Orange County: Integration in the Early Citrus Industry


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Victoria Perez

Dr. Shrout

Hist 571: Directed Readings Seminar

December 16, 2016

Final Paper

Orange County: Integration in the Early Citrus Industry

Southern California gradually transitioned from a rural region of ranches into a more urban setting in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This transformation is attributed to the establishment of industrial agriculture and, specifically, the citrus industry. Overall, scholars studied the citrus industry both in broad and specific terms. Regional and state histories allowed them to view citrus as a whole unit that drove the economic development of Southern California and the state in general. Historians also compiled case studies about the specific communities in early cities, such as those in San Juan Capistrano. Starting from a smaller group of people revealed a more personal perspective of the social and cultural changes associated with the citrus industry. This paper utilized the latter method in order to contribute to the small, but growing, selection of Orange County history.

In general, historians approached this industry by examining either the institutions or the people that contributed to urban development. Understanding citrus from a top-down perspective of institutions like the Fruit Exchange or the railroad established the historical background, but it left out many people. Scholars responded to this issue in the historiography by shifting the focus onto the ordinary people experiencing the region’s development. Histories from this second group understood the narrative from the bottom-up. In the last ten years, workers who migrated to California became more visible in the historical narrative. While citrus did in fact promote the region’s growth, it would not have made such an impact without the daily contribution of people

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who picked and packaged the citrus. Those workers consisted of migrants from other states and countries who created new communities in Southern California. During the early twentieth century, immigration and migration influenced the creation of a diverse population and the development of the citrus industry. In general, scholars approached community development within the context of both local and national migration trends in this period of growth. By working from the bottom up, historians eventually established a narrative that attempted to represent more of the Southern California population.

In addition to describing how the state of the field became more inclusive, this paper will also explain that the historiography should now focus on cross-gender and cross-ethnic interactions in the early Orange County communities. Future research would examine how and why the commingling of women and non-Anglos was significant in the make up of the county’s citrus workforce. This paper will build on previous histories by using photographs to explain how interactions among diverse groups of people affected citrus communities. Historians adding to the narrative should not only recognize the diversity within the citrus workforce, but they should also realize that those workers transformed the social and cultural environment of the citrus industry. Studying these aspects more closely will also develop a history seeking to portray a more relatable past for those living and working in a modern and diverse world today.

Since the growth of Southern California’s citrus industry is multi-faceted, historians tried to analyze it in different ways. Theoretical approaches to this subject ranged from economic history to cultural history. Specifically, scholars who wrote social and cultural histories of Southern California established a more complex story. Historians developed a more dynamic perspective when they acknowledged ordinary people’s contributions to growth, instead of describing their

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impact in brief and general terms. This newer approach from the last ten to twenty years highlighted many aspects of Orange County communities, but it also left out other characteristics that have yet to be fully realized. Historians described ethnic groups in distinct and separate worlds, but they still did not entirely explain one aspect of early integration in the work place. The historical debate most related to this discussion deals with this struggle to understand community, whether it is viewed as a significant participant or only a minor contributor to the citrus industry. How much did immigration or migration play a role in developing Orange County’s communities and how should the ordinary person’s story inform its citrus history?

The historical counterargument to this debate approached the question with considerably less focus on people and immigration. It is important to note that these historians published their works before, and sometimes around the same time as, other scholars who argued for the other side of the debate. Although top-down histories mentioned people, they did not always represent every gender or ethnicity that should hold a place in the narrative. Instead, these scholars drew attention to major institutions and their leaders in order to create a broader understanding of significant changes occurring in Southern California.

While histories from above provided a good foundation for the narrative, they minimized the role of the ordinary person in order to identify general trends in the region’s history. William Deverell, in “The Southern Pacific Railroad Survives the Pullman Strike of 1894,” used this top-down approach to explain the power of California’s railroads and its leaders in the midst of labor strikes.1 Ronald Tobey and Charles Wetherell used an approach similar to Deverell in “The Citrus

1  William Deverell, “The Southern Pacific Railroad Survives the Pullman Strike of 1894.” in Major Problems in California History. ed. Chan Sucheng and Spencer Olin, (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1997), 183, 192.

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Industry and the Revolution of Corporate Capitalism in Southern California, 1887-1944.” These three historians did not really consider migration in their analysis of the region’s main factors for growth and success. With an impersonal approach to regional expansion, they argued from the perspectives of company leaders or citrus growers in general terms.2 Unlike histories from below, top-down histories did not emphasize laborers who were unable to make substantial profits from the railroad, real estate, or citrus. However, historians did not try to leave people and immigration out of the story. Instead, they chose to focus on the structures that allowed the region and the citrus industry to flourish. This part of the narrative preceded histories of other people and immigrants because it was important to first understand the environment that drew them to the state. Yet, histories of institutions were still not complete without the laborers who boosted the success of those structures.

Edward Bachus, in “Who Took the Oranges Out of Orange County?: The Southern California Citrus Industry in Transition,” provided another example of how scholars studied community in broad terms, rather than in specific examples of cultural development. Bachus, also argued for a traditional history of institutions that impacted growth, which included irrigation, the railroad, and the Southern California Fruit Exchange. This did not mean that people were not present in the history. As Bachus demonstrated, he included people in the history mostly through statistics.3 Even though statistics revealed a broad understanding of population growth, they did not fully explain aspects of the people’s daily lives. This historical method produced a limited

2  Deverell, “Railroad,” 183-184, 191; Ronald Tobey and Charles Wetherell, “The Citrus Industry and the Revolution of Corporate Capitalism in Southern California, 1887-1944.” California History  74, no. 1 (1995), 9-10, 15, 19.

3  Edward J. Bachus, “Who Took the Oranges Out of Orange County?: The Southern California Citrus Industry in Transition.” Southern California Quarterly 63, no. 2 (1981): 157-73, 160, 164-167, 170.

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perspective that was not inclusive and descriptive enough as a top-down approach. Bacchus and other similar-minded historians recognized ordinary people but did not give them a central role. Since they did not focus on immigration, the history lost a sense of who the non-elite of the community were and their own experiences.

This left room for subsequent scholars to write social and cultural histories that added a personal element to the citrus industry. These scholars considered the alternative perspective to the debate in favor of the community’s influence on the citrus industry. As a reminder, the main question was how much should immigration or migration play a role in developing Orange County communities and should the ordinary person’s story inform the citrus history?

Some scholars identified the impact of people who migrated to Southern California and the United States in general. They argued that it was the labor force, which drove the citrus industry’s growth. Hal Barron supported this perspective in his article, “Citriculture and Southern California: New Historical Perspectives.” He recognized that labor history was a “critical factor” to understanding the region’s diversity.4 In the same way, James Barrett argued, in “Americanization from the Bottom-Up,” that national migration history should be viewed from the perspective of marginalized laborers and immigrants.5 This method allowed him to explain how diverse groups developed into interconnected communities on a national level. These bottom-up interpretations demonstrated that ordinary migrants and laborers should be viewed as central and significant. A history that started with migrants gave new agency to those people and turned it into a

4  Hal S. Barron. “Citriculture and Southern California: New Historical Perspectives.” California History 74, no. 1 (1995): 3.

5  James R. Barrett, “Americanization from the Bottom Up: Immigration and the Remaking of the Working Class in the United States, 1880-1930.” The Journal of American History, Vol. 79, No. 3, (Dec. 1992), 997-998, 1020.

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more relatable story. They showed that migrants were far from passive characters in the history; rather, they actively made decisions to move to the United States and find work in California.

Other scholars analyzed immigration through the lens of the “California Dream” and efforts to establish communities in the state. Kevin Starr’s Americans and the California Dream discussed “the imaginative aspects of California’s journey to identity” by studying how settlers created and sought after their ideas of the California Dream.6 Many people pursued this dream but economic success came mostly to those who had power, money, or land. In Freedom’s Frontier: California and the Struggle over Unfree Labor, Emancipation, and Reconstruction, Stacey Smith offered a broader analysis on the state’s labor and slavery history during the 1800s by connecting them to similar national developments. Smith and Starr utilized the immigration theme to show how California’s migrant population influenced the state’s development.7 A variety of people came to the state in pursuit of the dream, but those opportunities were not available to everyone. Smith’s argument brought particular attention to misconceptions about labor practices in the state. These works portrayed specific aspects of migration and labor during the nineteenth century that laid the groundwork for the social and cultural changes in the next century.

Immigration provided a useful, but complicated, approach for historians who wrote history that included ordinary people. Both Douglas Sackman’s Orange Empire and Smith’s book built upon Starr’s history by placing either enslaved or migrant laborers next to other privileged,

6  Kevin Starr, Americans and the California Dream, 1850-1915.  (New York: Oxford University Press, 1973), vii.

7  Stacey Smith, Freedom’s Frontier: California and the Struggle over Unfree Labor, Emancipation, and Reconstruction. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2013), 4; Starr, Americans , 415-444.

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wealthy Californians.8 Sackman appeared to be in the middle  of the historical debate because he emphasized the citrus corporations’ marketing as a significant growth factor. However, he also recognized the role of migrant workers. Samuel Truett, in Fugitive Landscapes, is in conversation with Sackman as another scholar of the West. Truett identified immigrants and native peoples as key contributors to the Southwest borderlands’ development.9 Even though his work did not specifically refer to California history or citrus, his methodology is still applicable to those histories that are about the community development of Orange Country. Personal examples in these histories presented a complex and authentic perspective of community life. Starting with people to trace the region’s development allowed historians to give a voice to community members, whose work directly affected the growth.

When people appeared in the narrative, California historians studied them as Anglo or non-Anglo groups in their separate worlds, even though they lived or worked in the same cities. Histories by Sackman, Starr, and also Stephen Gould identified key figures, often men, who shaped communities. However, scholars, such as Stephen O’Neil, Lisbeth Haas, and Gilbert G. Gonzalez, also identified Mexicans and women as important members of the community. Stephen Gould in “Orange County Before It Was A County” and Stephen O’Neil in “The Role of Colonias In Orange County” made general assumptions about communities by drawing examples

8  Smith, Freedom’s Frontier, 5-6; Douglas Cazaux Sackman, Orange Empire: California and the Fruits of Eden (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2005), 8, 123-153, 176-177, 225-261.

9  Samuel Truett. Fugitive Landscapes: The Forgotten History of the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands. (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2006), 129.

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either from elite Anglo families or minority enclaves.10 Lizbeth Haas’ “San Juan Capistrano: A Rural Society in Transition to Citrus” provided examples of men and women who experienced the growing disparities between the Anglos and the californios and Indians in San Juan Capistrano at the turn of the century. She explained that the city’s transition away from subsistence farming and towards industrial agricultural created more segregated urban spaces, such as the workplace, that did not exist in the previously non-Anglo dominated rural period.11 Gilbert G. Gonzalez referred to cross-ethnic interactions, but he only briefly mentioned them in his article entitled “Women, Work, and Community in the Mexican Colonias of the Southern California Citrus Belt.”12 Historical methods that separated ethnicities or emphasized a certain group ensured that people were not left out. Yet, they also created a limited understanding of integrated interactions in the rest of the community.

Three scholars’ specific analysis of gender roles and ethnicity established a good starting point for future interventions in Orange County history. They included Gonzalez, Margo McBane, and Truett. Gonzalez argued that Mexican women who worked in the packing houses also formed social and cultural identities in the colonias, or segregated communities.13 He portrayed Mexican women more as important members of their own society and made only a few connections to their roles in the city they lived in. By contrast, Margo McBane’s article, “The

10  Stephen Gould, “Orange County Before It Was A County,” Proceedings of the Conference of Orange County History, 1988. edited by Robert A. Slayton and Leland L. Estes, (Orange: Chapman College, 1989), 84-88; Stephen O’Neil, “The Role of Colonias In Orange County,” Proceedings of the Conference of Orange County History, 1988. edited by Robert A. Slayton and Leland L. Estes, (Orange: Chapman College, 1989),  114-115.

11  Lisbeth Haas, “San Juan Capistrano: A Rural Society in Transition to Citrus.” California History  74, no. 1 (1995): 48-51, 56.

12  Gilbert G. Gonzalez, “Women, Work, and Community in the Mexican Colonias of the Southern California Citrus Belt.” California History  74, no. 1 (1995): 64-66.

13  Gonzalez, “Women, Work, and Community,” 58, 60, 64-66.

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Role of Gender in Citrus Employment,” explained how the labor force of Ventura County’s Limoneira Company included men, women, and multiple ethnicities. Although she identified segregated housing in this California community, the workforce was still integrated in the first half of the twentieth century.14 However, this particular case happened outside of Orange County. Truett also provided a good model for a dynamic cross-ethnic history when he gave agency to the various people living in the diverse Southwest borderland communities.15 McBane and Truett’s approaches to their histories are applicable to the farm and city life within Orange County.

Despite the existence of segregation in Orange County, there needs to be more historical analysis on commingling among different genders and ethnicities as it related to migration. This would recreate a complex and dynamic view of those communities. For example, historical photographs of Orange County citrus workers suggested that Anglos and non-Anglos worked in the same spaces, rather than being separated into two places. When future scholars give more attention to this diversity, the interpretation of community life will change from a narrative focused on segregation to one that will now consider the integration of men, women, and minorities in Orange County history.

Overall, there was a historiographical turn around the 1990s towards more of a social and cultural history of California’s growth. Rather than viewing the history mainly through major institutions and themes like the railroad or the “California Dream,” scholars reconstructed the story to shift the focus onto ordinary people and the spaces they inhabited. Yet, the historiography

14  Margo McBane, “The Role of Gender in Citrus Employment: A Case Study of Recruitment, Labor, and Housing Patterns at the Limoneira Company, 1893 to 1940.” California History  74, no. 1 (1995): 69, 73, 76, 78-81.

15  Truett, Fugitive Landscapes, 7-9, 30, 108, 140.

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still lacked analysis that connected all of the types of people associated with the citrus industry in Orange County. Scholars considered each of these individuals on their own, but further research needs to examine how those individuals worked together as a diverse whole to establish the community. It is necessary to study the relationships between community leaders, non-Anglo workers, and women workers, to name a few, to understand the dynamic growth of the region. This move towards greater complexity in citrus history will provide a relevant connection between an old historical instance of integration and the increasingly diverse modern world.

Photographs of packing house workers in Orange County will help historians establish the complex story of integrated work spaces. So far in Southern California citrus history, historians identified railroad corporate leaders, citrus growers, and citrus workers as important individuals.16 While some historians gave Anglo men credit  for developing the citrus industry, others, like McBane, recognized the substantial role of women in the citrus work force.17 One photograph from the city of Orange, entitled David Hewes’ Packing House Interior With Workers, ca. 1905, depicted the direct role of women in the early years of the industry.18 During the 1900s, the need for workers in this growing industry encouraged not only American, but also Mexican migration to the area.19 Another photograph in 1933 Irvine, Employees of the Irvine Valencia Growers Packing House, revealed that over time more Mexicans worked alongside Anglo men and women in the packing environment. Both photos are in the archive of the Orange Public Library

16  Deverell, “Railroad,” 191-192; Tobey and Wetherell, “Corporate Capitalism,” 8, 17; Bachus, “Oranges,” 161-165.

17  McBane, “The Role of Gender in Citrus Employment,” 69-70.

18 David Hewes’ Packing House Interior With Workers, ca. 1905.  1905. Orange Public Library Collection, Orange Public Library and History Center, Orange, CA.

19 O’Neil, “The Role of Colonias In Orange County,” Proceedings,  114-115.

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Collection. With these images, I identified who was in the picture and the genders and ethnicities represented in them. Using a bottom-up approach, I analyzed how immigration affected packing house workers and how those workers also impacted the citrus industry. These two photos suggested that the historical narrative should incorporate the diversity of citrus workers into a more cross-gender and cross-ethnic view of the Orange County citrus industry.

Since the Hewes’ picture came from 1905, it represented the early years of the county’s citrus industry. It captured three Anglo men and eight Anglo women posing next to tables and crates filled with lemons and other produce at the El Modena packing house in Orange, California. The crates in the foreground held produce that was unprocessed, while a few boxes in the background looked already packed.20 In general, Sackman explained that Anglo women occupied about half of the packing house jobs by 1913 and their numbers grew from then on. Women may have worked in the packing houses, but they were often characterized as symbolic figures in citrus advertising. In addition to using efficient packing methods, workers needed to use great care in packaging citrus that was shipped throughout the United States. Because citrus growers viewed Anglo women as having a more “nurturing touch,” they did not initially hire Mexican women around this time.21 The Hewes’ picture supported Sackman’s analysis because it showed that both men and women worked in packing houses together in 1905. This early photo displayed cross-gender Anglo work spaces before the later inclusion of non-Anglo workers.

Why did the Hewes’ photographer choose these people for the image? It is interesting that the photographer stood further back to include men, women, and produce crates in the picture.

20 David Hewes’ Packing House Interior With Workers, ca. 1905.

21  Sackman, Orange Empire,  89-92, 146-151.

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The women also wore long dresses or skirts that must have made it challenging to do their work.22 Perhaps the photo was an advertisement that emphasized the able-bodied men required to move heavy crates for the women, the nurturing and orderly-looking women to handle the fruit, and the company’s abundant amount of fruit. Citrus workers in this photo might not have had the right to consent to the picture. Maybe the packing house owner, David Hewes, expected them to agree to it or maybe they wanted their picture taken at a time when it was not so common. According to this 1905 image, women had the opportunity to work in a public environment outside of the private sphere of the home. It was also an example of them working alongside men in a packing house. Considering gender roles, women still appeared to remain under the men’s authority and the physical constraints created by their clothing. Although women had these limitations, one consequence of this photo was that it portrayed women in a more public and social setting. Because the photographer took this particular shot, the result was an image that preserved a record of their role as citrus laborers contributing to the economy.

While the Hewes’ photograph exemplified one working environment in Orange, I also found the Employees photo among several citrus worker images from the library’s archive. The Hewes’ photo showed mostly Anglo women, but other photographs identified a variety of people that included men, women, Anglos, and Mexicans working in packing houses and the fields. I chose these two images from different decades in order to examine how the labor force changed over time during the development of the Orange County citrus industry.

The Employees photo from 1933 represented a distinct ethnic shift among the packing house workers. It showed presumably all seventy workers at an Irvine packing site and the

22 David Hewes’ Packing House Interior With Workers, ca. 1905.

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archival record identified almost all of people in the photo. Of the fifty-two women workers sitting down, several were Hispanic. One of the eighteen men was also Hispanic.23 By the 1930s, around 35,000 laborers, including women, came from Mexican families that formed their own villages in Southern California.24 It is possible that the pictured non-Anglos, or Hispanics, came from ethnic backgrounds of either Mexican, Spanish californio, or Indian heritage. However, it is also important to note that non-Anglos could now work in the packing house, a place where they could not work earlier on. Sackman’s history described that workers of various ethnicities came to California, but he did not really elaborate on how they worked together.25 Overall, this photograph suggested that a diverse group of laborers eventually became associated with the citrus industry by the 1930s.

What was the second photographer’s reason for choosing these people for the same picture and organizing them in a certain way? It is fascinating that all of the people, except two, were separated by gender but not by ethnicity. The two men in the front row wore nicer clothes; so, they might have been the managers or owners of the packing house. The women sat in three rows, the men stood behind them, and the work tables were not clearly visible. The women also wore shorter, more practical dresses.26 Even though the photo distinguished between men and women, the small and practical changes to the women’s clothing showed that gender roles became less constricting by the 1930s. The people might have consented to be in the photo because

23 Employees of the Irvine Valencia Growers Packing House.  1933. Orange Public Library Collection, Orange Public Library and History Center, Orange, CA.

24  Gonzalez, “Women, Work, and Community,” 58.

25  Sackman, Orange Empire, 127-135.

26 Employees of the Irvine Valencia Growers Packing House.

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they had to. On the other hand, maybe everyone wanted to be in the picture with their friends, which would explain why Anglo and non-Anglo women sat together, rather than separately.

Another consequence of the photo was that it suggested citrus employers eventually hired more Mexicans for the skilled positions. It represented what the workforce possibly looked like when Mexicans consisted of fourteen percent of Orange County’s population after 1930.27 Based on the historical narrative, this example of a multi-ethnic environment did not entirely fit with previous scholars’ interpretation of the citrus industry. The two ethnicities perhaps lived in different parts of the city, but, by reading against the grain, one purpose of the Employees photo might be to demonstrate the diversity among citrus packers. This image indicated that the historical field should consider this and other early instances of labor integration in their understanding of Orange County. Diversity is now a common occurrence in the United States, but this photo proved that integration existed as early as the county’s citrus industry during the 1930s.

Because almost thirty years separated the two photos, they displayed many significant differences. All of the individuals in Hewes’ were Anglo compared to the second one that had a mix of Anglo and Hispanic workers. There were also more workers in the second picture. This might have been because all the workers were available to pose for the photograph, but it also made sense because the booming citrus industry needed a larger workforce by the 1930s. It is possible that previous historians did not write about non-Anglos because those people did not always have the same opportunities. For example, San Juan Capistrano’s californios struggled to diversify their investments when agriculture became more industrialized around the turn of the

27  O’Neil, “The Role of Colonias in Orange County,” Proceedings, 115.

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century. On the other hand, Anglos moving to the area had money to invest in the land.28 What the Hewes’ photo did not show in 1905 were the growing amount of immigrant Mexican field workers picking the produce seen in the packing house.29 Although the Employees photo came later, it portrayed a more integrated group of people. This integration occurred over time, most likely because more Mexicans migrated to Southern California by then. The images provided a visual representation of how immigration contributed to the diverse community in Orange County.

These photos enhanced the historian’s view of migration, which played a significant role in the histories of Southern California and the United States. Americans attempted to fulfill their ideal dreams, with mixed results. They sought after ideas such as connecting back to nature, a return to health, happiness, and “self-fulfillment.” These were not always possible once they started living in the state.30 For foreigners, life had its own challenges. Immigrants to the United States attempted to maintain their own cultures in the midst of Americanization. Barrett explained that others viewed “Americanization” as the “social control” of immigrants, but he referred it as the immigrant’s adaptive process to their new situation.31 Both American migrants and Mexican immigrants hoped to establish new lives in the United States. By connecting Barrett’s theme to Truett’s related discussion of agency and adaptability, the citrus community also appeared to adapt to their working environments.32 Specifically, as more Mexicans moved to

28  Haas, “San Juan Capistrano,” 48, 50-51, 54.

29  O’Neil, “The Role of Colonias in Orange County,” Proceedings, 115.

30  Starr, Americans, 434-444.

31  Barrett, “Americanization from the Bottom Up,” 997.

32  Truett, Fugitive Landscapes, 29-30, 129-130.

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Southern California, they met the labor needs of the citrus industry. Perhaps, packing house owners adapted to the demographic shift by allowing managers to hire more non-Anglos and fill the need. The two packing house pictures supported a more complex view of the past where workers adapted to the hard work and employers also adapted to demographic changes in the community.

Examining two packing house photos demonstrated that not all twentieth century workers in came from one gender or ethnic group. Rather, the Orange County work force included a mix of people working together to pack citrus boxes. Women and Mexicans had the opportunities to become active and vital members of the citrus community. These individuals were much like Truett’s Americans, Spaniards, and Mexicans who created “hybrid spaces” in the Southwest copper borderlands during the same time period. 33 The photographs also provided an example of an increase in “wage labor” in the citrus industry.34 Men and women of different races received wages and contributed to the success of the citrus industry in their shared work spaces. Previous historians studied different gender and ethnic groups separately in the citrus industry. So, it was surprising that primary sources pointed out that Anglos and non-Anglos worked in the same places. This discovery might lead to other examples of integration for historians to research. If they worked along side each other in the packing houses, then were there any other integrated community spaces at that time, such as churches? Photographs portray aspects of society not always shown in the written record. In this case, they provided a more complicated view of social and cultural integration within Orange County.

33  Truett. Fugitive Landscapes,  22-23, 43, 120, 140.

34  Haas, “San Juan Capistrano,” 47, 54-56.

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In addition to photos, there are many other primary sources associated with Orange County’s citrus industry. Two relevant archives are the Center for Oral and Public History at California State University, Fullerton, and the Orange Public Library Collection. Photos, oral histories, and newspaper articles from these collections will be useful to reconstruct the integrated communities of the citrus industry. With these sources, historians might utilize more of a bottom-up approach to Orange County’s early community life to discover other aspects, like the interactions between people of different genders and ethnicities. For instance, Gonzalez and Haas included photos of Mexican colonias and citrus workers in their articles to provide visual evidence of those people’s active roles in the community. 35 Future scholarship should build on their analysis by considering what other available photos described about the social dynamics among workers. Community interaction and the integration of non-Anglos and Anglos were not well-represented in Orange County history, which is a possible future direction for the existing historiography.

Although photographs add another dimension to the story, it will be helpful to include different types of primary sources, such as oral histories or newspaper articles. Pictures described what the community looked like, but they make it difficult to determine how that cross-gender and cross-ethnic integration happened. Interviews will offer another personal perspective similar to the packinghouse photographs. In particular, the Anglo oral histories on Orange’s early growth portrayed their understanding of life at the turn of the century that is useful for comparison with other sources. Interviews and newspapers will reveal how people from that time period remembered or explained community interaction. They will also provide insight into parts of the community

35  Gonzalez, “Women, Work and Community,” 60, 63, 67; Haas, “San Juan Capistrano,” 53, 55, 57.

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aside from packinghouses and orchards. This primary source evidence will enhance the historical record because it will present a more complex perspective of Southern Californian community life.

The history of the citrus industry considered several approaches and themes in order to fully comprehend its significance. Historians analyzed the implications of institutions and the people who supported them in Southern California. They also demonstrated that immigration is one of the main factors for the success of the citrus industry and the development of Orange County. The ordinary person entered the historiography more recently in a way that is more inclusive of everyone in the community. However, the historical narrative did not yet have enough analysis regarding integration in Orange County. Photographs from a local archive presented this cross-gender and cross-ethnic view of labor, especially in the 1930s. It is crucial to acknowledge the laborers in the story, but it is even more important to identify social and cultural developments among the laborers themselves. The success of the citrus industry may have influenced migration, but, in return, the industry had to adapt its standards to accept the increasingly diverse Orange County citrus workers in the early twentieth century. Future researchers should consider both sides of this adaptability and agency in the story of Southern California communities as they continue to debate the significance of the citrus industry.

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Bibliography

Bachus, Edward J. “Who Took the Oranges Out of Orange County?: The Southern California                 Citrus Industry in Transition.” Southern California Quarterly 63, no. 2 (1981): 157-73.

Barrett, James R. “Americanization from the Bottom Up: Immigration and the Remaking of the Working Class in the United States, 1880-1930.” The Journal of American History, Vol. 79, No. 3, Discovering America: A Special Issue (Dec. 1992), 996-1020.

Barron, Hal S. “Citriculture and Southern California: New Historical Perspectives.” California History 74, no. 1 (1995): 2-5.

David Hewes’ Packing House Interior With Workers, ca. 1905. 1905. Orange Public Library Collection, Orange Public Library and History Center, Orange, CA. http://history.cityoforange.org/awweb/main.jsp?flag=browse&smd=1&awdid=16

Deverell, William. “The Southern Pacific Railroad Survives the Pullman Strike of 1894.” An essay in Major Problems in California History: Documents and Essays. ed. by Chan Sucheng and Spencer Olin. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. 1997.

Employees of the Irvine Valencia Growers Packing House. 1933. Orange Public Library Collection, Orange Public Library and History Center, Orange, CA. http://history.cityoforange.org/awweb/main.jsp?&awdid=3&smd=1&flag=browse

Gonzalez, Gilbert G. “Women, Work, and Community in the Mexican Colonias of the Southern California Citrus Belt.” California History 74, no. 1 (1995): 58-67.

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Gould, Stephen. “Orange County Before It Was A County.” Proceedings of the Conference of Orange County History, 1988. edited by Robert A. Slayton and Leland L. Estes. Orange: Chapman College, 1989.

Haas, Lisbeth. “San Juan Capistrano: A Rural Society in Transition to Citrus.” California History 74, no. 1 (1995): 46-57.

McBane, Margo. “The Role of Gender in Citrus Employment: A Case Study of Recruitment, Labor, and Housing Patterns at the Limoneira Company, 1893 to 1940.” California History 74, no. 1 (1995): 68-81.

O’Neil, Stephen. “The Role of Colonias In Orange County.” Proceedings of the Conference of Orange County History, 1988. edited by Robert A. Slayton and Leland L. Estes. Orange: Chapman College, 1989.

Sackman, Douglas Cazaux. Orange Empire: California and the Fruits of Eden. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2005.

Smith, Stacey L. Freedom’s Frontier: California and the Struggle over Unfree Labor, Emancipation, and Reconstruction. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2013. Ebook.

Starr, Kevin. Americans and the California Dream, 1850-1915. New York: Oxford University Press, 1973.

Tobey, Ronald, and Charles Wetherell. “The Citrus Industry and the Revolution of Corporate   Capitalism in Southern California, 1887-1944.” California History 74, no. 1 (1995): 6-21. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25177466.

Truett, Samuel. Fugitive Landscapes: The Forgotten History of the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2006.

Orange: From Communities to Cities – Primary Source Bibliography


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Primary Source Annotated Bibliography

Bartlett, W. C. “The Tropical Fruits of California” Overland Monthly and Out West Magazine. Vol. 1, Issue 3 (Sept 1868): 263-268. Making of America Journal Articles
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/moajrnl/ahj1472.1-01.003/263

This source demonstrates how people viewed the citrus industry as it was developing. It is an early example of a positive reaction to Southern California’s growth that may have enticed people to move to the state.

By-laws of the Yorba Linda Citrus Association, 19 June 1915. Box 1, Folder 7. Local History: Citrus Collection CA4, University Archives and Special Collections. California State University, Fullerton Pollack Library.

This source is an example of the business and cooperative side of the citrus industry. It will help me understand the institution’s perspective in contrast to my other more personal primary sources related to the citrus industry.

Campbell, Ensley J. Community History Project (Orange): Early Orange; and the Citrus Industry. By Milan Pavlovich and Florence Smiley. OH 1507. Oral History Program at California State University, Fullerton, September 1, 1970.

This source is helpful because the narrator discusses his role in the early development of Orange and in citrus ranching. It also includes commentary about several ethnicities living in the city and different aspects that contributed to the success of citrus.

David Hewes’ Packing House Interior With Workers, ca. 1905. 1905. Orange Public Library Collection, Orange Public Library and History Center, Orange, CA.
http://history.cityoforange.org/awweb/main.jsp?flag=browse&smd=1&awdid=16

This is one of several relevant photographs from the Orange Public Library and History Center archive. While this image shows Anglo women citrus workers, other photographs identify men, women, Anglos, and Mexicans working in fields and packing houses. The images demonstrate the types of laborers associated with the citrus industry.

Smiley, Florence. Community History Project (Orange): Reminiscences of Early Childhood. By Milan Pavlovich. OH 478. Oral History Program at California State University, Fullerton, August 17, 1970.

This is another oral history that provides a personal and detailed view of Southern California life around the turn of the nineteenth century. This source is useful because it explains the growth of the city of Orange from the perspective of a woman who grew up in Southern California and whose family had migrated to the state.

 

Additional Source:

Bartley, George. Community History Project (Orange): Constable of El Modena. By Milan Pavlovich and Florence Smiley. OH 477. Oral History Program at California State University, Fullerton, July 2, 1970.

While this source has some information regarding Orange community life, the other two oral histories are more related to my paper. It focuses more on the narrator’s experiences as a constable and a walnut farmer, rather than in citrus.

Post on The World The Civil War Made


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The World the Civil War Made (edited by Gregory P. Downs and Kate Masur), is a collection of essays that analyze the “historical distinctiveness” of the postwar period through themes such as “personalized power,” individual rights, and rampant violence (14-15). As higbeejonathan explained, the book’s argument is based on how the Civil War changed the nation (3). The authors examine “new possibilities for imagining government, claims-making, and narrative” (17). These historians were not confined by traditional approaches to slavery or regions; rather, they perspectives of the United States spanned regions, ethnicity, and even territories that had not yet joined the Union. Although the South directly experienced most of the physical destruction and emancipation, the Civil War impacted the west and the north as well as politics at the federal, state, and local levels. The authors demonstrated these developments through the use of monographs, journal articles, treaties, newspapers, photographs, novels, and letters.

The essays in Downs and Masur described several historical events or movements that were considered failures. It reminded me of David Sim’s A Union Forever and the failed attempts of Irish nationhood in the same time period. This method was not simply about labeling failures but also understanding the complexities and consequences of postbellum developments that contributed to those failures. For example, the federal government, or the “Stockade State,” became more powerful during the war but it was not always able to enforce laws and treaties effectively in the Western territories (ch. 2, 3, 7, 9, p. 6, 223). History is not often remembered from the perspective of failure, but historians can consider previously downplayed elements of history with this approach.

This book explained several aspects of the “Reconstruction” era that I had not yet considered. Before reading this, I did not realize that Indian tribes tried to gain citizenship and land based on the Homestead Act. Stephen Kantrowitz’s description of this movement in relation to the postwar period and Western expansion proved that the war affected all parts of the United States, not just the South. Indian relations and other Western developments make much more sense in light of the changes occurring in the rest of the U.S. after the 1860s. This idea of studying regions together instead of separately is visible in Slavery’s Capitalism where historians argue that the North and the South both benefited from slavery. I was also fascinated with the discussion of ruins in chapter four. K. Stephen Prince explained how northerners initially viewed the postbellum South as an idea to be “recreated” (108). He explained that journalists and their readers adopted a mindset of viewing southern destruction as a northern opportunity to renew the south. Postwar Americans had to reconsider the intellectual meaning of destruction and death, which is explained in This Republic of Suffering as Sbremer also pointed out.

Overall, I think this book successfully reimagined the “Reconstruction” period after the Civil War. It was a complicated era that involved continuity and change as Americans tried to reunify their nation going into the twentieth century.

Polished Paragraphs – Southern California Communities


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Since Southern California’s early growth is multi-faceted, historians have tried to analyze it in different ways. One of the main historical debates deals with the development related to the citrus industry. What was the most important factor for the region’s expansion and why? How much did immigration play a role in region’s growth? Some scholars, like Edward Bachus, argue for a traditional history of institutions impacting growth, which include irrigation, the railroad, and the Fruit Exchange. Similarly, William Deverell in“The Southern Pacific Railroad Survives the Pullman Strike of 1894” uses a top-down approach to discuss the power of California’s railroads in the midst of labor strikes (Deverell 183, 192). Other scholars argue instead that it was the labor force, such as Mexican immigrants, which drove the citrus industry’s growth. Stacey Smith, in Freedom’s Frontier, offers a broader analysis on the state’s labor and slavery in the 1800s by connecting them to similar national developments. National trends are also explained from the immigrants’ perspective in James R. Barrett’s “Americanization from the Bottom Up.” Douglas Sackman seems to be in the middle of this debate because he emphasizes the citrus corporations’ marketing as a significant growth factor in Orange Empire, but he also recognizes the role of migrant workers. Samuel Truett, in Fugitive Landscapes, can build on Sackman’s work by viewing immigrants and native peoples as key contributing factors in the Southwest borderlands’ development (Truett 129).

Another related historical debate is one that considers the California Dream alongside efforts to establish successful Southern Californian communities. Was this dream attainable for everyone who lived in the state, why or why not? Should historians use cultural and social history, rather than economic history, for instance, to understand how communities developed and grew? Kevin Starr’s Americans and the California Dream discusses “the imaginative aspects of California’s journey to identity” by studying how settlers created and sought after their ideas of the dream (Starr vii). Many people pursued this dream but economic success came mostly to those who had power, money, or land. Starting with this idea of success, historians have studied Southern California’s expansion from the perspective of booming citrus corporations (Ronald Tobey and Charles Wetherell). Yet, this method marginalizes laborers who were not able to make substantial profit from the railroad, real estate, or citrus (Smith). Some of my sources including Slayton and Estes, Sackman, and Starr refer to key figures, often men, who shaped communities. However, scholars, such as Gilbert Gonzalez, Stephen O’Neil, and Lisbeth Haas, have also identified Mexicans, and women in particular, as important figures in their communities. In my early research, there appears to be a general historiographical turn towards more of a cultural and social history of California’s growth. Rather than viewing the history mainly through major institutions and themes like the railroad or the California Dream, recent scholars have reconstructed the story to shift the focus onto ordinary people and the spaces they inhabited.

Post #6: This Republic of Suffering


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Drew Faust’s This Republic of Suffering demonstrated that “death created the modern American union— not just by ensuring national survival, but by shaping enduring national structures and commitments” (xiv). The survivors’ mourning became a “shared suffering” in order to understand the meaning behind all the death caused by the Civil War (xv-xviii). While Faust addressed the numbers of civilians and soldiers killed, her book shifted the focus onto personal experiences related to death. She grappled with the aftermath of death, rather than simply stating that many battles and death had occurred. America had not really experienced anything like this until the 1860s. Faust examined the response of American society and culture to these new developments of total war.

A soldier’s death was necessarily an isolated and impersonal event. Instead, Faust argued that the Civil War should be understood through the idea of the “work of death” (xiv-xviii, 54). She connected this idea to the social and cultural transformations as a reaction to mass death. Each section highlighted an aspect of the work of death. Soldiers had to prepare themselves for certain death as well as the issue of killing another human being. Their lives were already brutal enough, but they also involved the laborious practices of burying their fallen comrades. The book also explained how the works of mourning and naming caused northerners, southerners, and the government to rethink their beliefs regarding their great loss and bereavement.

Faust’s argument for the work of death was especially exemplified through her use of letters, dissertations, diaries, newspapers, photographs and other sources. Like Robert, I also noticed Faust’s extensive use of sources. Although her interpretation was interwoven throughout, she also let the voices in the primary texts speak for themselves. This approach allowed me to perceive the personal and emotional struggles of the historical characters in their own words. It was also helpful to see contrasting examples, like with the information gathering methods of the Christian Commission and the Sanitary Commission (110-112).

This Republic of Suffering was similar to Stephanie Camp’s book in that both examined how people groups dealt with harsh circumstances. In Camp, enslaved people responded to their bondage through acts of truancy and defiance, such as stealing or going to parties. Civil war Americans had to create ways to cope with death and its consequences. Civilians and family members sought to retrieve and memorialize their fallen soldiers. They adapted their traditions, such as the “Good Death,” and developed a system to help them mourn those buried far away. Camp and Faust started with the popular historical topics of slavery and the Civil War but added another dimension to them by adding agency and human emotion to their histories.

Overall I thought the book was a fascinating read. Having studied the Civil War before, I appreciated this new take regarding death’s impact on the country’s values and practices. Faust wrestled with the dehumanizing consequences of death, yet still provided her readers with a personal humanized understanding of the suffering. This book gave me an opportunity to recognize the historical significance of death. Perhaps it is also meant to demonstrate to modern readers that death, in general, cannot be downplayed or ignored (176-177).

Post #5: Fugitive Landscapes – Victoria


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In Fugitive Landscapes, Samuel Truett’s main argument intertwined the American and Mexican history of the Southwestern copper borderlands. Previous historiography has treated these countries as separate entities and usually in a regional sense. Truett explained that the borderlands influenced each other so much that they should be viewed together in history. Even as United States and Mexico worked to modernize and dominate this land, it remained a fugitive landscape with frontier characteristics (6-9, 180). Truett specifically mentioned that historians have marginalized the transnational significance of the Mexican Revolution in the early twentieth century while they tended to focus on World War One. Instead, Truett considered this Mexican period a “key turning point” because it led to the American idea that a border signified “differences” on each side and the Mexican idea of a border to be crossed (174-177).

Truett used diaries, government and company reports, eyewitness narratives, maps, photographs, and other sources to reconstruct the complex transnational status of the borderlands. A diverse group of people adapted to and moved around in the Arizona-Sonora area. Yet, governments and elites attempted to control local frontiers. Beyond the local level, these borderlands were not so much a desert wasteland as they were a “crossroads” for commerce and migration across the United States and Mexico border (60, 106). By identifying the borderlands as a crossroads, it can be added to a group of other significant locations throughout the world where economic, political, and cultural interaction have occurred together.

Truett did not give as much agency to the Indians as Hamalainen had done in Comanche Empire. Rather, the book focused on American imperial dreams, the Mexican state’s search for power, and the agency of Mexican laborers and other immigrants. Truett did highlight the theme of creating alliances, networks, and relationships to survive in the borderlands. Fugitive Landscapes could also be in conversation with the authors of Slavery’s Capitalism. Before this, history has not always acknowledged industrialization found in the American South or the Southwestern borderlands. While both places lacked identical Northern-looking factories, they did have developments that suggested industrial progress, such as technological advances or transportation improvements.

I would agree with Dave that Truett did a good job arguing that the borderlands still had a “frontier identity” by the end of the book (dshanebeck). I liked how Truett focused on the ordinary inhabitants of the borderlands and their ability to survive a variety of natural, political, and economic obstacles. Overall, I think that Fugitive Landscapes contained useful history and background, especially considering Truett’s comment that the borderlands are often forgotten. However, the book ends without really saying what can be done with this remembered history. If people should know more about this history how can it be presented to an audience in a non-academic setting? I think the book can be developed further by explaining how the content can be applied today. Current discussions about borderland concerns, diversity, and cultural developments can be connected to historical trends detailed in Truett’s book. For instance, the mixing of American and Mexican cultures, such as in Truett’s mining towns, is still occurring in America today (ex. Mexican food). Perhaps borderlands historians can engage the public’s attention by starting with relevant and applicable connections between the past and the present.

Final Paper Proposal


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My paper will be on “Orange: From A Community To A City.” The purpose of this paper is to explain how and why ordinary people were influential in forming communities and establishing cities in Southern California. Specifically, I will examine the community of Orange, CA within the context of Orange County development in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. I will discuss how historians have historiographically regarded important factors that led to urban development. I am mainly concerned with how historians have included the people in communities as a possible factor. Southern California gradually transitioned from a rural region of ranches into a more urban setting at this time. For instance, the successes of agriculture and the railroad contributed to such development, but I want to take that research further by examining the history of Orange through the lens of its community. While the citrus industry was key to Orange County’s growth, it would not have made such an impact without the daily contribution of workers who picked and packaged the citrus. Also, the railroad may have contributed to the region’s economic growth, but it also brought people to California from other states and countries who founded cities like Orange.

There are several significant questions guiding my research. Why have historians tended to focus more on institutions such as the Southern Pacific Railroad and the Southern California Fruit Exchange instead of the communities, which also contributed to the area’s growth? How did immigration play a role in the establishment of cities, such as Orange? Was the change from rural to urban growth a direct result of increased migration to the area? Why were people drawn to Orange County and the community of Orange in particular? How and why did people establish the city of Orange? How much were community members involved in that process or was it controlled by certain leaders? How was the Orange community similar to or distinct from other Orange County communities? How can historians create a more diverse and inclusive understanding of Orange County’s early community life?

I have identified many potential primary sources for this paper. My primary sources include oral histories, newspapers, city records, county records, and photographs related to both Orange County and Orange. Three potential archives for these sources are Orange County collections in the Center for Oral and Public History (CSUF), CSUF Special Collections, and the Orange Public Library and History Center. With these sources, my aim is to have a bottom-up approach to Orange County’s early development. While the citrus industry and the railroad were major factors, I will also research the personal aspects of Orange’s growth. I hope to learn more about the people who lived in early Orange such as orchard workers, business owners, or families. Since there are oral histories available, I want to incorporate these stories into the history of the city’s development. My primary sources overall will enable me to piece together how early Orange County communities created the cities we know today.

Post #4: A Union Forever


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David Sim’s A Union Forever argued that there are strong connections between and “Irish question” and the transnational development of America’s foreign policy with Britain. Irish and Irish-American nationalists attempted to gain independence from Britain, by way of American politics, in the midst of uncertain diplomatic relations in the Victorian era (Sim 2-3).

Sim used a variety of sources from letters and historical newspaper articles to presidential papers. It was especially helpful to read eyewitness perspectives of the Irish-American arrests in chapter 4. Sim stated that the prisoner’s actions “indicate that Irish nationalists were not passive subjects of high diplomatic negotiation. Rather, they were agents active in shaping — or at least attempting to shape — the political response to their own arrests and incarceration” (Sim 118). Having said that, I think his argument could have been improved throughout the rest of the book if he had used similar sources that told more of the Irish voice. Because this book consisted of political history, there seemed to be more primary documents from the political leaders in control than the ordinary Irish or Irish-Americans involved. In the end, the Irish tried to gain concessions and independence, but did not have enough power or say to do so until 1921.

I also thought there was not enough connection between Ireland’s actions and the revolutionary and nationalist movements of the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Sim only briefly mentioned that there were other European revolutions in 1848 and around that time (Sim 71). Although this book focused specifically on Ireland’s status as a potential nation, Sim did not clearly place the Irish movement in its immediate European context. Even later on, Ireland’s hopes for independence were not a unique concern, as President Wilson quickly came to understand after World War One (Sim 183-184). With this background, it would be easier to determine if Irish-Americans were the only immigrants or among others agitating for their home country’s rights.

Like Janelle  mentioned, one thing I found interesting was Sim’s interpretation of American sympathy for Ireland’s struggles, especially in chapter 2 (vannoyj). There was a great deal of politics involved in assisting those suffering from famine. I would add that Sim not only explained the political significance of American aid, but also the economic impact of providing assistance to a potential market. It was also viewed as “an opportunity to project American philanthropy and, implicitly, American power in the British archipelago” (Sim 68). Even though American intervention for the Irish eventually waned going into the twentieth century, Americans had already assisted Ireland during famine and political tension, at times with a goal for economic gain.

A Union Forever demonstrated once again that America was not an isolated entity in the nineteenth century. The United States was still closely tied to Great Britain but it still wanted recognition as a separate nation, which supports Gould’s argument. Sim added to this by demonstrating how America had to both preserve their citizens’ rights and maintain peaceful diplomatic relations with Britain.

supplementary article review


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Amani T. Marshall discussed aspects of slave resistance in his 2014 article called “They Are Supposed To Be Lurking About the City”: Enslaved Women Runaways In Antebellum Charleston.” His article focused on bondwomen living in Charleston, South Carolina. This is much more specific than Stephanie M. H. Camp’s Closer To Freedom: Enslaved Women And Everyday Resistance in the Plantation South. Both discuss resistance associated with women, but Marshall emphasized skilled women living in the city, instead of on a plantation. Marshall’s main argument was that bondwomen “found freedom in southern cities, where they could assert control over their bodies and labor while maintaining kinship ties” (Marshall 188).

Marshall began his article with several examples of enslaved women running away from their masters. These women had opportunities to support themselves because they were skilled as seamstresses or cooks, for example. Their owners printed newspaper advertisements for their runaways, but these ads did not deter the women from continuing to run away and using their newly discovered autonomy to their benefit (Marshall 188-191). Women in an urban setting had more access to freedom and mobility due to their skilled work experience.

Marshall’s next section discussed the process of slaveholders hiring out their slaves to learn skills and make them a profit. For instance, freed women of color who were entrepreneurs taught enslaved women their skills. The bondswomen were also “empowered to reject their slave status” by the competitive environment that limited job opportunities for the enslaved (Marshall 193). Not only did those apprentices learn a trade, but they also gained confidence and a desire to be free (Marshall 195). He also explained that bondswomen’s “ability to hire their time, choose their employer, and live out encouraged enslaved women to evaluate their employment situations based on wages, labor assignments, and working conditions” (Marshall 201). Enslaved female apprentices in Charleston gained skills and knowledge that they could use to live free with their families when they ran away.

Marshall’s final section and conclusion emphasized the bondswomen’s growing power and their ability to avoid losing their freedom. He explained that Charleston eventually required this group of women to wear badges to limit their employment options (Marshall 204-206). However, the women understood that their labor had value and that they did not have to remain in bondage. Marshall ended by stating “they recognized that freedom was more than simply a legal concept, but rather a lived experience that could be realized in the city through their own resourcefulness and hard work” (Marshall 212). Their perception of freedom clearly undermined their owner’s attempts to keep them enslaved dependent workers.

By contrast, Camp’s Closer to Freedom presented a compelling narrative about the bondspersons’ resistance on Southern plantations. Women and men rebelled against a system that tried to control every aspect of their lives, including spatial and temporal boundaries (Camp 4). She argued that truancy, or temporary flight, allowed women and men to gain knowledge that proved useful for more permanent escape during the Civil War (Camp 36, 123). Camp also explained that the enslaved took control of their bodies in the way they dressed or escaped to social events at night (Camp 68). While the book was published in 2004, it laid a good groundwork for understanding the plantation dynamics through the eyes of those in bondage.

Due to Marshall’s emphasis on the urban antebellum setting, his sources were often associated with Charleston. He used newspaper ads, census records, and artifacts to support his argument. Marshall utilized information from oral history but not to the same extent as Camp. In addition to oral histories, Camp used plantation and government records, journals, letters and abolitionist material to demonstrate a variety of examples of men and women’s resistance from several plantations on the South. On the other hand, Marshall, presented an urban perspective of antebellum bondwomen’s resistance. The city environment provided more opportunities for women to not only find skilled positions but also a chance to resist their owners and the limitations of slavery. In the end, primary evidence demonstrated that enslaved people were capable of rebelling successfully in both settings.

While Marshall and Camp clearly explained the complex world of slave resistance, their arguments could still be improved. Camp had the tendency to be repetitive in her use of examples, perhaps to emphasize her main points. Marshal on the other hand, provided several different examples of free and enslaved skilled women. His narratives pointed back to his argument that bondswoman took matters into their own hands and took advantage of their situations to achieve some, if not all, of their freedom. One critique of Marshall would be that he focused his attention on Charleston, which is a place that had a higher black population than white until 1860 (Marshall 192). Knowing this fact, was Charleston the exception or the norm when it provided refuge for runaways? Was it easier for people to stay hidden in large cities in general or was it mainly because the white population lost some authority as a minority?

Each of the historians chose a bottom-up approach to slavery that gave agency to bondwomen and bondmen living in the South. In contrast to the economic history of slavery in Beckert and Rockman last week, Marshall and Camp viewed slavery from social, cultural and gender perspectives. The bondspeople did not blindly accept their low status of manual laborers; rather, they found ways to separate their enslaved lives from their personal lives. Even though Marshall did not directly reference Stephanie Camp’s work, her ideas may have still influenced Marshall’s writing. Marshall did refer to other related scholarship, such as writings by Cynthia Kennedy (Braided Relations) and Midori Takagi (Rearing Wolves). This could simply be because these authors’ analysis were also based on an urban environment, not a plantation.

Placing Marshall’s article along side this week’s reading demonstrated that slave resistance occurred throughout the South. Enslaved people in the cities and on plantations opposed their chattel slavery through various acts of resistance. Their actions were not always about escaping to the North, but instead they sought access to freedom from within their local setting. These scholars recognized that these people were still able to shape their own lives despite their experiences with slavery.

word count: 1020

Bibliography

Camp, Stephanie M. H. Closer to Freedom: Enslaved Women and Everyday Resistance in the Plantation South. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2004.

Marshall, Amani. 2014. “They Are Supposed to Be Lurking About the City”: Enslaved Women Runaways in Antebellum Charleston. The South Carolina Historical Magazine. 115, no. 3: 188-212.

Final Paper Topics


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1. Free Methodism: the development of a new religious denomination started in New York as it was related to social issues of the time- such as poverty and abolition – 1860s

2. Lewis and Clark expedition: examining the early expansion of America westward, maybe looking more into the Indian perspective of the expedition or the team’s preparation for the trip 1800-1810

3. Southern California: influences on the early development of the area, such as ranches, cities, immigration, agriculture; maybe specifically looking at Orange, 1870s or 1880s