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Richard Holcombe Kilbourne - Debt, investment, slaves: credit relations in East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana, 1825-1885

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    Debt, investment, slaves: credit relations in East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana, 1825-1885
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Debt, investment, slaves: credit relations in East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana, 1825-1885: summary, description and annotation

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Richard Kilbourne has produced a comprehensive study of the credit system in one Louisiana parish in the antebellum and postbellum periods of the Civil War. East Feliciana Parish was important in terms of both population and the large number of slaves. This books primary concern is the role of slave property in collateralizing credit relationships and planter perceptions regarding slaves as financial assets. A thorough survey of parish mortgage records and other manuscript collections led to the conclusion that most credit relationships, collateralized and uncollateralized, were grounded in slave property as opposed to land or other forms of wealth. Uncollateralized debt was directly dependent on the relative wealth of parish residents, and the bulk of most portfolios consisted of slaves. Emancipation and the Civil War occasioned a monumental credit implosion from which the local economy never recovered, at least for the remainder of the 19th century. Kilbourne makes an extensive examination of postwar debt distress and the evolution of sharecropping and tenancy. Even the wealthiest households were in the throes of debt distress as was evidenced by the numerous suits by wives for separations of property. A peculiar recoding requirement for crop privileges and pledges in the years from 1870 to 1880 made it possible to determine the amount of credit available in the postwar decades. Kilbourne shows that credit facilities contracted by 90 percent in the two decades following the Civil War. The decline in credit facilities parallels the decline in household wealth levels. Kilbourne disagrees with earlier scholars on the role of furnishing merchants in shaping the postbellum agricultural order. Furnishing merchants did become relatively more important in financing agriculture in the postwar decade, but they were not the successors of antebellum firms. Local merchants actually provided less credit than they had furnished before the Civil War to small cotton farmers who had made up two-thirds of the growers in the parish in 1860. Slavery made for a unique labor market, and this situation influenced the evolution of the credit system in the region. Emancipation was a revolutionary break with what had gone before. The focus of the credit system shifted from slaves to cotton. Land did form most postbellum planter portfolios, but it did not fill the void left by emancipation, and wealth levels remained substantially below antebellum ones. The credit system became highly localized in the postwar decades, and this fact was instrumental in shaping postbellum planting arrangements.

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title Debt Investment Slaves Credit Relations in East Feliciana - photo 1

title:Debt, Investment, Slaves : Credit Relations in East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana, 1825-1885
author:Kilbourne, Richard Holcombe.
publisher:University of Alabama Press
isbn10 | asin:0817307303
print isbn13:9780817307301
ebook isbn13:9780585161686
language:English
subjectCredit--Louisiana--East Feliciana Parish--History--19th century, Slavery--Louisiana--East Feliciana Parish--History--19th century, Debt--Louisiana--East Feliciana Parish--History--19th century.
publication date:1995
lcc:HG3756.U54K55 1994eb
ddc:332.7/0976316
subject:Credit--Louisiana--East Feliciana Parish--History--19th century, Slavery--Louisiana--East Feliciana Parish--History--19th century, Debt--Louisiana--East Feliciana Parish--History--19th century.
Page iii
Debt, Investment, Slaves
Credit Relations in East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana 18251885
Richard Holcombe Kilbourne, Jr.
Foreword by Gavin Wright
Page iv Copyright 1995 The University of Alabama Press Tuscaloosa Alabama - photo 2
Page iv
Copyright 1995
The University of Alabama Press
Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487-0380
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
The paper on which this book is printed meets the minimum
requirements of American National Standard for Information
Science-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials,
ANSI Z39.48-1984.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Kilbourne, Richard Holcombe
Debt, investment, slaves : credit relations in East Feliciana
Parish, Louisiana, 18251885 / Richard Holcombe Kilbourne, Jr., with
a foreword by Gavin Wright.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
ISBN 0-8173-0730-3 (alk. paper)
1. CreditLouisianaEast Feliciana ParishHistory19th
century. 2. SlaveryLouisianaEast Feliciana Parish
History19th century. 3. DebtLouisianaEast Feliciana Parish
History19th century. I. Title.
HG3756.U54K55 1995
332.7'0976316dc20
94-5785
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data available
Page v
To the memory of my great-great-grandfather,
Judge James Gilliam Kilbourne
(Captain, A.Q.M., F & S 4th La. Infantry, C.S.A.)
(18281893)
Page vii
Picture 3
Can you realize that the wealth of this Parish alone in June, 1860, was valued at $14,734,895 and now it is reduced about one seventh part of that sum? Our Negro population governs, completely demoralized, with 1500 colored to 900 white voters.
Henry Marston to Messrs. Snow, Coyle & Co., July 10, 1869
Picture 4
The late Secession war has reduced me very much in pecuniary point of view (the loss of 60 fine Negroes being one item, and which has caused me to be left considerably in debt). If it were otherwise I would not probably think of asking for a debt against which prescription has run for so many yearsBeing old & feeling the effects of poverty, you can decide whether I do not need it
Henry Marston to Mr. J. E. Paschal, October 12, 1874
Picture 5
[T]he Planters of the South, by the operation of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments of the Constitution have experienced a loss of two thousand millions of their slave property for which not one dollar of compensation is expended...
Henry Marston to President R. B. Hayes, September 28, 1877
Page ix
Contents
Foreword
xi
Acknowledgments
xiii
Glossary
xv
Introduction
1
1
The Origins of the Antebellum Credit System: The Accommodation Endorser
16
2
The Emergence of Factors as Investment Bankers
26
3
Securing Antebellum Credit Transactions with Slaves
49
4
The Nemesis of Prewar Debt
75
5
The Truncation of the Factorage System
107
6
Decline and Default
130
7
Tenants, Sharecroppers, and Furnishers
159
Appendix
171
Notes
173
Bibliography
191
Index
195

Page xi
Foreword
To the best of my knowledge, Richard Kilbourne's book is the first systematic study of the role of slave property in credit contracts. As such, it fills a gaping void in the existing literature on the economics of American slavery. This statement may seem surprising, because slavery has been the object of prodigious historical research, including several massive and well-known quantitative projects. Yet the financial aspects of slavery have been neglected. Even those historical economists who have given a prominent interpretive place to the implications of slave property as a form of wealth, such as Roger Ransom and Richard Sutch, have done so more on the basis of theory than on a detailed examination of portfolios and credit relationships.
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