The Price They Paid: Slavery, Shipwrecks, and Reparations Before the Civil War
By (Author) Jeff Forret
The New Press
The New Press
26th February 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
History of the Americas
342.73087
Hardback
336
Width 152mm, Height 228mm, Spine 21mm
A prizewinning historian uncovers the first instances of reparations in Americaironically, though perhaps not surprisingly, paid to slaveholders, not former slaves
In 1831, the American ship Comet, carrying 165 enslaved men, women, and children, crashed onto a coral reef near the shore of the Bahamasthen part of the British Empirewhere slavery had been outlawed. Shortly afterwards, the Vice Admiralty Court in Nassau, over the outraged objections of the ships owners, set the rescued captives free. American slave owners and the companies who insured the liberated human cargoes would spend years lobbying for reparations, not for the emancipated slaves, of course, but for the masters deprived of their human property.
In a work of profoundly relevant research and storytelling, historian and Bancroft Award finalist Jeff Forret uncovers how the Cometas well as similar episodes that unfolded over the antebellum eraresulted in the first direct slavery reparations payments made by the U.S. government, establishing a precedent that has never been fully explored. The Price They Paid shows how, unlike their former owners and insurers, neither the survivors of the Comet and other vessels, nor their descendants, have ever received reparations for the price they paid in their lives, labor, and suffering during slavery.
Any accounting of reparations today requires a fuller understanding of how the debts of slavery have been paid, and to whom. The Price They Paid represents a major step forward in that effort.
Jeff Forret is a university professor at Lamar University, Texas. He won the Frederick Douglass Book Prize, was a finalist for the Bancroft Prize for his book Slave against Slave: Plantation Violence in the Old South, and is the author of the critically acclaimed Williams Gang, among other books. He lives in Beaumont, Texas.