"Fruiterer" slave badge. Charleston, South Carolina, 1834. Obverse struck with "CHARLESTON / 1834 / FRUITERER&c / No. 17". Approx. 2 5/8 x 2 7/8 in.
A Charleston slave badge issued for a "Fruiterer", typically a designation used to describe an enslaved person (often female) engaged in the sale of fruit or produce.
Condition as shown. Some pitting to front. Correct clipped corners and punch hole at top.
Charleston slave badges are sobering visual evidence of a system for hiring out enslaved men and women that was unique to that city between 1800-1865. During this period, the local government mandated that enslaved people wear or otherwise display badges like this when they were hired out by their enslavers (note the small hole at the top center of this example). The city issued the badges in return for a fee paid by slaveholders. The objects were then inscribed with an occupation, year of issue, and registration number. When worn, the badge gave its wearer some freedom of movement around Charleston. That said, the wages earned by a hired-out slave typically belonged to their owners.
Few objects are as profoundly impactful as a Charleston slave badge. This example, without any doubt, was worn by an enslaved person while they were hired out to work, likely for the financial benefit of their enslaver.
[African American History, Black Americana, Frederick Douglass, Abolition, Emancipation, Slavery, Slave, Abolitionist, John Brown, Abraham Lincoln, Civil War, Union, Confederate]
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