became a contractor who guaranteed a
- minimum sum to the state in return for the labor of the prisoners. Bagging
- and rope became the most important products of the institution, and the
- extent to which they were manufactured is indicated by a statement issued in
- 1844 which showed $14,310.47 in cash received from the sale of these
- commodities and $9,000.14 worth of goods still unsold in the hands of
- commission merchants. The keeper maintained that the quality of his bale
- rope and bagging was better than that obtainable elsewhere, and that it
- "always commanded the highest market price, and met with ready sale."
-
- When its hemp manufactories burned in 1844, the penitentiary suffered a loss
- which occurred frequently among other participants in the industry. The dry
- fiber was highly inflammable, and after it started burning the fire was
- almost inextinguishable. When the ropewalk owned by Hart and Dodge in
- Lexington burned in 1806, the fire started at ten o'clock in the evening.
- Flakes of burning fiber, rising in the updraft, covered houses a quarter of
- a mile distant, and the people carried water all night in order to protect
- their property. At nine o'clock the next morning a breeze sprang up, the
- smoldering mass of hemp and ashes again burst into flames, and several
- people were injured in fighting the fire.
-
- In 1812 John W. Hunt's factory was burned for the second time, and two Negro
- boys, both under fifteen years old, were charged with the serious crime of
- arson. They were tried, sentenced to be hanged, and finally reprieved by
- the governor because of their age and "some representations relative to the
- testimony" which had been made to him. At least one newspaper questioned
- the wisdom of the pardon, stating that the boys had been found guilty after
- a fair trial and that an example should have been made of them. The paper
- pointed out that no less than nine factories had burned within a short time,
- inferred that incendiarism had been responsible, and stressed the fact that
- no one had been punished.
-
- In a small town a fire which destroyed a hemp factory injured not only the
- proprietor but also the whole community, for often it was the only industry
- located there. One disastrous fire consumed the bagging and bale rope
- factory of Samuel S. Smith and Company in Carlisle, Nicholas County, in
- 1832. According to an eyewitness, who wrote his account years afterward,
- the alarm was given at ten o'clock at night, and the town's new fire engine
- rushed into action; "but alas! owing to the great headway it had obtained,
- and the perishable nature of the buildings and their contents, nothing could
- be done to arrest the fire in its stronghold." The lasting effect of this
- disaster was noted by the same writer: "It has always been the misfortune
- of Carlisle that no manufactories of any kind to amount to anything have
- ever been established here since the burning of the hemp factory in 1832."
-
- So frequently did fires occur, and so great was the danger, that insurance
- rates were higher "on buildings in which are usually deposited considerable
- quantities of hemp or flax" than on any other type of structure. The rates
- charged by the Kentucky Mutual Assurance Society in 1814 on buildings used
- for the storage of hemp were approximately three times as high as those
- levied on less combustible property. Within the category paying the highest
- rates there were also differences. Three per cent was charged on hemp
- houses constructed of brick, slate, or tile, 4 per cent on brick veneer, 5
- per cent when the first floor was constructed of brick or stone and the
- second of wood, and 6 per cent on wooden buildings.
-
- PROFITS
-
- In times of stress, such as the period following the War of 1812, the
- manufacture of hemp was not a profitable venture, and many people who tried
- it were forced to retire from the business. In normal years, however, after
- the adoption of protective duties on hempen goods, the Kentucky manufacturer
- derived a healthy profit from his enterprise. Bale rope and bagging were
- the main products, although some manufacturers, including David Myerle in
- 1838 and the Turston family of Louisville, devoted much of their energies to
- turning out cordage for the river and ocean trade, and many produced
- miscellaneous items, as plow lines, bed cords, twine and Kentucky jeans, in
- addition to baling materials.
-
- The profits derived from factories operated by hand, by horsepower, and by
- steam may be illustrated by a few specific examples. Thorn and Company of
- Boyle County in 1850 operated with hand labor a ropewalk valued at $2,000.
- The cost of the 40 tons of hemp which it consumed annually was estimated to
- be $3,000, and the wages averaged $56 per month, or $672 for the year. The
- product, 30,000 pounds of rope, was valued at $5,000. The difference
- between the value of the product and the cost of raw material and labor was
- $21,328, a profit which, if it was clear, was greater than the capital
- invested in the enterprise. A similar situation existed at the rope factory
- of Nicholas Arthur of Mason County, which was operated by horse power and
- which was worth $6,000. Arthur's establishment processed 300 tons of fiber
- per year, employed 15 workers whose wages were valued at $3,600 annually,
- and turned out 600,000 pounds of rope worth $41,000. The apparent profit
- was therefore $7,400, which again was more than the valuation of the
- property. Chapman Coleman and Company, who operated a steam-driven ropewalk
- in Jefferson County, processed 430 tons of hemp which cost $40,000, worked
- 60 Negroes for an estimated wage of $12,000 for the year, and produced 8,000
- coils of rope with a market value of $65,000. In this case the profit,
- $13,000, though large, was much less than the capital invested in the
- concern, $30,000. . . .
-
- Typed in by THE GROW DOCTOR, Gastown,BC. for MIDEALITE PRODUCTIONS NORTHSIDE
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- Reformatted 3/9/93 by Chris Klausmeier cklausme@jarthur.claremont.edu
-