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Reveal

Locked Up: The Prison Labor That Built Business Empires

Reveal

The Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX

News

4.78K Ratings

🗓️ 17 September 2022

⏱️ 52 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

After the Civil War, a new form of slavery took hold in the US and lasted more than 60 years. Associated Press reporters Margie Mason and Robin McDowell investigate the chilling history of how Southern states imprisoned mainly Black men, often for minor crimes, and then leased them out to private companies – for years, even decades, at a time. The team talks with the descendant of a man imprisoned in the Lone Rock stockade in Tennessee nearly 140 years ago, where people as young as 12 worked under subhuman conditions in coal mines and inferno-like ovens used to produce iron. This system of forced prison labor enriched the Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad company – at the cost of prisoners’ lives.

At the state park that sits on the former site of the Lone Rock stockade, relics from the hellish prison are buried beneath the soil. Archeologist Camille Westmont has found thousands of artifacts, such as utensils and the plates prisoners ate off. She has also created a database listing the names of those sent to Lone Rock. A team of volunteers are helping her, including a woman reckoning with her own ancestor’s involvement in this corrupt system and the wealth her family benefited from.

The United States Steel Corporation helped build bridges, railroads and towering skyscrapers across America. But the company also relied on forced prison labor. After U.S. Steel took over Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad in 1907, the industrial giant used prison labor for at least five years. During that time, more than 100 men died while working in their massive coal mining operation in Alabama. U.S. Steel has misrepresented this dark chapter of its history. And it has never apologized for its use of forced labor or the lives lost.The reporters push the company to answer questions about its past and engage with communities near the former mines.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey, hey, hey, it's Al. Cyber Monday is near and Amazon ads are everywhere.

0:06.2

But I'm not here to talk about deals on Amazon.

0:09.0

I'm here to tell you that Reveal Reporter Will Evans has exposed how Amazon failed to

0:14.8

protect its customers and sellers and also its workers.

0:19.4

Injury rates in Amazon warehouses only got worse during times like Cyber Monday.

0:25.0

We need to keep exposing injustice across corporate America and we need your support to do it.

0:31.4

Reveal is a nonprofit.

0:33.1

To help support our work in 2023, please donate by December 31st.

0:38.3

Just visit revealnews.org slash 2023.

0:41.9

Again, revealnews.org slash 2023.

0:45.6

Thank you.

0:54.4

From the Center for Investigative Reporting in PRX, this is Reveal.

0:58.6

I'm Al Letton.

1:02.9

Hello.

1:03.9

This past summer, reporter Margie Mason got on the phone with a man in Tennessee.

1:09.2

Let me just tell you who I am.

1:10.3

I'm a reporter at the Associated Press and I have been working on a project in Tennessee.

1:18.8

She's talking to Jerry Weedon.

1:20.8

He's a pastor in the town of Murphriesboro, southeast of Nashville.

1:25.2

Margie and her reporting partner Rob McDowell found him after months of research.

1:31.0

Their convinced Jerry is the descendant of a black man born around the time of the Civil

1:35.8

War who is arrested for minor crime and forced to work in a private coal mine.

...

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