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24 Legal Stud. F. 133 (2000)
For the Better Government of Servants and Slaves: The Law of Slavery and Miscegenation

handle is hein.journals/lstf24 and id is 141 raw text is: FOR THE BETTER GOVERNMENT OF SERVANTS
AND SLAVES: THE LAW OF SLAVERY AND
MISCEGENATION
KAREN WOODS WEIERMAN*
William G. Allen, in The American Prejudice against Color (1853),
explains that he writes to serve the Anti-slavery Cause, even though
he has never been a slave and his experience of prejudice has been in
the North. Allen presents the story of his controversial interracial
marriage as an attack on American Caste and skin-deep Democracy
and he makes clear the connection between the taboo against intermar-
riage (even after the slaves were freed in the North) and Southern
bondage.'
In this Essay I explore the historical basis of Allen's claims. Using
Virginia and Massachusetts as regional models, I argue that the
development of slavery and the development of miscegenation law were
concurrent and closely intertwined. Tracing the process of gradual
emancipation in the North after the Revolutionary War and emancipa-
tion in the South after the Civil War, I then posit that the particular
historical conditions of slavery and emancipation (especially gradual
emancipation in the North) transformed the concept of race and
perpetuated the taboo against interracial marriage well past the demise
of slavery.2
I. VIRGINIA: FROM JAMESTOWN TO THE LOVING DECISION
As A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr. and Barbara K. Kopytoff contend,
There is probably no better place than Virginia to examine the origins
of the American doctrine of racial purity and the related prohibitions on
interracial sex and interracial marriage. Colonial Virginia was the
'mother' of American slavery and one of the first colonies to formulate
a legal definition of race and to enact prohibitions against interracial
* Writing Center Coordinator, Wentworth Institute of Technology; Lecturer in
English, Boston College.
1 William G. Allen, THE AMERICAN PREJUDICE AGAINST COLOR: AN AUTHENTIC
NARRATIVE, SHOWING How EASILY THE NATION GOT INTO AN UPROAR 1-2 (London: W. and
F. G. Cash, 1853).
2 See Joanne Pope Melish, DISOWNING SLAvERY: GRADUAL EMANCIPATION AND RACE
IN NEW ENGLAND, 1780-1860 (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1998).

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