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Tennessee. Moreover, he felt that, as Louisiana was
largely an agricultural State, he would exert the best
influence by himself continuing as a planter, as he was
in Tennessee. He purchased a sugar plantation on
Bayou Lafourche, and settled on it with his family and
four hundred Negroes to whom he was a most elight-
ened master.

In addition to creating humane working conditions
(Polk refused, for one thing, to let his Negroes work on
Sunday, even in the cane-crushing season, much to the
scandal of his nceighbors who complained that he was
spoiling his workers and would surely go bankrupt), he
gave every care to the Negroes' moral and religious
guidance, as he had in Tennessee. A visitor to Leighton
has described the Bishop instructing some of the Negro
men in one great room of the mansion, his wife doing
the same for the women elsewhere in the house, and
one of the Bishop's daughters conducing a class for
Negro children in yet another place.

In each case "questions on the elementary principles
of the Christian religion were put and answered with
readiness and accuracy. Hymns were sung and anthems
chanted, the whole service exhibiting the care with
which they had been instructed and their interest in the
exercises." This concern with the wellness of his own
Negroes, bishop Polk extended to the entire diocese, so
that by 1855, there were congregations of Negroes on
thirty-one plantations, and in every parish the clergy
were ministering to blacks as well as whites. To any-
one who spoke of the difficulty of teaching Christian
religion and morality to a people so recently trans-
ported from darkest Africa, the Bishop would reply,
"You may not save him, but you will save yourself."

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Notes and Questions

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swmdal

In a previously-mentioned post on "Meridiana-The Blog of the Sewanee Project on Slavery, Race, and Reconciliation" dated June 23, 2018, Woody Register stated: "The ministry at St. John’s would deliver souls to Christ and proof to slavery’s growing legions of critics that holding black persons in bondage was neither a sin nor a contradiction of American principles of liberty and equality. Bishop Polk told his faithful that a master assured his salvation by trying to provide for that of his slaves. Slaveholders were the special instruments for advancing the kingdom of God." There was at least a bit of self-interest in
Polk's treatment of his four hundred Negroes "to whom he was a most enlightened master."

swmdal

Polk was not unique in allowing his slaves some respite on Sundays. Thomas Jefferson's Monticello allowed some slaves (typically not house servants, who were on call full time) to "pursue their own interests in evenings, on Sundays, and on some holidays."