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Convict Leasing Built the South
Convict leasing wasn’t a footnote to American history. It was the economic engine that replaced slavery in the post–Civil War South.
After emancipation, Southern states faced a problem they were determined to solve without abandoning racial hierarchy or cheap labor. Slavery had ended, but the plantation economy had not been meaningfully restructured. Formerly enslaved people were now legally free, mobile, and no longer obligated to work for white landowners
smartbrowngirlllc
2 days ago2 min read


Did Slavery Actually End in 1865?
The United States treats 1865 as a clean break: the war ends, the amendment passes, freedom arrives, and the story insists history moves on. It’s a comforting version of events, one that suggests moral progress, offers closure, and frames everything that followed as the result of individual failure rather than inherited systems. But history doesn’t work that way. Slavery didn’t end as a system in 1865; it ended as a legal designation
smartbrowngirlllc
Jan 205 min read
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