Kevin Waite speaks Tuesday at Redlands’ A.K. Smiley Library about his research into slavery in the West during the 1850s. Despite being a free state, California was home to up to 1,500 Black slaves, Waite said. (Photo by David Allen, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)
As a free state before the Civil War, California would seem untouched by slavery and the debates around it. Yet the real picture is more nuanced.
An estimated 500 to 1,500 Black people were “forcibly imported” into California as slaves by their owners, historian Kevin Waite told an audience at Redlands’ A.K. Smiley Library on Tuesday night, May 2. He’s the author of “West of Slavery: The Southern Dream of a Transcontinental Empire.”
While even 1,500 is a small number compared to the 4 million slaves in the United States in the 1850s, it’s not zero, is it?
Waite asked that we imagine the effort it took not only for a White slave owner to travel by horse-drawn wagon across much of the country, but to smuggle in slaves. That, he said, showed how valuable the slaves must have been.
The most famous may be Biddy Mason, who was brought from Georgia to Salt Lake City, Utah, in 1848, and from there to the Mormon colony in San Bernardino in 1851. She had to walk, driving the animals, across the Mojave Desert.
According to Waite’s research, early San Bernardino had 30 slaves. Fourteen of them, including Mason, were owned by Robert Smith, who was probably the largest slaveholder in the West. (Even in the 1850s, the Inland Empire was problematic.)
Mason won her freedom in court and became a leading citizen of Los Angeles. I wrote about her in 2020, saying she was one of the most notable people ever to hail from San Bernardino.
The West had a lot of Southern transplants and sympathizers, many of whom had outsized influence because they got coveted federal appointments, Waite explained. It was part of a national movement to tip the balance of power toward slavery and the Confederacy.
While Abraham Lincoln carried California in the 1861 presidential election, his margin here was the lowest of any free state, Waite said.
How did the tide turn? Sympathetic as many Californians were to the South, the majority recoiled from secession and the Confederacy, which they saw as extremism. And Lincoln shrewdly purged 1,500 civil servants in the West and replaced them with pro-Union appointees, stripping Southerners of much of their power here.
Yet, Waite pointed out, as the post-Civil War “Lost Cause” movement took hold to normalize the Confederacy, the influence lingered.
As recently as a decade ago, California still had more than a dozen things — redwood trees, peaks, highways and schools — named for Confederate figures, generally Robert E. Lee or Jefferson Davis. Many have since been renamed, including an elementary school in Long Beach, but not all.
More Waite
Kevin Waite and I had only met via Zoom. A professor of U.S. history at England’s Durham University, although a Pasadena native, Waite was beginning to research Biddy Mason’s life with fellow historian Sarah Barringer Gordon when we spoke in 2020, and then again in 2021.
Now visiting Southern California, he invited me to his Redlands talk. When I walked in, as one of the first arrivals, he and I recognized each other immediately. Although after only seeing him on screens 10 inches high, he was taller than I’d expected.
After his talk, I asked how his and Gordon’s research into Biddy Mason and her times was going. It’s steaming ahead.
“I can get it done in 18 months or 24 months,” Waite told me. “I’ve been working on the San Bernardino research the past six months or so.” He added: “A lot is known about the Mormon history of San Bernardino but very little about its slave-owning history.”
Looking forward to what they come up with.
David Allen writesss Friday, Sunday and Wednesday. Email dallen@scng.com, phone 909-483-9339, like davidallencolumnist on Facebook and follow @davidallen909 on Twitter.
Originally published at Dave Allen