History

The Shocking Photo of ‘Whipped Peter’

That Made Slavery’s Brutality Impossible to Deny

In March 1863, Peter staggered into a Union encampment in Baton Rouge, exhausted and battered. He had endured a harrowing ten-day escape, pursued by bloodhounds, running barefoot through creeks and fields, his clothes reduced to muddy, tattered rags. Yet this ordeal paled in comparison to the horrors of his enslavement on John and Bridget Lyons’ Louisiana plantation. There, Peter suffered a brutal whipping that nearly killed him, leaving his back a map of raised welts and scars from buttocks to shoulders—a testament to the savagery of slavery.

Upon reaching the Union camp, Peter enlisted in the army and underwent a medical examination that exposed his scars. The sight horrified white soldiers, though black soldiers, accustomed to such brutality, were less shocked. Two photographers, McPherson and Oliver, captured an image of Peter’s scarred back, which was reproduced as a carte-de-visite, a popular, affordable photo format during the Civil War. The photograph, dubbed “The Scourged Back” or “Whipped Peter,” spread rapidly across the nation, becoming one of the era’s most iconic images of slavery’s cruelty. Published in Harper’s Weekly, it reached a vast audience, though some confusion arose when Peter was mistakenly called “Gordon.”

Peter after his escape, the welts from being whipped upon his back
Peter, after his escape, had the welts from being whipped upon his back

The image galvanized abolitionist sentiment, contradicting Southern claims that slavery was merely an economic necessity. Abolitionists sold the photo to raise funds, and it fueled public outrage, with one journalist urging that it be “multiplied by 100,000, and scattered over the States.” A Union surgeon, J.W. Mercer, noted that many escaped slaves bore similar scars, reinforcing the image’s truth. Yet Copperheads—Northerners sympathetic to the South—dismissed it as fake, prompting a Union soldier to defend its authenticity, emphasizing the undeniable “progress of truth.”

Peter’s escape began after his whipping by the plantation overseer, Artayou Carrier, who was later fired. Fleeing with three others, Peter used onions to mask their scent from bloodhounds. One companion was killed by slave hunters, but Peter and the others reached the Union camp, overjoyed to see black soldiers in uniform. Beyond the photograph and his brief testimony, little is known of Peter’s life, including his fate after the war. His image, however, endured as a powerful indictment of slavery, revealing its brutality to Northerners unfamiliar with its realities.

Despite its impact, accounts of Peter’s ordeal reflect the era’s pervasive racism, even among sympathetic Northerners. Harper’s Weekly described him as having “unusual intelligence and energy,” perpetuating stereotypes, while a surgeon noted his lack of “unusual viciousness,” as if such a trait could justify his suffering. Still, Peter’s scarred back became a rallying cry for abolition, its wide circulation through mass media amplifying its influence. As historian Bruce Laurie noted, what began as a private image achieved profound significance through its reach.

Whipping was a common tool of control on Southern plantations, symbolizing masters’ authority and slaves’ oppression. For white Southerners and enslaved black people, scarred backs like Peter’s were grimly familiar. For Northerners, however, his image made slavery’s horrors undeniable, cementing its place as one of the Civil War era’s most haunting and influential photographs.

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