I didn't say that, the newspaper stories from 1859 said that.CID1990 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 11, 2020 12:49 pmGil said that - the testimony does not.houndawg wrote:
it says either Lee or the overseer
It is a small point - Lee owned slaves and in at least two instances he had two of them whipped. But this is how history gets twisted... the small details are given short shrift in favor of “larger truths” and then the actual history winds up distorted. It matters.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
From the previous link:
June 2nd, 1859 saying that four fugitive slaves had been arrested in Westminster, Maryland. On June 24th of the same year, two anonymous letters appeared in the New York Tribune. One of these reports that since becoming owner of his wife's family's estate, conditions on Lee's Arlington plantation had deteriorated sharply. The author alleges that an 80 year old man is made to work as a field hand, that elderly women were made to work through the night making clothes for field hands, that food rations had been slashed, and that arbitrary punishment had become common. She or he also recounts a very similar story to the one in the Testimony of Wesley Norris, though in this letter, the whipping is thirty nine lashes for both of the Norris siblings (the legally permitted maximum) rather than fifty and twenty. A second letter reportedly from a neighbour of Robert Lee also reports that the incident occurred, with alarm. Both letters protest that upon the death of his wife's father, the Arlington slaves were supposed to have been freed, and they strongly imply that Lee prevented the publication of the notice of manumission. Curiously, these letters portray Lee in a worse light again - both claim that he flogged the slaves himself:












