© This work is the property of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. It may be used freely by individuals for research, teaching and personal use as long as this statement of availability is included in the text.
Crispus Attucks, the First Martyr of the American Revolution,
King
(now State) Street, Boston, March 5th, 1770. Page 16.
By
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
HARRIET BEECHER STOWE.
THE colored race have been generally considered by their enemies, and sometimes even by their friends, as deficient in energy and courage. Their virtues have been supposed to be principally negative ones. This little collection of interesting incidents, made by a colored man, will redeem the character of the race from this misconception, and show how much injustice there may often be in a generally admitted idea.
In considering the services of the Colored Patriots of the Revolution, we are to reflect upon them as far more magnanimous, because rendered to a nation which did not acknowledge them as citizens and equals, and in whose interests and prosperity they had less at stake. It was not for their own land they fought, not even for a land which had adopted them, but for a land which had enslaved them, and whose laws, even in freedom, oftener oppressed than protected. Bravery, under such circumstances, has a peculiar beauty and merit.
It is to be hoped that the reading of these sketches will give new self-respect and confidence to the race here represented. Let them emulate the noble deeds and sentiments of their ancestors, and feel that the dark skin can never be a badge of disgrace, while it has been ennobled by such examples.
And their white brothers in reading may remember, that generosity, disinterested courage and bravery, are of not particular race and complexion, and that the image of the Heavenly Father may be reflected alike by all. Each record of worth in this oppressed and despised should be pondered, for it is by many such that the cruel and unjust public sentiment, which has so long proscribed them, may be reversed, and full opportunities given them to take rank among the nations of the earth.
H. B. STOWE.
ANDOVER, October, 1855.
The following pages are an effort to stem the tide of prejudice against the colored race. The white man despises the colored man, and has come to think him fit only for the menial drudgery to which the majority of the race has been so long doomed. "This prejudice was never reasoned up and will never be reasoned down." It must be lived down. In a land where wealth is the basis of reputation, the colored man must prove his sagacity and enterprise by successful trade or speculation. To show his capacity for mental culture, he must BE, not merely claim the right to be, a scholar. Professional eminence is peculiarly the result of practice and long experience. The colored people, therefore, owe it to each other and to their race to extend liberal encouragement to colored lawyers, physicians, and teachers--as well as to mechanics and artisans of all kinds. Let no individual despair. Not to name the living, let me hold up the example of one whose career deserves to be often spoken of, as complete proof that a colored man can rise to social respect and the highest employment and usefulness, in spite not only of the prejudice that crushes his race, but of the heaviest personal burthens. Dr. DAVID RUGGLES, poor, blind, and an invalid, founded a well-known Water-Cure Establishment in the town where I write, erected expensive buildings, won honorable distinction as a most successful and skillful practitioner, secured the warm regard and esteem of this community, and left a name embalmed in the hearts of many who feel that they owe life to his eminent skill and careful practice. Black though he was, his aid was sought sometimes by those numbered among the Pro-Slavery class. To be sure, his is but a single instance, and I know it required preeminent ability to make a way up to light through the overwhelming mass of prejudice and contempt. But it is these rare cases of strong will and eminent endowment,--always sure to make the world
feel them whether it will or no,--that will finally wring from a contemptuous community the reluctant confession of the colored man's equality.
I ask, therefore, the reader's patronage of the following sheets on several grounds; first, as an encouragement to the author, Mr. NELL, to pursue a subject which well deserves illustration on other points beside those on which he has labored; secondly, to scatter broadly as possible the facts here collected, as instances of the colored man's success--a record of the genius he has shown, and the services he has rendered society in the higher departments of exertion; thirdly to encourage such men as RUGGLES to perseverance, by showing a generous appreciation of their labors, and a cordial sympathy in their trials.
Some things set down here go to prove colored men patriotic though denied a country:--and all show a wish, on their part, prove themselves men, in a land whose laws refuse to recognise their manhood. If the reader shall, sometimes, blush to find that, in the days of our country's weakness, we remembered their power to help or harm us, and availed ourselves gladly of their gone services, while we have, since, used our strength only to crush them the more completely, let him resolve henceforth to do them justice himself and claim it for them of others. If any shall be convinced by these facts, that they need only a free path to show the same capacity and reap the same rewards as other races, open every door to their efforts, and hasten the day when to be black shall not, almost necessarily, doom a man to poverty and the most menial drudgery. There is touching eloquence, as well as something of Spartan brevity, in the appeal of a well-known colored man, Rev. PETER WILLIAMS, of New York:--"We are NATIVES Of this country: we ask only to be treated as well as FOREIGNERS. Not a few of our fathers suffered and bled to purchase its independence; we ask only to be treated as well as those who fought against it. We have toiled to cultivate it, and to raise it to its present prosperous condition; we ask only to share equal privileges with those who come from distant lands to enjoy the fruits of our labor."
WENDELL PHILLIPS.
NORTHAMPTON, Oct. 25, 1852.
IN the month of July, 1847, the eloquent Bard of Freedom, JOHN G. WHITTIER, contributed to the National Era a statement of facts relative to the Military Services of Colored Americans in the Revolution of 1776, and the War of 1812. Being a member of the Society of Friends, he disclaimed any eulogy upon the shedding of blood, even in the cause of acknowledged justice, but, says he, "when we see a whole nation doing honor to the memories of one class of its defenders, to the total neglect of another class, who had the misfortune to be of darker complexion, we cannot forego the satisfaction of inviting notice to certain historical facts, which, for the last half century, have been quietly elbowed aside, as no more deserving of a place in patriotic recollection, than the descendants of the men, to whom the facts in question relate, have to a place in a Fourth of July procession, [in the nation's estimation.] Of the services and sufferings of the Colored Soldiers of the Revolution, no attempt has, to our knowledge, been made to preserve a record. They have had no historian. With here and there an exception, they have all passed away, and only some faint traditions linger among their descendants. Yet enough is known to show that the free colored men of the United States bore their full proportion of the sacrifices and trials of the Revolutionary War."
In my attempt, then, to rescue from oblivion the name and fame of those who, though "tinged with the hated stain," yet had warm hearts and active hands in the "times that tried men's souls," I will first gratefully tender him my thanks for the service his compilation has afforded me, and my acknowledgments also to other individuals who have kindly contributed facts for this work. Imperfect as these pages may prove, to prepare even these, journeys have been made to confer with the living, and even pilgrimages to grave-yards, to save all that may still be gleaned from their fast disappearing records.
There is now an institution of learning in the State of New York, (Central College,) where the chair of Professorship in Belles Lettres
has been filled by three colored young men, CHARLES L. REASON, WILLIAM G. ALLEN, and GEORGE B. VASHON, each of whom has worn the Professor's mantle gracefully, giving proof of good scholarship and manly character.
These men, as teachers, especially in Colleges open to all, irrespective of accidental differences, are doing a mighty work in uprooting prejudice. The influences thus generated are already felt. Many a young white man or woman who, in early life, has imbibed wrong notions of the colored man's inferiority, is taught a new lesson by the colored Professors at McGrawville; and they leave its honored walls with thanksgiving in their hearts for their conversion from pro-slavery heathenism to the Gospel of Christian Freedom, and are thus prepared to go forth as pioneers in the cause of Human Brotherhood.
But the Orator's voice and Author's pen have both been eloquent in detailing the merits of Colored American, in these various ramifications of society, while a combination of circumstances has veiled from the public eye a narration of those military services which are generally conceded as passports to the honorable and lasting notice of Americans.*
* In 1852, Dr. M. R. DELANY published a work with special reference to condition of the colored people in the United States.
I was born on Beacon Hill, and from early childhood, have loved to visit the Eastern wing of the State House, and read the four stones taken from the monument that once towered from its summit. One contains the following inscription:--
"Americans, while from this eminence scenes of luxuriant fertility, of flourishing commerce, and the abodes of social happiness, meet your view, forget not those who by their exertions have secured to you these blessings."
These words became indelibly impressed upon my mind, and have contributed their share in the production of this book, which, like the labors of "Old Mortality," rendered immortal by the genius of Scott, I humbly trust will deepen in the heart and conscience of this nation the sense of justice, that will ere long manifest itself in deeds worthy a people who, "free themselves," should be "foremost to make free."
WILLIAM C. NELL.
BOSTON, October, 1855.
The following brief account of the organization of a colored military company in Boston, accidentally omitted from the body of this work, is inserted here, (though somewhat out of place,) as a matter too important to be overlooked in a book of this character:--
The "Massasoit Guards," a military company originating among some of the colored citizens of Boston, having been refused a loan of State arms, have equipped themselves in preparation for volunteer service. They do not wish to be considered a caste company, and hence invite to their ranks any citizens of good moral character who may wish to enrol their names.
Many query, "Why call themselves 'Massasoit Guards?' why not 'Attucks' Guards,' after one of their own race, and the first martyr of American Independence, on the 5th of March, 1770?
Perhaps, as the name of Attucks has been already appropriated by colored military companies in New York and Cincinnati, they accepted Massasoit as their patron saint. He was one of those Indian chiefs, who, in early colonial times, proved himself signally friendly to the interests of the Old Bay State. Their pride of loyalty may have prompted the choice, though we believe a better selection could have been made. Still, if they are satisfied, the preferences of others are superfluous.
We earnestly hope they will revive the efforts for erasing the word white from the military clause in the statute-book, for, until that is accomplished, their manhood and citizenship are under proscription.
Page 19, in the sentence from Mr. Parker, read Crispus for Christopher.
Page 21, for Salem, read Peter Salem.
Page 112, third line from bottom, read J. S. Rock, M. D.
Page 157, five lines from top, read fractional for practical.
Page 181, third line from bottom, read John Boyer Vashon.
CRISPUS ATTUCKS--COLORED AMERICANS ON BUNKER HILL-- SEYMOUR BURR--JEREMY JONAH--A BRAVE COLORED ARTILLERIST --GOVERNOR HANCOCK'S FLAG--BIG DICK--PRIMUS HALL-- JAMES AND HOSEA EASTON--JOB LEWIS--QUACK MATRICK-- JACK GROVE--BOSSON WRIGHT--PETITIONS OF COLORED MEN IN OLD COLONY TIMES--LEGISLATIVE ACTION ON SLAVERY-- MUM BETT--GOV. HANCOCK AGAINST KIDNAPPING-- PAUL CUFFE--ETC. ETC.
ON the 5th of March, 1851, the following petition was presented to the Massachusetts Legislature, asking an appropriation of $1,500, for the erection of a monument to
the memory of CRISPUS ATTUCKS, the first martyr in the Boston Massacre of March 5th, 1770:--
To the Honorable the Senate and House of Representatives of the State of Massachusetts, in General Court assembled:
The undersigned, citizens of Boston, respectfully ask that an appropriation of fifteen hundred dollars may be made by your Honorable Body, for a monument to be erected to the memory of CRISPUS ATTUCKS, the first martyr of the American Revolution.
WILLIAM C. NELL,
CHARLES LENOX REMOND,
HENRY WEEDEN,
LEWIS HAYDEN,
FREDERICK G. BARBADOES,
JOSHUA B. SMITH,
LEMUEL
BURR.
This petition was referred to the Committee on Military Affairs, who granted a bearing to the petitioners, in whose behalf appeared Wendell Phillips, Esq., and William C. Nell, but finally submitted an adverse report, on the ground that a boy, Christopher Snyder, was previously killed. Admitting this fact, (which was the result of a very different scene from that in which Attucks fell,) it does not offset the claims of Attucks, and those who made the 5th of March famous in our annals the day which history selects as the dawn of the American Revolution.
Botta's History, and Hewes's Reminiscences (the tea party survivor), establish the fact that the colored man, ATTUCKS,
was of and with the people, and was never regarded otherwise.
Botta, in speaking of the scenes of the 5th of March, says:--"The people were greatly exasperated. The multitude ran towards King street, crying, 'Let us drive out these ribalds; they have no business here!' The rioters rushed furiously towards the Custom House; they approached the sentinel, crying, 'Kill him, kill him!' They assaulted him with snowballs, pieces of ice, and whatever they could lay their hands upon. The guard were then called, and, in marching to the Custom House, they encountered," continues Botta, "a band of the populace, led by a mulatto named ATTUCKS, who brandished their clubs, and pelted them with snowballs. The maledictions, the imprecations, the execrations of the multitude, were horrible. In the midst of a torrent of invective from every quarter, the military were challenged to fire. The populace advanced to the points of their bayonets. The soldiers appeared like statues; the cries, the howlings, the menaces, the violent din of bells still sounding the alarm, increased the confusion and the horrors of these moments; at length, the mulatto and twelve of his companions, pressing forward, environed the soldiers, and striking their muskets with their clubs, cried to the multitude: 'Be not afraid; they dare not fire: why do you hesitate, why do you not kill them, why not crush them at once?' The mulatto lifted his arm against Capt. Preston, and having turned one of the muskets, he seized the bayonet with his left hand, as if he intended
to execute his threat. At this moment, confused cries were heard: 'The wretches dare not fire!' Firing succeeds. ATTUCKS is slain. The other discharges follow. Three were killed, five severely wounded, and several others slightly."
ATTUCKS had formed the patriots in Dock Square, from whence they marched up King street, passing through the street up to the main guard, in order to make the attack.
ATTUCKS was killed by Montgomery, one of Capt. Preston's soldiers. He had been foremost in resisting, and was first slain. As proof of a front engagement, he received two balls, one in each breast.
John Adams, counsel for the soldiers, admitted that Attucks appeared to have undertaken to be the hero of the night, and to lead the people. He and Caldwell, not being residents of Boston, were both buried from Faneuil Hall. The citizens generally participated in the solemnities.
The Boston Transcript
of March 7, 1851, published an anonymous communication, disparaging the whole
affair; denouncing CRISPUS ATTUCKS as a very firebrand of disorder and sedition,
the most conspicuous, inflammatory, and uproarious of the misguided populace,
and who, if he had not fallen a martyr, would richly have deserved hanging as an
incendiary.* If the
leader, ATTUCKS, deserved the epithets above applied, is it not a legitimate
inference, that the citizens who followed on are included, and hence should
swing in his company on the gallows? If the leader and his patriot * The Transcript of March
5th, 1855, honorably alludes to CRISPUS ATTUCKS.
band were misguided, the distinguished orators who, in after days, commemorated the 5th of March, must, indeed, have been misguided, and with them, the masses who were inspired by their eloquence; for John Hancock, in 1774, invokes the injured shades of Maverick, Gray, Caldwell, ATTUCKS, Carr; and Judge Dawes, in 1775, thus alludes to the band of "misguided incendiaries":--"The provocation of that night must be numbered among the master-springs which gave the first motion to a vast machinery,--a noble and comprehensive system of national independence."
Ramsay's History of the American Revolution, Vol. I., p. 22, says--"The anniversary of the 5th of March was observed with great solemnity; eloquent orators were successively employed to preserve the remembrance of it fresh in the mind. On these occasions, the blessings of liberty, the horrors of slavery, and the danger of a standing army, were presented to the public view. These annual orations administered fuel to the fire of liberty, and kept it burning with an irresistible flame."
The 5th of March continued to be celebrated for the above reasons, until the Anniversary of the Declaration of American Independence was substituted in its place; and its orators were expected to honor the feelings and principles of the former as having given birth to the latter.
On the 5th of March, 1776, Washington repaired to the intrenchments. "Remember," said he, "it is the 5th of March, and avenge the death of your brethren!"
In judging, then, of the merits of those who launched
the American Revolution, we should not take counsel from the Tories of that or the present day, but rather heed the approving eulogy of Lovell, Hancock, and Warren.
Welcome, then, be every taunt that such correspondents may fling at ATTUCKS and his company, as the best evidence of their merits and their strong claim upon our gratitude! Envy and the foe do not labor to traduce any but prominent champions of a cause.
The rejection of the petition was to be expected, if we accept the axiom that a colored man never gets justice done him in the United States, except by mistake. The petitioners only asked for justice, and that the name of CRISPUS ATTUCKS might be honored as a grateful country honors other gallant Americans.
And yet, let it be recorded, the same session of the Legislature which had refused the ATTUCKS monument, granted one to ISAAC DAVIS, of Concord. Both were promoters of the American Revolution, but one was white, the other was black; and this is the only solution to the problem why justice was not fairly meted out.
In April, 1851, Thomas Sims, a fugitive slave from Georgia, was returned to bondage from the city of Boston, and on Friday, June 2d, 1854, Anthony Burns, a fugitive from Virginia, was dragged back to slavery,--both marching over the very ground that ATTUCKS trod. Among the allusions to the man, and the associations clustering around King street of the past and State street of the present, the following are selected. The first is from a speech of the
Hon. ANSON BURLINGAME, in Faneuil Hall, Oct. 13, 1852, on the rendition of Thomas Sims:--
"The conquering of our New England prejudices in favor of liberty 'does not pay.' It 'does not pay,' I submit, to plat our fellow-citizens under practical martial law; to beat the drum in our streets; to clothe our temples of justice in chains, and to creep along, by the light of the morning star, over the ground wet with the blood of CRISPUS ATTUCKS, the noble colored man, who fell in King street before the muskets of tyranny, away in the dawn of our Revolution; creep by Faneuil Hall, silent and dark; by the Green Dragon, where that noble mechanic, Paul Revere, once mustered the sons of liberty; within sight of Bunker Hill, where was first unfurled the glorious banner of our country; creep along, with funeral pace, bearing a brother, a man made in the image of God, not to the grave,--O, that were merciful, for in the grave there is no work and no device, and the voice of a master never comes,--but back to the degradation of a slavery which kills out of a living body an immortal soul. O, where is the man now, who took part in that mournful transaction, who would wish, looking back upon it, to avow it!"
"Thousands of agitated people came out to see the preacher [Burns] led off to slavery, over the spot where Hancock stood and ATTUCKS fell."*
* Worcester Spy.
"And at high 'change, over the spot where, on the 5th of March, 1770, fell the first victim in the Boston Massacre,--where the negro blood of CHRISTOPHER ATTUCKS stained the ground,--over that spot, Boston authorities carried a citizen of Massachusetts to Alexandria as a slave."**
** THEODORE PARKER, June 4th.
"A short distance from that sacred edifice, [Faneuil Hall,] and between it and the Court House, where the disgusting rites of sacrificing a human being to slavery were lately performed, was the spot which was first moistened with American blood in resisting slavery, and among the first victims was a colored person."*
* Hon. CHARLES SUMNER'S Speech in Congress, June 28,1854.
"Nearly all those who had watched the trial of poor Burns, who heard his doom, saw the slave-guard march from the Court House, that had been closed so long, through State street, swept as if by a pestilence, down to the vessel that, under our flag, bore him out of the Bay the Pilgrims entered, into captivity, would rather have looked on a funeral procession, rather have heard the rattling of British guns again . . . . . Sad, shocking, was the sight of the harmless, innocent victim of all that mighty machinery, as he passed down Queen's street and King's street, all hung in mourning. Better to have seen the halter and the coffin for a criminal again paraded through our streets, than the cutlasses and the cannon for him. As he went down to the dock into which the tea was thrown, the spirits that lingered about the spots he passed vanished and fled, whilst dire and frightful images arose in their place."**
Speech of CHARLES M. ELLIS, (one of Burns' counsel,) July, 1854.
HENRY HILL, a colored man, and a Revolutionary Soldier, died in Chilicothe, on the 12th of August, 1833, aged eighty years. He was buried with the honors of war,--a singular tribute of respect to the memory of a colored man, but no doubt richly merited in this case. Henry, I should infer from an obituary notice in the Chilicothe Advertiser, was at the battle of Lexington, Brandywine, Monmouth, Princeton, and Yorktown.
Brave Colored Artillerist. Page 23.
Peter Salem, the Colored American, at Bunker Hill. Page 21.
Swett, in his "Sketches of Bunker Hill Battle," alludes to the presence of a colored man in that fight. He says:-- "Major Pitcairn caused the first effusion of blood at Lexington. In that battle, his horse was shot under him, while he was separated from his troops. With presence of mind, he feigned himself slain; his pistols were taken from his holsters, and he was left for dead, when he seized the opportunity, and escaped. He appeared at Bunker Hill, and, says the historian, 'Among those who mounted the works was the gallant Major Pitcairn, who exultingly cried out, "The day is ours!" when a black soldier named SALEM shot him through, and he fell. His agonized son received him in his arms, and tenderly bore him to the boats.' A contribution was made in the army for the colored soldier, and he was presented to Washington as having performed this feat."*
*In some engravings of the battle, this colored soldier occupies a prominent position; but in more recent editions, his figure is non est inventus. A significant, but inglorious omission. On some bills, however, of the Monumental Bank, Charlestown, and Freeman's Bank, Boston, his presence is manifest.
Besides SALEM, there were quite a number of colored soldiers at Bunker Hill. Among them, TITUS COBURN, ALEXANDER AMES, and BARZILAI LEW, all of Andover; and also CATO HOWE, of Plymouth,--each of whom received a pension. Lew was a fifer. His daughter, Mrs. Dalton, now lives within a few rods of the battle field.
SEYMOUR BURR was a slave in Connecticut, to a brother of Col. Aaron Burr, from whom he derived his name. Though treated with much favor by his master, his heart
yearned for liberty, and he seized an occasion to induce several of his fellow slaves to escape in a boat, intending to join the British, that they might become freemen; but being pursued by their owners, armed with the implements of death, they were compelled to surrender.
Burr's master, contrary to his expectation, did not inflict corporeal punishment, but reminded him of the kindness with which he had been treated, and asked what inducement he could have for leaving him. Burr replied, that he wanted his liberty. His owner finally proposed, that if he would give him the bounty money, he might join the American army, and at the end of the war be his own man. Burr, willing to make any sacrifice for his liberty, consented, and served faithfully during the campaign, attached to the Seventh Regiment, commanded by Colonel, afterwards Governor Brooks, of Medford. He was present at the siege of Fort Catskill, and endured much suffering from starvation and cold. After some skirmishing, the army was relieved by the arrival of Gen. Washington, who, as witnessed by him, shed tears of joy on finding them unexpectedly safe.
Burr married one of the Punkapog tribe of Indians, and settled in Canton, Mass. He received a pension from Government. His widow died in 1852, aged over one hundred years.
JEREMY JONAH served in the same Regiment, (Col. Brooks's,) at the same time with Seymour Burr. The two veterans used to make merry together in recounting their military adventures, especially the drill on one occasion,
when Jonah stumbled over a stone heap; for which he was severely caned by the Colonel. He drew a pension.
LEMUEL BURR, (grandson of Seymour,) a resident of Boston, often speaks of their reminiscences of DEBORAH GANNETT. In confirmation of this part of their history, I give the following extract from the Resolves of the General court of Massachusetts during the session of 1791:--
XXIII.--Resolve on the petition of DEBORAH GANNETT, granting her £34 for services in the Continental Army. January 20,1792.
On the petition of DEBORAH GANNETT, praying for compensation for services performed in the late army of the United States:
Whereas, it appears to this Court that the said DEBORAH GANNETT enlisted, under the name of Robert Shurtliff, in Capt. Webb's company, in the 4th Massachusetts Regiment, on May 20th, 1782, and did actually perform the duty of a soldier, in the late army of the United States, to the 23d day of October, 1783, for which she has received no compensation; and, whereas, it further appears that the said Deborah exhibited an extraordinary instance of female heroism, by discharging the duties of a faithful gallant soldier, and at the same time preserving the virtue and chastity of her sex unsuspected and unblemished, and was discharged from the service with a fair and honorable character; therefore,
Resolved, That the Treasurer of this Commonwealth be, and he hereby is, directed to issue his note to the said Deborah for the sum of thirty four pounds, bearing interest from Oct. 23, 1783.
Joshua B. Smith has stated to me that he was present at a company of distinguished Massachusetts men, when the conversation turned upon the exploits of Revolutionary times; and that the late Judge Story related an incident of
a colored Artillerist who, while having charge of a cannon with a white fellow soldier, was wounded in one arm. He immediately turned to his comrade, and proposed changing his position, exclaiming that he had yet one arm left with which he could render some service to his country. The change proved fatal to the heroic soldier, for another shot from the enemy killed him upon the spot. Judge Story furnished other incidents of the bravery of colored soldiers, adding, that he had often thought them and their descendants too much neglected, considering the part they had sustained in the wars; and he regretted that he did not, in early life, gather the facts into a shape for general information.
The late Governor Eustis, of Massachusetts, the pride and boast of the Democracy of the East, himself an active participant in the war, and therefore a most competent witness, states that the free colored soldiers entered the ranks with the whites. The time of those who were slaves was purchased of their masters, and they were induced to enter the service in consequence of a law of Congress, by which, on condition of their serving in the ranks during the war, they were made freemen. This hope of liberty inspired them with fresh courage to oppose their breasts to the Hessian bayonet at Red Bank, and enabled them to endure with fortitude the cold and famine of Valley Forge.
At the close of the Revolutionary War, John Hancock presented the colored company, called "the Bucks of America," with an appropriate banner, bearing his initials,
as a tribute to their courage and devotion throughout the struggle. The "Bucks," under the command of Colonel Middleton, were invited to a collation in a neighboring town, and, en route, were requested to halt in front of the Hancock Mansion, in Beacon street, where the Governor and his son united in the above presentation.
LYDIA MARIA CHILD gives the following sketch of Col. MIDDLETON, commander of the "Bucks":--
"Col. Middleton was not a very good specimen of the colored man. He was an old horse-breaker, who owned a house that he inhabited at the head of Belknap street. He was greatly respected by his own people, and his house was thronged with company. His morals were questioned,-- he was passionate, intemperate, and profane. We lived opposite to him for five years; during all this time, my father treated this old negro with uniform kindness. He had a natural compassion for the ignorant and the oppressed, and I never knew him fail to lift his hat to this old neighbor, and audibly say, with much suavity, 'How do you do, Col. Middleton?' or 'Good morning, colonel.' My father would listen to the dissonant sounds that came from an old violin that the colonel played on every summer's evening, and was greatly amused at his power in subduing mettlesome colts. He would walk over and compliment the colonel on his skill in his hazardous employment, and the colonel would, when thus praised, urge the untamed animal to some fearful caper, to show off his own bold
daring. Our negroes, for many years, were allowed peaceably to celebrate the abolition of the slave trade; but it became a frolic with the white boys to deride them on this day, and finally, they determined to drive them, on these occasions, from the Common. The colored people became greatly incensed by this mockery of their festival, and this infringement of their liberty, and a rumor reached us, on one of these anniversaries, that they were determined to resist the whites, and were going armed, with this intention. About three o'clock in the afternoon, a shout of a beginning fray reached us. Soon, terrified children and women ran down Belknap street, pursued by white boys, who enjoyed their fright. The sounds of battle approached; clubs and brickbats were flying in all directions. At this crisis, Col. Middleton opened his door, armed with a loaded musket, and, in a loud voice, shrieked death to the first white who should approach. Hundreds of human beings, white and black, were pouring down the street, the blacks making but a feeble resistance, the odds in numbers and spirit being against them. Col. Middleton's voice could be heard above every other, urging his party to turn and resist to the last. His appearance was terrific, his musket was levelled, ready to sacrifice the first white man that came within its range. The colored party, shamed by his reproaches, and fired by his example, rallied, and made a short show of resistance. Capt. Winslow Lewis and my father determined to try and quell this tumult. Capt. Lewis valiantly grappled with the
ringleaders of the whites, and my father coolly surveyed the scene from his own door, and instantly determined what to do. He calmly approached Col. Middleton, who called to him to stop, or he was a dead man! I can see my father at this distance of time, and never can forget the feelings his family expressed, as they saw him still approach this armed man. He put aside his musket, and, with his countenance all serenity, said a few soothing words to the colonel, who burst into tears, put up his musket, and, with great emotion, exclaimed, loud enough for us to hear across the street, 'I will do it for you, for you have always been kind to me,' and retired into his own house, and shut his door upon the scene."
When a boy, living in West Boston, I was familiar with the person of "Big Dick," and have heard the following account of him (which is taken from the Boston Patriot) confirmed. It is not wholly out of place in this collection. "RICHARD SEAVERS," said that journal, a few days after his decease, "was a man of mighty mould." A short time previous to his death, be measured six feet five inches in height, and attracted much attention when seen in the street. He was born in Salem, or vicinity, and when about sixteen years old, went to England, where he entered the British navy. When the war of 1812 broke out, be would not fight against his country, gave himself up as an American citizen, and was made a prisoner of war.
"A surgeon on board an American privateer, who experienced the tender mercies of the British Government in
Dartmoor prison, during the War of 1812, makes honorable mention of "King Dick," as be was there called:--
" 'There are about four hundred and fifty negroes in prison No. 4, and this assemblage of blacks affords many curious anecdotes, and much matter for speculation. These blacks have a ruler among them, whom they call King Dick. He is by far the largest, and, I suspect, the strongest man in the prison. He is six feet five inches in height, and proportionably large. This black Hercules commands respect, and his subjects tremble in his presence. He goes the rounds every day, and visits every berth to see if they are all kept clean. When he goes the rounds, he puts on a large bearskin cap, and carries in his hand a huge club. If any of his men are dirty, drunken, or grossly negligent, he threatens them with a beating; and if they are saucy, they are sure to receive one. They have several times conspired against him, and attempted to dethrone him, but he has always conquered the rebels. One night, several attacked him, while asleep in his hammock; he sprang up and seized the smallest of them by his feet, and thumped another with him. The poor negro who had thus been made a beetle of was carried next day to the hospital, sadly bruised, and provokingly laughed at. This ruler of the blacks, this King Richard IV.; is a man of good understanding, and he exercises it to a good purpose. If any one of his color cheats, defrauds, or steals from his comrades, he is sure to be punished for it.' "
CHARLES BOWLES, (says his biographer, Rev. John W. Lewis,) "was born in Boston, 1761. His father was an African; his mother was a daughter of the celebrated Col. Morgan, who was distinguished as an officer in the Rifle Corps of the American army, during the revolutionary struggle for independence. At the early age of twelve, he
was placed in the family of a Tory; but his young heart did not fancy his new situation, for at the tender age of fourteen, we find him serving in the colonial army, in the capacity of waiter to an officer. He remained in this situation for two years, and then enlisted,--a mere boy,--in the American army, to risk his life in defence of the holy cause of liberty. He served during the entire war, after which he went to New Hampshire, and engaged in agricultural pursuits. He succeeded in drawing a pension, became a Baptist preacher, and died March 16, 1843, aged 82."
PRIMUS HALL, a native Bostonian, was the son of Prince Hall, founder of the Masonic Lodge of that name in Boston. Primus Hall was long known to the citizens as a soap-boiler. Besides his revolutionary services, be was among those who, in the war of 1812, repaired to Castle Island, in Boston Harbor, to assist in building fortifications.
The following anecdote of Primus is extracted from Godey's Lady's Book for June, 1849, to which it was communicated by Rev. HENRY F. HARRINGTON:--
"Throughout the Revolutionary War, PRIMUS HALL was the body servant of Col. PICKERING, of Massachusetts. He was free and communicative, and, delighted to sit down with an interested listener and pour out those stores of absorbing and exciting anecdotes with which his memory was stored.
"It is well known that there was no officer in the whole American army whose memory was dearer to WASHINGTON, and whose counsel was more esteemed by him, than that of the honest and patriotic Col. PICKERING. He was on intimate
terms with him, and unbosomed himself to him with as little reserve as, perhaps, to any confidant in the army. Whenever he was stationed within such a distance as to admit of it, he passed many hours with the Colonel, consulting him upon anticipated measures, and delighting in his reciprocated friendship.
"WASHINGTON was, therefore, often brought into contact with the servant of Col. PICKERING, the departed PRIMUS. An opportunity was afforded to the negro to note him, under circumstances very different from those in which he is usually brought before the public, and which possess, therefore, a striking charm. I remember two of these anecdotes from the mouth of PRIMUS. One of them is very slight, indeed, yet so peculiar as to be replete with interest. The authenticity of both may be fully relied upon.
"WASHINGTON once came to Col. PICKERING'S quarters, and found him absent.
" 'It is no matter,' said he to PRIMUS 'I am greatly in need of exercise. You must help me to get some before your master returns.'
Under WASHINGTON'S directions, the negro busied himself in some simple preparations. A stake was driven into the ground about breast high, a rope tied to it, and then PRIMUS was desired to stand at some distance and hold it horizontally extended. The boys, the country over, are familiar with this plan of getting sport. With true boyish zest, WASHINGTON ran forwards and backwards for some time, jumping over the rope as he came and went, until he expressed himself satisfied with the 'exercise.'
"Repeatedly afterwards, when a favorable opportunity offered, he would say--'Come, PRIMUS, I am in need of exercise;' whereat the negro would drive down the stake, and WASHINGTON would jump over the rope until he had exerted himself to his content.
"On the second occasion, the great General was engaged in earnest consultation with Col. PICKERING in his tent until after the night had fairly set in. Head-quarters were at a considerable distance, and WASHINGTON signified his preference to staying with the Colonel over night, provided he had a spare blanket and straw.
"O, yes,' said PRIMUS, who was appealed to; 'plenty of straw and blankets--plenty.'
"Upon this assurance, WASHINGTON continued his conference with, the Colonel until it was time to retire to rest. Two humble beds were spread, side by side, in the tent, and the officers laid themselves down, while PRIMUS seemed to be busy with duties that required his attention before he himself could sleep. He worked, or appeared to work, until the breathing of the prostrate gentlemen satisfied him that they were sleeping; and then, seating himself upon a box or stool, he leaned his head on his hands to obtain such repose as so inconvenient a position would allow. In the middle of the night, WASHINGTON awoke. He looked about, and descried the negro as he sat. He gazed at him awhile, and then spoke.
" 'PRIMUS!' said he, calling; 'PRIMUS!'
"PRIMUS started up and rubbed his eyes. 'What, General?' said he.
"WASHINGTON rose up in his bed, 'PRIMUS,' said he, 'what did you mean by saying that you had blankets and straw enough? Here you have given up your blanket and straw to me, that I may sleep comfortably, while you are obliged to sit through the night.'
" 'It's nothing, General,' said PRIMUS. 'It's nothing. I'm well enough. Don't trouble yourself about me, General, but go to sleep again. No matter about me. I sleep very good.'
" 'But it is matter--it is matter,' said WASHINGTON, earnestly. 'I cannot do it, PRIMUS. If either is to sit up, I will. But I think there is no need of either sitting up. The blanket is wide enough for two. Come and lie down here with me.'
" 'O, no, General!' said PRIMUS, starting, and protesting against the proposition. 'No; let me sit here. I'll do very well on the stool.'
" 'I say, come and lie down here!' said WASHINGTON, authoritatively. 'There is room for both, and I insist upon it!'
He threw open the blanket as be spoke, and moved to one side of the straw. PRIMUS professes to have been exceedingly shocked at the idea of lying under the same covering with the commander-in-chief, but his tone was so resolute and determined that he could not hesitate. He prepared himself, therefore, and laid himself down by WASHINGTON, and on the same straw, and under the same blanket, the General and the negro servant slept until morning."
JAMES EASTON, of Bridgewater, was one who participated in the erection of the fortifications on Dorchester Heights, under command of Washington, which the next morning so greatly surprised the British soldiers then encamped in Boston.
Mr. Easton was a manufacturing blacksmith, and his forge and nail factory, where were also made edge tools and anchors, was extensively known, for its superiority of workmanship. Much of the iron work for the Tremont Theatre and Boston Marine Railway was executed under his supervision. Mr. Easton was self-educated. When a young man, stipulating for work, he always provided for chances of evening study. He was welcome to the business circles of Boston as a man of strict integrity, and the many who resorted to him for advice in complicated matters styled him "the Black Lawyer." His sons, Caleb, Joshua, Sylvanus, and Hosea, inherited his mechanical genius and mental ability.
The family were victims, however, to the spirit of color-phobia, then rampant in New England, and were persecuted even to the dragging out of some of the family from the Orthodox Church, in which, on its enlargement, a porch had been erected, exclusively for colored people. After this disgraceful occurrence, the Easton's left the church. They afterwards purchased a pew in the Baptist church at Stoughton Corner, which excited a great deal of indignation. Not succeeding in their attempt to have the bargain cancelled, the people tarred the pew. The next Sunday,
the family carried seats in the waggon. The pew was then pulled down; but the family sat in the aisle. These indignities were continued until the separation of the family.
HOSEA EASTON published a Treatise on the Intellectual Condition of the Colored People, in which was shown the heart of a philanthropist and the head of a philosopher. His work did great execution among those who proclaim the innate inferiority of colored men. Here is a chapter from his experience:--
"I, as an individual, have had a sufficient opportunity to know something about prejudice and its destructive effects. At an early period of my life, I was extensively engaged in mechanism, associated with a number of other colored men, of master spirits and great minds. The enterprise was followed for about twenty years perseveringly, in direct opposition to public sentiment and the tide of popular prejudice. So intent were the parties in carrying out the principles of intelligent, active freemen, that they sacrificed every thought of comfort and ease to the object. The most rigid economy was adhered to, at home and abroad. A regular school was established for the youth, connected with the factory; the rules of morality were supported with surprising assiduity, and ardent spirits found no place in the establishment. After the expenditure of this vast amount of labor and time, together with many thousands of dollars, the enterprise ended in a total failure. By reason of the repeated surges of the tide of prejudice, the establishment, like a ship in a boisterous hurricane at sea, went beneath the waves,-- richly laden, well manned and well managed, sank to rise no more. It fell, and with it fell the hearts of several of its projectors in despair, and their bodies into their graves."
QUACK MATRICK, of Stoughton Corner, was a regular Revolutionary soldier, and drew a pension.
JOB LEWIS, of Lancaster, (formerly a slave,) enlisted for two terms of three years each; and a third time for the remainder of the war. He died in November, 1797. His Son, JOEL W. LEWIS, when a boy, was very persevering in study, and as he depended mainly upon himself, when away from a brief country school term, busied himself for seven weeks in solving one complicated lesson in arithmetic. Mr. Lewis is now proprietor of an extensive blacksmithing establishment in Boston, where he gives employment to several white and colored mechanics.
PRINCE RICHARDS, of East Bridgewater, was a pensioned Revolutionary soldier. While a slave, he learned to write with a charred stick; thus evincing a burning desire to improve, even against the command of his self-styled owner.
PHILIP ANDREWS, a colored man, was drowned in Ludlow, on the 30th of May, 1842. He was over eighty years of age. He was the servant of a captain of the British army, in the Revolution, and, at the age of sixteen, deserted to the American army, and has remained in this country ever since.
JACK GROVE, of Portland, while steward of a brig, sailing from the West Indies to Portland, in 1812, was taken by a French vessel, whose commander placed a guard on board. Jack urged his commander to make an effort to retake the vessel, but the captain saw no hope. Says Jack, "Captain McLellan, I can take her, if you will let me go ahead."
The captain checked him, warning him not to lisp such a word,--there was danger in it; but Jack, disappointed though not daunted, rallied the men on his own hook. Captain McLellan and the rest, inspired by his example, finally joined them, and the attempt resulted in victory. They weighed anchor, and took the vessel into Portland. The owners of the brig offered Jack fifty hogsheads of molasses for his valor and patriotism, but Jack demanded one half of the brig, which being denied him, he commenced a suit, engaging two Boston lawyers in his behalf. I have not been able to learn how the case was decided, if, indeed, a decision has yet been made.
BOSSON WRIGHT resided in Massachusetts upwards of eighty years, and could well remember when the British burned the town of Portland. He assisted in building two of the Forts, and parted with two of his companions on their way to join the American army. He was a tax-payer for more than fifty years.
Bosson said that one Mayberry, a slave from Gorham, saw a British sailor in the act of setting fire to the old Parish church, (now the First Parish in Portland,) when he (Mayberry) seized him, and carried him before the leading men, who, being Tories, ordered the sailor's discharge.
Being one afternoon on a sailing excursion down Portland harbor, Bosson directed attention to the Fort as not being properly located, indicating the spot which he would have selected. Some years after, when President Munroe visited the Eastern States, the same observation was made by him,
and the same spot pointed out as had been by Bosson Wright.
One of his acquaintances, a colored soldier at the Battle of Saratoga, walked up, quite elated, to Cornwallis, after his surrender, saying:--"You used to be named Cornwallis, but it is Corn-wallis no longer; it must now be Cob-wallis, for General Washington has shelled off all the corn."
"Sir, slavery never flourished in Massachusetts; nor did it ever prevail there at any time, even in early colonial days, to such a degree as to be a distinctive feature in her powerful civilization. Her few slaves were merely for a term of years, or for life. If, in point of fact, their issue was, sometimes held in bondage, it was never by sanction, of any statute law of Colony or Commonwealth. (Lanesboro' vs. Westfield, 16 Mass., 73.) In all her annals, no person was ever born a slave on the soil of Massachusetts. This of itself is a response to, the imputation of the Senator.
"A benign and brilliant act of her Legislature, as, far back
as 1646, shows her sensibility on this subject. A Boston ship had brought home two negroes, seized on the coast of Guinea. Thus spoke Massachusetts:--
" 'The General Court, conceiving themselves bound by the first opportunity to bear witness against the heinous and crying sin of man-stealing, also, to prescribe such timely redress for what is past, and such a law for the future as may sufficiently deter all those belonging to us to have to do in such vile and most odious conduct, justly abhorred of all good and just men, do order that the negro interpreter, with others unlawfully taken, be, by the first opportunity, at the charge of the country, for the present, sent to his native country of Guinea, and a letter with him of the indignation of the Court thereabout and justice thereof.' "
"The Colony that could issue this noble decree was inconsistent with itself, when it allowed its rocky face to be pressed by the footsteps of a single slave. But a righteous public opinion earnestly and constantly set its face against slavery. As early as 1701, a vote was entered upon the records of Boston to the following effect:--'The Representatives are desired to promote the encouraging the bringing of white servants, and to put a period to negroes being slaves.' Perhaps, in all history, this is the earliest testimony from any official body against negro slavery, and I thank God that it came from Boston, my native town. In 1705, a heavy duty was imposed upon every negro imported into the province; in 1712, the importation of Indians as servants or slaves was strictly forbidden, but the general
subject of slavery attracted little attention till the beginning of the controversy which ended in the Revolution, when the rights of the blacks were blended by all true patriots with those of the whites. Sparing all unnecessary details, suffice it to say, that, as early as 1769, one of the courts of Massachusetts, anticipating, by several years, the renowned judgment in Somersett's case, established within its jurisdiction the principle of emancipation; and under its touch of magic power, changed a slave into a freeman. Similar decisions followed in other places."
An author, who signs himself "Old Style Freeman," says that "the contest commenced in 1761, in the town of Boston, in the old court-house, in the masterly speech of James Otis against the writs of assistance. He boldly asserted the rights, not only of the white, but of the black man . . . . Our colonial charters make no difference between black and white colonists.
"Massachusetts passed resolutions, in 1764, in which the rights of all the colonists were declared, without respect to mark or color, and James Otis, under the sanction of the House of Representatives, published his work on the Rights of the British Colonies, in which it was 'declared that all the colonists are, by the law of nature, 'freeborn, as, indeed, all men are, white or black; nor can any logical inference in aid of slavery,' said Otis, 'be drawn from a flat nose or a long or short face.' "
June 23d, 1773, the following petition was presented to
the General Court, which was read, and referred to the next session:--
PROVINCE OF MASSACHUSETTS BAY.
To His Excellency, Thomas Hutchinson, Esq., Governor:--
To the Honorable, His Majesty's Council, and to the Honorable House of Representatives, in general court assembled at Boston, the 6th day of January, 1773:--The humble petition of many slaves living in the town of Boston, and other towns in the province, is this, namely:--
That Your Excellency and Honors, and the Honorable the Representatives, would be pleased to take their unhappy state and condition under your wise and just consideration.
We desire to bless God, who loves mankind, who sent his Son to die for their salvation, and who is no respecter of persons, that he hath lately put it into the hearts of multitudes, on both sides of the water, to bear our burthens, some of whom are men of great note and influence, who have pleaded our cause with arguments, which we hope will have their weight with this Honorable Court.
We presume not to dictate to Your Excellency and Honors, being willing to rest our cause on your humanity and justice, yet would beg leave to say a word or two on the subject.
Although some of the negroes are vicious, (who, doubtless, may be punished and restrained by the same laws which are in force against others of the King's subjects,) there are many others of a quite different character, and who, if made free, would soon be able, as well as willing, to bear a part in the public charges. Many of them, of good natural parts, are discreet, sober, honest and industrious; and may it not be said of many, that they are virtuous and religious, although their condition is in itself so unfriendly to religion,
and every moral virtue, except patience? How many of that number have there been, and now are, in this province, who had every day of their lives embittered with this most intolerable reflection, that, let their behavior be what it will, neither they nor their children, to all generations, shall ever be able to do or to possess and enjoy any thing--no, not even life itself--but in a manner as the beasts that perish!
We have no property! we have no wives! we have no children! we have no city! no country! But we have a Father in heaven, and we are determined, as far as his grace shall enable us, and as far as our degraded condition and contemptuous life will admit, to keep all his commandments; especially will we be obedient to our masters, so long as God, in his sovereign providence, shall suffer us to be holden in bondage.
It would be impudent, if not presumptuous, in us to suggest to Your Excellency and Honors, any law or laws proper to be made in relation to our unhappy state, which, although our greatest unhappiness, is not our fault; and this gives us great encouragement to pray and hope for such relief as is consistent with your wisdom, justice and goodness.
We think ourselves very happy, that we may thus address the great and general court of this province, which great and good court is to us the best judge, under God, of what is wise, just and good.
We humbly beg leave to add but this one thing more: we pray for such relief only, which by no possibility can ever be productive of the least wrong or injury to our masters, but to us will be as life from the dead.
In January, 1774, a bill was brought in, which passed all the forms in the two Houses, and was laid before Governor Hutchinson for his approval, March 8th. The negroes
had deputed a committee respectfully to solicit the Governor's consent; but he told them that his instructions forbade. His successor, General Gage, gave them the same answer, when they waited on him.
The blacks had better success in the judicial court. A pamphlet containing the case of a negro who had accompanied his master from the West Indies to England, and had there sued for and obtained his freedom, was reprinted here, and this encouraged several others to sue their masters for their freedom, and recompense for their services.
The first trial of this kind was in 1770. James, a servant of Richard Lechmere, of Cambridge, brought an action against his master for detaining him in bondage. The negroes collected money among themselves to carry on the suit and the verdict was in favor of the plaintiff. Other suits were instituted between that time and the Revolution, and the juries invariably gave their verdicts in favor of liberty.
During the Revolutionary War, public opinion was so strongly in favor of the abolition of slavery, that, in some of the country towns, votes were passed in town meetings that they would have no slaves among them; and that they would not exact of the masters any bonds for the maintenance of liberated blacks, should they become incapable of supporting themselves. A liberty-loving antiquarian copied the following from the Suffolk Probate Record, and published it in the Boston Liberator, February, 1847:--
"Know all men by these presents, that I, Jonathan Tackson, of Newburyport, in the county of Essex, gentleman, in consideration
of the impropriety I feel, and have long felt, in beholding any person in constant bondage,--more especially at a time when my country is so warmly contending for the liberty every man ought to enjoy,--and having sometime since promised my negro man Pomp, that I would give him his freedom, and in further consideration of five shillings, paid me by said Pomp, I do hereby liberate, manumit, and set him free; and I do hereby remise and release unto said Pomp, all demands of whatever nature I have against said Pomp.
"In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and seal, this nineteenth June, 1776.
"JONATHAN JACKSON. [Seal.]
"Witness--MARY COBURN,
WILLIAM NOYES."
It only remains to say a word respecting the two parties to the foregoing instrument.
JONATHAN JACKSON, Of Newburyport, we well remember to have heard spoken of, in our younger days, by honored lips, as a most upright and thorough gentleman of the old school, possessing talents and character of the first standing. He was the first Collector of the Port of Boston, under Washington's administration, and was Treasurer of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts for many years, and died in 1810. A tribute to his memory and his worth, said to be from the pen of the late John Lowell, appeared in the Columbian Centinel, March 10, 1810. His immediate descendants have long resided in this city, are extensively known, and as widely and justly honored.
POMP took the name of his late master, upon his emancipation,
and soon after enlisted in the army, as POMP JACKSON, served through the whole war of the Revolution, and obtained an honorable discharge at its termination. He afterwards settled in Andover, near a pond still known as "Pomp's Pond," where some of his descendants yet live. In this case of emancipation, it appears, instead of "cutting his master's throat," he only slashed the throats of his country's enemies.
Rev. Charles Lowell, in a letter to the Boston Courier, May 17, 1847, says:--"I well remember, myself, when I was a boy at Andover Academy, being often told by an intelligent old black man, who sold buns, that my father was the friend of the blacks, and the cause of their being freed, or something to that effect, and that I often had a bun or two extra on that account. I may further state, that in October, 1773, an action was brought against Richard Greenleaf, of Newburyport, by Cæsar (Hendrick), a colored man, whom he claimed as his slave, for holding him in bondage. He laid the damages at fifty pounds. The counsel for the plaintiff, in whose favor the jury brought in their verdict, and awarded him eighteen pounds, damages and costs, was John Lowell, Esq., afterwards Judge Lowell."*
* Coffin's History of Newbury, p. 339.
From the archives in the State House, I have gleaned many petitions and resolves of Revolutionary times, on questions concerning the rights of Massachusetts colored citizens, some of which I have deemed of sufficient historical value to be recorded in this volume.
I find the following Resolution on the records of the House of Representatives, Sept. 13, 1776. The Council concurred, Sept. 16, 1776:--
Whereas, this House is credibly informed that two negro men, lately brought into this State as prisoners taken on the high seas, are advertised to be sold at Salem, the 17th inst., by public auction,--
Resolved, That the selling and enslaving the human species is a direct violation of the natural rights alike vested in all men by their Creator, and utterly inconsistent with the avowed principles on which this and the other United States have carried their struggles on for liberty, even to the last appeal; and therefore, that all persons concerned with the said negroes be, and they hereby are, forbidden to sell them, or in any manner to treat them otherway than is already ordered for the treatment of prisoners of war taken in the same vessel, or others in the like employ, and if any sale of the said negroes shall be made, it hereby is declared null and void.
Whereas, the practice of holding Africans and the children born of them, or any other persons, in slavery, is unjustifiable in a civil government, at a time when they are asserting their natural freedom; wherefore, for preventing such a practice for the future, and establishing to every person residing within the State the invaluable blessing of liberty,--
Be it enacted, by the Council and House of Representatives, in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same,--That
all persons, whether black or other complexion, above 21 years of age, now held in slavery, shall, from and after the--day of--next, be free from any subjection to any master or mistress, who have claimed their servitude by right of purchase, heirship, free gift or otherwise, and they are hereby entitled to all the freedom, rights, privileges and immunities that do, or ought to of right, belong to any of the subjects of this State, any usage or custom to the contrary notwithstanding.
And be it enacted, by the authority aforesaid, that all written deeds, bargains, sales or conveyances, or contracts, without writing, whatsover, for conveying or transferring any property in any person, or to the service and labor of any person whatsoever, of more than twenty-one years of age, to a third person, except by order, of some court of record for some crime that has been, or hereafter shall be, made, or by their own voluntary contract for a term not exceeding seven years, shall be and hereby are declared null and void.
And, whereas, divers persons now have in their service negroes, mulattoes, or others who have been deemed their slaves or property, and who are now incapable of earning their living by reason of age or infirmities, and may be desirous of continuing in the service of their masters or mistresses,--be it therefore enacted, by the authority aforesaid, that whatever negro or mulatto, who shall be desirous of continuing in the service of his master or mistress, and shall voluntarily declare the same before two justices of the county in which said master or mistress resides, shall have a right to continue in the service, and to a maintenance from their master or mistress, and if they are incapable of earning their living, shall be supported by the said master or mistress, or their heirs, during the lives of said servants, any thing in this act to the contrary notwithstanding.
Provided, nevertheless, that nothing in this act shall be understood to prevent any master of a vessel or other person from bringing into this State any persons, not Africans, from any other part of the
world, except the United States of America, and selling their service for a term of time not exceeding five years, if 21 years of age, or, if under 21, not exceeding the time when he or she so brought into the State shall be 26 years of age, to pay for and in consideration of the transportation and other charges said master of vessel or other person may have been at, agreeable to contracts made with the persons so transported, or their parents or guardians in their behalf, before they are brought from their own country.
Ordered to lie until second session of the General Court.*
*VOL VII. Revolutionary Resolves.
The petition of a great number of negroes, who are detained in a state of slavery in the very bowels of a free and Christian country, humbly showing,--
That your petitioners apprehend that they have, in common with all other men, a natural and inalienable right to that freedom, which the great Parent of the universe hath bestowed equally on an mankind, and which they have never forfeited by any compact or agreement whatever. But they were unjustly dragged by the cruel hand of power from their dearest friends, and some of them even torn from the embraces of their tender parents,--from a populous, pleasant and plentiful country, and in violation of the laws of nature and of nations, and in defiance of all the tender feelings of humanity, brought hither to be sold like beasts of burthen, and, like them, condemned to slavery for life--among a people possessing the mild religion of Jesus--a people not insensible of the sweets of national freedom, nor without a spirit to resent the unjust endeavors of others to reduce them to a state of bondage and subjection.
Your Honors need not to be informed that a life of slavery like
that of your petitioners, deprived of every social privilege, of every thing requisite to render life even tolerable, is far -worse than nonexistence.
In imitation of the laudable example of the good people of these States, your petitioners have long and patiently waited the event of petition after petition, by them presented to the legislative body of this State, and cannot but with grief reflect that their success has been but too similar.
They cannot but express their astonishment that it has never been considered, that every principle from which America has acted, in the course of her unhappy difficulties with Great Britain, bears stronger than a thousand arguments in favor of your humble petitioners. They therefore humbly beseech Your Honors to give their petition its due weight and consideration, and cause an act of the legislature to be passed, whereby they may be restored to the enjoyment of that freedom, which is the natural right of all men, and their children (who were born in this land of liberty) may not be held as slaves after they arrive at the age of twenty-one years. So may the inhabitants of this State (no longer chargeable with the inconsistency of acting themselves the part which they condemn and oppose in others) be prospered in their glorious struggles for liberty, and have those blessings secured to them by Heaven, of which benevolent minds cannot wish to deprive their fellow-men.
And your petitioners, as in duty bound, shall ever pray:--
LANCASTER HILL,
PETER BESS,
BRISTER SLENFEN,
PRINCE
HALL,
JACK PIERPONT, [his X mark.]
NERO FUNELO, [his X mark.]
NEWPORT SUMNER, [his X mark.]
In 1778, Lieut. THOMAS KENCH presented a petition to the Legislature, asking for the appointment of a colored regiment. The Legislature responded thus:--
STATE OF MASSACHUSETTS BAY:
The Committee of both Houses upon the letter of THOMAS KENCH, with other papers accompanying it, have attended to that service, and report--
That there be one regiment of volunteers raised, as soon as possible, to serve during the war, to consist of the same number of officers and privates as those of a continental regiment;--That one sergeant in each company, and every higher officer in said regiment, shall be white men, and that all the other sergeants, inferior officers and privates shall be negroes, mulattoes, or Indians.
At a later date, Lieut. KENCH addressed the following letter to the Council:--
To the Honorable Council:
The letter I wrote before I heard of the disturbance with Col. Seaver, Mr. Spear, and a number of other gentlemen, concerning the freedom of negroes, in Congress, street. It is, a pity that riots should be committed on the occasion, as it is, justified that negroes should have their freedom, and none among, us be held as slaves, as freedom and liberty is the grand controversy that we are contending for, and I trust, under the smiles of Divine Providence, we shall obtain it, if all our minds can be united; and putting the negroes into the service will prevent much uneasiness, and give more satisfaction to those that are offended at the thoughts of their servants being free.
I will not enlarge, for fear I should give offence, but subscribe myself,
Your faithful servant,
THOMAS KENCH.
CASTLE ISLAND, April 7, 1778.
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND AND PROVIDENCE PLANTATIONS, IN
GENERAL
ASSEMBLY. February Session, 1778.
Whereas, for the preservation of the rights and liberties of the United States, it is necessary that the whole power of Government should be exerted in recruiting the Continental battalions; and, whereas, His Excellency, General Washington, hath inclosed to this State a proposal made to him by Brigadier General Varnum, to enlist into the two battalions raising by this State such slaves as should be willing to enter into the service; and, whereas, history affords us frequent precedents of the wisest, the freest and bravest nations having liberated their slaves and enlisted them as soldiers to fight in defence of their country; and also, whereas, the enemy have, with great force, taken possession of the capital and of a great part of this State, and this State is obliged to raise a very considerable number of troops for its own immediate defence, whereby it is in a manner rendered impossible for this State to furnish recruits for the said two battalions without adopting the said measures so recommended,--
It is Voted and Resolved, That every able-bodied negro, mulatto, or Indian man-slave in this State may enlist into either of the said two battalions, to serve daring the continuance of the present war with Great Britain;--That every slave so enlisting shall be entitled to and receive all the bounties, wages and encouragements allowed by the Continental Congress to any soldiers enlisting into this service.
It is further Voted and Resolved, That every slave so enlisting shall, upon his passing muster by Col. Christopher Greene, be immediately discharged from the service of his master or mistress, and be absolutely free, as though he had never been incumbered with any kind of servitude or slavery. And in case such slave shall, by sickness or otherwise, be rendered unable to maintain himself, he
shall not be chargeable to his master or mistress, but shall be supported at the expense of the State.
And, whereas, slaves have been by the laws deemed the property of their owners, and therefore compensation ought to be made to the owners for the loss of their service,--
It is further Voted and Resolved, That there be allowed and paid by this State to the owners, for every such slave so enlisting, a sum according to his worth, at a price not exceeding one hundred and twenty pounds for the most valuable slave, and in proportion for a slave of less value,--provided the owner of said slave shall deliver up to the officer who shall enlist him the clothes of the said slave, or otherwise he shall not be entitled to said sum.
And for settling and ascertaining the value of such slaves, it is further Voted and Resolved, That a committee of five shall be appointed, to wit,--one from each county, any three of whom to be a quorum,--to examine the slaves who shall be so enlisted, after they shall have passed muster, and to set a price upon each slave, according to his value as aforesaid.
It is further Voted and Resolved, That upon any able-bodied negro, mulatto or Indian slave enlisting as aforesaid, the officer who shall so enlist him, after he has passed muster as aforesaid, shall deliver a certificate thereof to the master or mistress of said negro, mulatto, or Indian slave, which shall discharge him from the service of said master or mistress.
It is further Voted and Resolved, That the committee who shall estimate the value of the slave aforesaid, shall give a certificate of the sum at which he may be valued to the owner of said slave, and the general treasurer of this State is hereby empowered and directed to give unto the owner of said slave his promissory note for the sum of money at which he shall be valued as aforesaid, payable on demand, with interest,--which shall be paid with the money from Congress.
A true copy, examined, HENRY WARD, Sec'y.
In 1782, a female slave named BELINDA presented a petition to the Legislature, in which she says:--"Although I have been servant to a Colonel forty years, my labors have not procured me any comfort. I have not yet enjoyed the benefits of creation. With my poor daughter, I fear I shall pass the remainder of my days in slavery and misery. For her and myself, I beg freedom."*
*American Museum Collection.
I extract the following account of this remarkable woman from an Address delivered in Stockbridge, Mass., February, 1831, by THEODORE SEDGWICK, Esq., a son of Judge Sedgwick, who had the honor of judicially pronouncing the doom of slavery in Massachusetts, under her Bill of Rights:--
"We have arrived, by imperceptible degrees, to a point of elevation from which we look down and around, with a sense of superiority, as if the height had been attained by our unaided efforts, and without remembering or regarding the means whereby we ascended. We despise the abject African, because he does not at once leap up to the ascent upon which we have been placed by circumstances, which we could no more control than he could have controlled his destiny.
"We should look at the subject in a different aspect. We should make all allowances for the different condition of the Africans and ourselves; give them credit for what
they have done, and not reproach them for not doing what they had no means of doing. They have the same principle of buoyancy with ourselves, and the instant that the weight which depresses their level in society is taken off, they will rise and occupy the space which is left vacant for them.
"Such has been my acquaintance with individuals of this race, that I regard the pretence of original and natural superiority in the whites, very much as I regard the tales of ancient fables, setting forth the superior bodily strength of heroes. But for the care of one of this calumniated race, I should not now, probably, be living to give this testimony.
"A very slight sketch of the history of the person to whom I refer may serve to illustrate this argument. Elizabeth Freeman (known afterwards by the name of Mum Bett) was born a slave, and lived in that condition thirty or forty years. She first lived in Claverac, Columbia county, in the State of New York, in the family of a Mr. Hogeboom. She was purchased at an early age by Col. Ashley, of Sheffield, in the county of Berkshire, in the now Commonwealth of Massachusetts. In both these States, and I believe every where in the Northern States, slavery existed in a very mitigated form. This is not so much to be ascribed to the superior humanity of the people, as to the circumstances of the case. The slaves were comparatively few. Society, except, perhaps, in the capitals, was in a state nearly primitive. The slaves were precluded from the table in but few families. Their masters and mistresses wrought with the
slaves. A great degree of familiarity necessarily resulted from this mode of life. Slavery in New York and New England was so marked, that but a slight difference could be perceived in the condition of slaves and hired servants. The character of the slaves was moulded accordingly. Sales were very rare. The same feeling which induces a father to retain a child in his family, or at least under his control, disinclined him from parting with his slave. There was little distinction of rank in the country. The younger slaves not only ate and drank, but played with the children. They thus became familiar companions with each other. The black women were cooks and nurses, and, as such, assisted by their mistresses. There was no great difference between the fare or clothing of black and white laborers.
"In this state of familiar intercourse, instances of cruelty were uncommon, and the minds of the slaves were not so much subdued but that they caused a degree of indignation not much less than if committed upon a freeman.
"Under this condition of society, while Mum Bett resided in the family of Col. Ashley, she received a severe wound in a generous attempt to shield her sister. Her mistress, in a fit of passion, resorted to a degree and mode of violence very uncommon in this country: she struck at the weak and timid girl with a heated kitchen shovel; Mum Bett interposed her arm, and received the blow; and she bore the honorable scar it left to the day of her death. The spirit of Mum Bett had not been broken down by ill usage--she resented the insult and outrage as a white person would have done. She
left the house, and neither commands nor entreaties could induce her to return. Her master, Col. Ashley, resorted to the law to regain possession of his slave. This was shortly after the adoption of the Constitution of Massachusetts. The case was tried at Great Barrington. Mum Bett was declared free; it being, I believe, the first instance (or among the first instances) of the practical application of the declaration in the Massachusetts Bill of Rights, that 'all men are born free and equal.'
The late Judge Sedgwick had the principal agency in her deliverance. She attached herself to his family as a servant. In that station she remained for many years, and was never entirely disconnected from his family.
"She was married when young; her husband died soon after, in the continental service of the Revolutionary War, leaving her with one child. During the residue of her life, she remained a widow. She died in December, 1829, at a very advanced age. She supposed herself to be nearly a hundred years old.
"If there could be a practical refutation of the imagined natural superiority of our race to hers, the life and character of this woman would afford that refutation. She knew her station, and perfectly observed its decorum; yet she had nothing of the submissive or the subdued character, which succumbs to superior force, and is the usual result of the state of slavery. On the contrary, without ever claiming superiority, she uniformly, in every case, obtained an ascendency over all those with whom she was associated in
service. Her spirit of fidelity to her employers was such as has never been surpassed. This was exemplified in her whole life. I can convey an idea of it only by the relation of a single incident.
"The house of Mr. Sedgwick, in this town, (Stockbridge,) was attacked by a body of insurgents, during the Shay's war, so well remembered in this vicinity. Mr. Sedgwick was then absent in Boston, and Mum Bett was the only guardian of the house. She assured the party that Mr. Sedgwick was absent, but suffered them to search the house to find him, which they did, by feeling under the beds and other places of concealment, with the points of their bayonets. She did not attempt to resist, by direct force, the rifling of property, which was one of the objects of the insurgents. She, however, assumed a degree of authority; told the plunderers that they 'dare not strike a woman,' and attended them in their exploring the house, to prevent wanton destruction. She escorted them into the cellar with a large kitchen shovel in her hand, which she intimated that she would use in case of necessity. One of the party broke off the neck of a bottle of porter. She told him that if he or his companions desired to drink porter, she would fetch a corkscrew, and draw a cork, and they might drink like gentlemen; but that, if the neck of another bottle should be broken, she would lay the man that broke it flat with her shovel. Upon tasting the liquor, the party decided that 'if gentlemen loved such cursed bitter stuff, they might keep it.'
'Understanding, from the conversation of the party, that they intended to take with them, in their retreat, a very fine gray mare that was in the stable, which she had been in the riding, she left the house and went directly to the stable. Before the rioters were apprised of her intention, she led the animal to a gate that opened upon the street, stripped off the halter, and, by a blow with it, incited the mare to a degree of speed that soon put her out of danger from the pursuit of the marauders.
"Even in her humble station, she had, when occasion required it, an air of command which conferred a degree of dignity, and gave her an ascendency over those of her rank, which is very unusual in persons of any rank or color. Her determined and resolute character, which enabled her to limit the ravages of a Shay's mob, was manifested in her conduct and deportment, during her whole life. She claimed no distinction; but it was yielded to her from her superior experience, energy, skill, and sagacity. In her sphere, she had no superior, nor any equal. In the latter part of her life, she was much employed as a nurse. Here she had no competitor. I believe she never lost a child, when she had the care of its mother, at its birth. When a child, wailing in the arms of its mother, heard her steps on the stairway, or approaching the door, it ceased to cry.
"This woman, by her extreme industry and economy, supported a large family of grand-children and great-grand-children. She could neither read nor write; yet her conversation was instructive, and her society was much sought.
She received many visits at her own house, and very frequently received and accepted invitations to pass considerble intervals of time in the families of her friends. Her death, notwithstanding her great age, was deeply lamented.
"Having known this woman as familiarly as I knew either of my parents, I cannot believe in the moral or physical inferiority of the race to which she belonged. The degradation of the African must have been otherwise caused than by natural inferiority. Civilization has made slow progress in every portion of the earth; where it has made progress, it proceeds in an accelerated ratio."
In 1795, Judge Tucker, of Virginia, propounded to Rev. Dr. Belknap, of Massachusetts, eleven queries respecting the slavery and emancipation of negroes in Massachusetts, which were answered by Dr. Belknap in a very intelligent manner. The queries and replies may be found in the fourth volume of the Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society. In one of his letters, Dr. Belknap says:-- "The present Constitution of Massachusetts was established in 1780. The first article of the Declaration of Rights asserts that 'all men are born free and equal.' This was inserted not merely as a moral or political truth, but with a particular view to establish the liberation of the negroes on a general principle, and so it was understood by the people at large: but some doubted whether this was sufficient. Many of the blacks, taking advantage of the public opinion and of this general assertion in the Bill of Rights, asked
their freedom and obtained it. Others took it without leave. In 1781, at the Court in Worcester County, an indictment was found against a white man for assaulting, beating and imprisoning a black. He was tried at the Supreme Judicial Court in 1783. His defence was that the black (Walker) was his slave, and that the beating, &c., was the necessary restraint and correction by the master.
"The judges and jury were of opinion that he had no right to beat or imprison him. He was found guilty, and fined forty shillings. This decision was a mortal wound to slavery in Massachusetts."
There is no specific record of the Abolition of slavery in Massachusetts; and, of course, different versions are given concerning it. John Quincy Adams, in reply to a question put by J. C. Spencer, stated that "a note had been given for the price of a slave in 1787. This note was sued, and the Court ruled that the maker had received no consideration, as man could not be sold. From that time forward, slavery died in the Old Bay State."
I find, in Dr. Belknap's letters, the following account of an early kidnapping enterprise in the city of Boston. The kidnappers were not so successful as others of a more recent date, since they do not seem to have had the State authorities on their side. "In the month of February, 1788," says Dr. Belknap, "just after the adoption of the present Federal Constitution by the Convention of Massachusetts, a most flagrant violation of the laws of society
and humanity was perpetrated in Boston, by one Avery, of Connecticut. By the assistance of another infamous fellow, he decoyed three unsuspecting black men on board a vessel, which he had chartered, and sent them down into the hold to work. Whilst they were there employed, the vessel came to sail and went to sea, having been previously cleared out for Martinice.
"As soon as this infamous transaction was known, Governor Hancock and M. L. Etombe, the French consul, wrote letters to the governors of all the islands in the West Indies, in favor of the decoyed blacks. The public indignation being greatly excited against the actors in this affair, and against others who had been concerned in the traffic of slaves, it was thought proper to take advantage of the ferment, and bring good out of evil.
"The three blacks who were decoyed were offered for sale at the Danish island of St. Bartholomew. They told their story publicly, which coming to the ears of the governor, he prevented the sale. A Mr. Atherton, of the island, generously became bound for their good behavior for six months, in which time letters came, informing of their case, and they were permitted to return.
"They arrived in Boston on the 20th of July following; and it was a day of jubilee, not only among their countrymen, but among, all the friends of justice and humanity."
Extract from a charge delivered to the African Lodge, June 24th, 1797, at Menotomy, (now West Cambridge,) Mass., by the Right Worshipful PRINCE HALL.
"Beloved Brethren of the African Lodge:
"It is now five years since I delivered a charge to you on some parts and points of masonry. As one branch or superstructure of the foundation, I endeavored to show you the duty of a mason to a mason, and of charity and love to all mankind, as the work and image of the great God and the Father of the human race. I shall now attempt to show you that it is our duty to sympathise with our fellow-men under their troubles, and with the families of our brethren who are gone, we hope, to the Grand Lodge above.
"We are to have sympathy," said he, "but this, after all, is not to be confined to parties or colors, nor to towns or states, nor to a kingdom, but to the kingdoms of the whole earth, over whom Christ the King is head and grand master for all in distress.
"Among these numerous sons and daughters of distress, let us see our friends and brethren; and first let us see them dragged from their native country, by the iron hand of tyranny and oppression, from their dear friends and connections, with weeping eyes and aching hearts, to a strange land, and among, a strange people, whose tender mercies are cruel, --and there to bear the iron yoke of slavery and cruelty, till death, as a friend, shall relieve them. And must not the unhappy condition of these, our fellow-men, draw forth
our hearty prayers and wishes for their deliverance from those merchants and traders, whose characters you have described in Revelations xviii. 11-13? And who knows but these same sort of traders may, in a short time, in like manner bewail the loss of the African traffic, to their shame and confusion? The day dawns now in some of the West India Islands. God can and will change their condition and their hearts, too, and let Boston and the world know that He hath no respect of persons, and that that bulwark of envy, pride, scorn and contempt, which is so visible in some, shall fall.
"Jethro, an Ethiopian, gave instructions to his son-in-law, Moses, in establishing government. Exodus xviii. 22-24. Thus, Moses was not ashamed to be instructed by a black man. Philip was not ashamed to take a seat beside the Ethiopian Eunuch, and to instruct him in the gospel. The Grand Master Solomon was not ashamed to hold conference with the Queen of Sheba. Our Grand Master Solomon did not divide the living child, whatever he might do with the dead one; neither did he pretend to make a law to forbid the parties from having free intercourse with one another, without the fear of censure, or be turned out of the synagogue.
Now, my brethren, nothing is stable; all things are changeable. Let us seek those things which are sure and steadfast, and let us pray God that, while we remain here, he would give us the grace of patience, and strength to bear up under all our troubles, which, at this day, God knows, we
have our share of. Patience, I say; for were we not possessed of a great measure of it, we could not bear up under the daily insults we meet with in the streets of Boston, much more on public days of recreation. How, at such times, are we shamefully abused, and that to such a degree, that we may truly be said to carry our lives in our hands, and the arrows of death are flying about our heads. Helpless women have their clothes torn from their backs. . . . And by whom are these disgraceful and abusive actions committed? Not by the men born and bred in Boston,--they are better bred; but by a mob or horde of shameless, low-lived, envious, spiteful persons--some of them, not long since, servants in gentlemen's kitchens, scouring knives, horse-tenders, chaise-drivers. I was told by a gentleman who saw the filthy behavior in the Common, that, in all places he had been in, he never saw so cruel behavior in all his life; and that a slave in the West Indies, on Sundays, or holidays, enjoys himself and friends without molestation. Not only this man, but many in town, who have seen their behavior to us, and that, without provocation, twenty or thirty cowards have fallen upon one man. (O, the patience of the blacks!) 'T is not for want of courage in you, for they know that they do not face you man for man but in a mob, which we despise, and would rather suffer wrong than to do wrong, to the disturbance of the community, and the disgrace of our reputation; for every good citizen doth honor to the laws of the State where he resides.
"My brethren, let us not be cast down under these and
many other abuses we at present are laboring under,--for the darkest hour is just before the break of day. My brethren, let us remember what a dark day it was with our African brethren, six years ago, in the French West Indies. Nothing but the snap of the whip was heard, from morning to evening. Hanging, breaking on the wheel, burning, and all manner of tortures, were inflicted on those unhappy people. But, blessed be God, the scene is changed. They now confess that God hath no respect of persons, and, therefore, receive them as their friends, and treat them as brothers. Thus doth Ethiopia stretch forth her hand from slavery, to freedom and equality."
About this time, the celebrated Prince Sanders was teaching in Boston. He subsequently prepared a compilation of Haytien documents, and presented, December 11, 1818, to the American Convention, a memorial for the abolition of slavery, and improving the condition of the African race.
PHILLIS WHEATLY was a native of Africa, and was brought to this country in the year 1761, and sold as a slave. She was purchased by Mr. John Wheatly, a respectable citizen of Boston. This gentleman, at the time of the purchase, was already the owner of several slaves; but the females in his possession were getting something beyond the active periods of life, and Mrs. Wheatly wished to obtain a young negress, with the view of training her up
under her own eye, that she might, by, gentle usage, secure to herself a faithful domestic in her old age. She visited the slave-market, that she might make a personal selection form the group of unfortunates for sale. There she found several robust, healthy females, exhibited at the same time with Phillis, who was of a slender frame, and evidently suffering from change of climate. She was, however, the choice of the lady, who acknowledged herself influenced to this decision by the humble and modest demeanor, and the interesting features, of the little stranger.
The poor, naked child (for she had no other covering than a quantity of dirty carpet about her, like a "fillibeg") was taken home in the chaise of her mistress, and comfortably attired. She is supposed to have been about seven years old, at this time, from the circumstance of shedding her front teeth. She soon gave indications of uncommon intelligence, and was frequently seen endeavoring to make letters upon the wall with a piece of chalk or charcoal.
A daughter of Mrs. Wheatly, not long after the child's first introduction to the family, undertook to learn her to read and write; and, while she astonished her instructress by her rapid progress, she won the good-will of her kind mistress by her amiable disposition and the propriety of her behavior. She was not devoted to menial occupations, as was at first intended; nor was she allowed to associate with the other domestics of the family, who were of her own color and condition, but was kept constantly about the person of her mistress.
She does not seem to have preserved any remembrance of the place of her nativity, or of her parents, excepting the simple circumstance, that her mother poured out water before the sun at its rising--in reference, no doubt, to an ancient African custom.
As Phillis increased in years, the development of her mind realized the promise of her childhood; and she soon attracted the attention of the literati of the day, many of whom furnished her with books. These enabled her to make considerable progress in belles-lettres; but such gratification seems only to have increased her thirst after knowledge, as is the case with most gifted minds, not misled by vanity; and we soon find her endeavoring to roaster the Latin tongue.
She was now frequently visited by clergymen, and other individuals of high standing in society; but, notwithstanding the attention she received, and the distinction with which she was treated, she never for a moment lost sight of that modest, unassuming demeanor, which first won the heart of her mistress in the slave-market. Indeed, we consider the strongest proof of her worth to have been the earnest affection of this excellent woman, who admitted her to her own board. Phillis ate of her bread, and drank of her cup, and was to her as a daughter; for she returned her affection with unbounded gratitude, and was so devoted to her interests as to have no will in opposition to that of her benefactress.
In 1770, at the age of sixteen, Phillis was received as a member of the church worshipping in the Old South Meeting
House, then under the pastoral charge of the Rev. Dr. Sewall. She became an ornament to her profession; for she possessed that meekness of spirit, which, in the language of inspiration, is said to be above all price. She was very gentle-tempered, extremely affectionate, and altogether free from that most despicable foible, which might naturally have been her besetting sin,--literary vanity.
The little poem, commencing,
" 'T was mercy brought me from my heathen land,"
will be found to be a
beautiful expression of her religious sentiments, and a noble vindication of the
claims of her race. We can hardly suppose any one, reflecting by whom it was
written--an African and a slave--to read it, without emotions both of regret and
admiration.
Phillis never indulged her muse in any fits of sullenness or caprice. She was at all times accessible. If any one requested her to write upon any particular subject or event, she immediately set herself to the task, and produced something upon the given theme. This is probably the reason why so many of her pieces are funeral poems, many of them, no doubt, being written at the request of friends. Still, the variety of her compositions affords sufficient proof of the versatility of her genius. We find her, at one time, occupied in contemplation of an event affecting the condition of a whole people, and pouring forth her thoughts in a lofty strain. Then the song sinks to the soft tones of sympathy, in the affliction occasioned by domestic bereavement.
Again, we see her seeking inspiration from the sacred volume, or from the tomes of heathen lore; now excited by the beauties of art, and now hymning the praises of Nature to "Nature's God." On one occasion, we notice her--a girl of but fourteen years--recognizing a political event, and endeavoring to express the grateful loyalty of subjects to their rightful king--not as one, indeed, who had been trained to note the events of nations, by a course of historical studies, but one whose habits, taste and opinions, were peculiarly her own; for in Phillis, we have an example of originality of no ordinary character. She was allowed, and even encouraged, to follow the leading of her own genius; but nothing was forced upon her, nothing suggested or placed before her as a lure; her literary efforts were altogether the natural workings of her own mind.
There is another circumstance respecting her habits of composition which peculiarly claims our attention. She did not seem to have the power of retaining the creations of her own fancy, for a long time, in her own mind. If, during the vigil of a wakeful night, she amused herself by weaving a tale, she knew nothing of it in the morning--it had vanished in the land of dreams. Her kind mistress indulged her with a light, and, in the cold season, with a fire, in her apartment, during the night. The light was placed upon a table at her bedside, with writing materials, that, if any thing occurred to her after she had retired, she might, without rising or taking cold, secure the swift-wing fancy ere it fled.
By comparing the accounts we have of Phillis's progress with the dates of her earliest poems, we find that she must have commenced her career as an authoress as soon as she could write a legible hand, and without being acquainted with the rules of composition. Indeed, we very much doubt if she ever had any grammatical instruction, or any knowledge of the structure or idiom of the English language, except what she imbibed from the perusal of the best English writers, and from mingling in polite circles, where, fortunately, she was encouraged to converse freely with the wise and the learned.
We gather, from her writings, that she was acquainted with astronomy, ancient and modern geography, and ancient history: and that she was well versed in the scriptures of the Old and New Testament. She discovered a decided taste for the stories of Heathen Mythology, and Pope's Homer seems to have been a great favorite with her.
The reader is already aware of the delicate constitution and frail health of Phillis. During the winter of 1773, the indications of disease had so much increased, that her physician advised a sea voyage. This was earnestly seconded by her friends; and a son of Mr. and Mrs. Wheatly, being about to make a voyage to England, to arrange a mercantile correspondence, it was settled that Phillis should accompany him, and she accordingly embarked in the summer of the same year.
She was at this time but nineteen years old, and was at the highest point of her short and brilliant career. It is
with emotions of sorrow that we approach the strange and splendid scenes which were now about to open upon her-- to be succeeded by grief and desolation.
Phillis was well received in England, and was presented to Lady Huntingdon, Lord Dartmouth, Mr. Thornton, and many other individuals of distinction; but, says our informant, "not all the attention she received, nor all the honors that were heaped upon her, had the slightest influence upon her temper or deportment. She was still the same single-hearted, unsophisticated being."
During her stay in England, her poems were given to the world., dedicated to the Countess of Huntingdon, and embellished with an engraving, which is said to have been a striking representation of the original. It is supposed that one of these impressions was forwarded to her mistress, as soon as they were struck off; for a grand niece of Mrs. Wheatly informs us that, during the absence of Phillis, she one day called upon her relative, who immediately directed her attention to a picture over the fire-place, exclaiming,--"See! look at my Phillis! Does she not seem as though she would speak to me?"
Phillis arrived in London so late in the season, that the great mart of fashion was deserted. She was, therefore, urgently pressed, by her distinguished friends, to remain until the Court returned to St. James, that she might be presented to the young monarch, George III. She would probably have consented to this arrangement, had not letters from America informed her of the declining health of
her mistress, who entreated her to return, that she might once more behold her beloved protegé. Phillis waited not a second bidding, but immediately reëmbarked for that once happy home, soon after made desolate by the death of her affectionate mistress.
She soon after received an offer of marriage from a respectable colored man, of Boston, The name of this individual was Peters. He kept a grocery in Court street, and was a man of handsome person. He wore a wig, carried a cane, and quite acted out "the gentleman." In an evil hour, he was accepted; and, though he was a man of talents and information,--writing with fluency and propriety, and, at one period, reading law,--he proved utterly unworthy of the distinguished woman who honored him by her alliance.*
*For this account of PHILLIS WHEATLY, I am principally indebted to a compilation from the original memoir published by Mr. George W. Light, and understood to have been written by Miss M. M. Odell.
The following letter, written by General Washington in reply to a communication sent to him by Phillis, will be read with the deepest interest. The letter may be found in Spark's Life of Washington.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Feb. 28, 1776.
Miss PHILLIS--
Your favor of the 26th of October did not reach my hands till the middle of December. Time enough, you will say, to have given an answer ere this. Granted. But a variety of important occurrences, continually interposing to distract the mind and withdraw the attention, I hope will apologize for the delay, and plead
my excuse for the seeming, but not real, neglect. I thank you most sincerely for your polite notice of me, in the elegant lines you enclosed: and, however undeserving I may be of such encomium, and panegyric, the style and manner exhibit a striking proof of your poetical talents; in honor of which, and as a tribute justly due to you, I would have published the poem, had I not been apprehensive that, while I only meant to give the world this new instance of your genius, I might have incurred the imputation of vanity. This, and nothing else, determined me not to give it place in the public prints.
If you should ever come to Cambridge, or near head-quarters, I should be happy to see a person so favored by the Muses, and to whom Nature has been so liberal and beneficent in her dispensations.
I am, with great respect, your obedient, humble servant,
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
As a preface to the edition of Miss Wheatly's poems published in Boston about 1770, I find this card from the publisher:--
As it has been repeatedly suggested to the publisher, by persons who have seen the manuscript, that numbers would be ready to suspect they were not really the writings of PHILLIS, he has procured the following attestation, from the most respectable characters in Boston, that none might have the least ground for disputing their Original.
We whose Names are under-written, do assure the World, that the Poems specified in the following page were (as we verily believe) written by PHILLIS, a young Negro Girl, who was, but a
few years since, brought, an uncultivated Barbarian, from Africa, and has ever since been, and now is, under the disadvantage of serving as a Slave in a family in this town. She has been examined by some of the best judges, and is thought qualified to write them.
His Excellency THOMAS HUTCHINSON, Governor,
The
Hon. ANDREW OLIVER, Lieutenant Governor,
Hon. Thomas Hubbard,
Hon. John Erving,
Hon. James Pitts,
Hon.
Harrison Gray,
Hon. James Bowdoin,
John Hancock, Esq.
Joseph Green, Esq.
Richard Cary, Esq.
Rev.
Charles Chauncy,
Rev. Mather Byles,
Rev. Ed. Pemberton,
Rev. Andrew Elliot,
Rev. Samuel Cooper,
Rev.
Samuel Mather,
Rev. John Moorhead,
Mr. John Wheatly, her
master.
PAUL CUFFE'S father was a native of Africa, whence, at an early age, he was dragged by the unfeeling hand of avarice from his home and connections; torn from the parental roof and every thing in this world that was near and dear to him; transported over the wide and trackless ocean, many thousand miles from the land of his birth, to be for ever consigned to rigorous and cruel bondage:
"To increase a stranger's treasures,
O'er the raging billows borne."
He was purchased as a slave by a person named Slocum, residing in Massachusetts, one of the United States of North America, by whom he was kept in slavery a considerable
portion of his life; and there is no reason to doubt, had it not been for his laudable enterprise, aided by great perseverance, he would have worn out his life in perpetual bondage, and ended his days, like many of his degraded and unjustly oppressed fellow-countrymen, under the galling yoke of fetters and chains, or the smart inflicted by the whip of the unrelenting driver. Being possessed, however, of a mind far superior to his degraded and unhappy condition, he was always diligent in his master's business, and proved himself in numerous instances faithful to his interests; so that, by unremitting industry and economy, he was enabled, after a considerable length of time, under the blessing of a kind Providence, to procure the means for purchasing his personal liberty, of which he had been deprived, as already stated, in very early life.
According to the custom of the country into which he was transported, Cuffe also received the name of Slocum, as expressing to whom he belonged; though it appears in after life he was known by the name of John Cuffe. Soon after the happy period in which Cuffe effected his emancipation, and succeeded in releasing himself from the bonds of slavery and unjust oppression, he became acquainted with Ruth Moses, an honorable woman, descended from one of the Indian tribes residing in Massachusetts.
Cuffe's acquaintance with Ruth Moses ended in their taking each other in marriage; and continuing in his praise-worthy habits of industry and frugality, be was enabled, soon after this occurrence, to purchase a farm of 100 acres
of land, in Westport, Massachusetts. Cuffe and Ruth continued to live happily together, and brought up a family of ten children--four sons, and six daughters. Three of the former, David, Jonathan and John, were farmers in the neighborhood of Westport, filled respectable stations in society, and were endowed with good intellectual capacities. They all married well, and gave their children a good education.
Cuffe died in 1745, leaving behind him a considerable property in land, the fruits of his industry.
PAUL, the youngest son of Cuffe, and the interesting subject of the present memoir, was born on Cutterhunker, one of the Elizabeth Islands, near New Bedford, in the year 1759; so that, when his father died, he was about fourteen years of age, at which time he had learned but little more than the letters of the alphabet. The land which his father had left behind him proving unproductive, afforded but little provision for the numerous family; so that the care of supporting his mother and sisters devolved jointly upon himself and his brothers. Thus he labored under great disadvantages, being deprived of the means and opportunity for acquiring even the rudiments of a good education. He was not, however, easily to be discouraged, and found opportunities of improving himself in various ways, and cultivating his mind. Having never received the benefits of an education, the knowledge he possessed was obtained entirely by his own indefatigable exertions, and the little assistance which he occasionally received from persons who were
friendly disposed towards him. Aided by these means, he soon learned to read and write, and he also attained to a considerable proficiency in arithmetic, and skill in navigation; and we may form some estimate of the natural talent with which he was endowed for the speedy reception of learning, from the fact that, with the assistance of a friend, he acquired such a knowledge of the latter science, in the short space of two weeks, as enabled him to command the vessel, in the voyages which he subsequently made to England, to Russia, to Africa, and to the West Indies, as well as to several different ports in the southern section of the United States.
It has already been stated that his three brothers were respectable farmers in the neighborhood of Westport. The mind of Paul, however, was early inclined to the pursuits of commerce. Conceiving that they furnished to industry more ample rewards than agriculture, and conscious that he possessed qualities which, under proper culture, would enable him to pursue commercial employments with prospects of success, he entered, at the age of sixteen, as a common hand, on board of a vessel destined to the Bay of Mexico, on a whaling expedition. His second voyage was to the West Indies; but on his third, which was during the American war, about the year 1776, he was captured by a British ship. After three months' detention as a prisoner at New York, he was permitted to return home to Westport, where, owing to the unfortunate continuance of hostilities, he spent about two years in agricultural pursuits. During this interval,
Paul and his brother, John Cuffe, were called on by the collector of the district in which they resided for the payment of a personal tax. It appeared to them that, by the laws and the Constitution of Massachusetts, taxation and the whole rights of citizenship were united. If the laws demanded of them the payment of personal taxes, the same laws must necessarily and constitutionally invest them with the rights of representing, and being represented, in the State Legislature. But they had never been considered as entitled to the privilege of voting at elections, or of being elected to places of trust and honor. Under these circumstances, they refused to comply. The collector resorted to the force of the laws; and after many delays and vexations, Paul and his brother deemed it most prudent to silence the suit by payment of the demands, which were only small. But they resolved, if it were possible, to obtain the rights which they believed to be connected with taxation. In pursuance of this resolution, they presented a respectful petition to the State Legislature, which met with a warm and almost indignant opposition from some in authority. A considerable majority, however, perceiving the propriety and justness of the petition, were favorable to the object, and, with an honorable magnanimity, in defiance of the prejudice of the times, a law was enacted by them, rendering all free persons of color liable to taxation, according to the ratio established for white men, and granting them all the privileges belonging to other citizens. This was a day equally honorable to the petitioners and to the Legislature; a day in which justice
and humanity triumphed over prejudice and oppression; and a day which ought to be gratefully remembered by every person of color within the boundaries of Massachusetts, and the names of John and Paul Cuffe should always be united with its recollection.
Paul, being at this time about twenty years of age, thought himself sufficiently skilled to enter into business on his own account, and laid before his brother David a plan for opening a commercial intercourse with the State of Connecticut. His brother was pleased with the prospect, and they built an open boat and proceeded to sea.
They encountered such numerous and untoward discomfitures, as would have caused the courage of most persons to fail. But Paul's dispositions were not of that yielding nature. He possessed that inflexible spirit of perseverance and firmness of mind, which entitled him to a more successful issue of his endeavors and he believed that, while be maintained integrity of heart and conduct, he might humbly hope for the protection of Providence. Under these impressions, he prepared for another voyage. In his open boat, with a small cargo, he again directed his course towards the island of Nantucket. The weather was favorable, and he arrived in safety at the destined port, and disposed of his little cargo to advantage. The profits of this voyage, by strengthening the confidence of his friends, enabled him further to enlarge his plans, and by a steady perseverance, he was at length enabled, under Divine assistance, to overcome obstacles apparently insurmountable.
Having become master of a small covered vessel, of about twelve tons burthen, he hired a person to assist him as a seaman, and made many advantageous voyages to different parts of the State of Connecticut; and, when about twenty-five years of age, he married a native of the country, and a descendant of the same tribe to which his mother belonged. For some time after his marriage, he attended chiefly to his agricultural concerns; but from an increase of family, he at length deemed it necessary to pursue his commercial undertakings more extensively than he had before done. He arranged his affairs for a new expedition, and hired a small house on Westport river, to which he removed his family. A vessel of eighteen tons was now procured, in which he sailed to the banks of St. George, in quest of codfish, and returned home with a valuable cargo. This important adventure was the foundation of an extensive and profitable fishing establishment from Westport river, which continued for a considerable time, and was the source of an honest and comfortable living to many of the inhabitants of that district.
At this period, Paul formed a connection with his brother-in-law, Michael Wainer, who had several sons well qualified for the sea service, four of whom, subsequently, laudably filled responsible situations as captains and first mates. A vessel of twenty-five tons was built, and in two voyages to the Straits of Bellisle and Newfoundland, he met with such success as enabled him, in conjunction with another person,
to build a vessel of forty-two tons burthen, in which he made several profitable voyages.
Paul had experienced the many disadvantages of his very limited education, and he resolved, as far as it was practicable, to relieve his children from similar embarrassments. The neighborhood had neither a tutor nor a school for the instruction of youth, though many of the citizens were desirous that such an institution should be established. About 1797, Paul proposed convening a meeting of the inhabitants, for the purpose of making such arrangements as should accomplish the desired object, the great utility and necessity of which was undeniable. The collision of opinion, however, respecting mode and place, occasioned the meeting to separate without arriving at any conclusion. Several meetings of the same nature were held, but all were alike unsuccessful in their issue. Perceiving that all efforts to procure a union of sentiment were fruitless, Paul, by no means disheartened, set himself to work in earnest, and had a suitable house built on his own ground, and entirely at his own expense, which he freely offered for the use of the public, without requiring any pecuniary remuneration, feeling himself fully compensated in the satisfaction he derived in seeing it occupied for so useful and excellent a purpose; and the school was opened to all who pleased to send their children.
How gratifying to humanity is this anecdote! and who, that justly appreciates human character, would not prefer Paul Cuffe, the offspring of an African slave, to the proudest
statesman that ever dealt out destruction amongst mankind?
About this time, Paul proceeded on a whaling voyage to the Straits of Bellisle, where he met with four other vessels, completely equipped with boats and harpoons, for capturing whales. Paul discovered that he had not made proper preparations for the business, having only ten hands on board, and two boats, one of which was old and almost useless. When the masters of the other vessels discovered his situation, they refused to comply with the customary practices adopted on such voyages, and refused to mate with his crew. In this emergency, Paul resolved to prosecute his undertaking alone, till, at length, the other masters thought it most prudent to accede to the usual practice, apprehending his crew, by their ignorance, might alarm and drive the whales from their reach, and thus defeat the object of their voyage. During the season, they took seven whales. The circumstances which had taken place roused the ambition of Paul and his crew; they were diligent and enterprising, and had the honor of killing six of the seven whales, two of which fell by Paul's own hands.
He returned home in due season, heavily freighted with oil and bone, and arrived in the autumn of 1793, being then about his thirty-fourth year. He went to Philadelphia to dispose of his cargo, and found his pecuniary circumstances were by this time in a flourishing train. When in Philadelphia, he purchased iron necessary for bolts, and other work suitable for a schooner of sixty or seventy tons, and, soon
after his return to Westport, the keel for a new vessel was laid. In 1795, his schooner, of sixty tons burthen, was launched, and called "The Ranger."
He also possessed two small fishing boats; but his money was exhausted, and the cargo of his new vessel would require a considerable sum beyond his present stock. He now sold his two boats, and was enabled to place on board his schooner a cargo valued at two thousand dollars; with this he sailed to Norfolk, on the Chesapeake Bay, and there learned, that a very plentiful crop of Indian corn had been gathered that year on the eastern shore of Maryland, and that he could procure a schooner-load, for a low price, at Vienna, on the Nantcoke river. Thither he sailed, but, on his arrival, the people were filled with astonishment and alarm. A vessel, owned and commanded by a black man, and manned with a crew of the same complexion, was unprecedented and surprising.
The white inhabitants were struck with apprehensions of the injurious effects which such circumstance would have on the minds of their slaves, suspecting that he wished secretly to kindle the spirit of rebellion, and excite a destructive revolt among them. Under these notions, several persons associated themselves, for the purpose of preventing Paul from entering his vessel or remaining among them. On examination, his papers proved to be correct, and the custom-house officers could not legally refuse the entry of his vessel. Paul combined prudence with resolution; and, on this occasion, conducted himself with candor, modesty,
and firmness; and his crew behaved, not only inoffensively, but with a conciliating propriety, In a few days, the inimical association vanished, and the inhabitants treated him and his crew with respect, and even kindness. Many of the principal people visited his vessel, and, in consequence of the pressing invitation of one of them, Paul dined with his family in the town.
During the year 1797, after his return home, he purchased the house in which his family resided, and the adjoining farm. For the latter, including improvements, he paid $3500, and placed it under the management of his brother, who, as before stated, was a farmer.
By judicious plans, and diligence in their execution, Paul gradually increased his property, (one farm covered a hundred acres,) and by the integrity and consistency of his conduct, he gained the esteem and regard of his fellow-citizens. In the year 1800, he, was concerned in one-half of the expenses of building and equipping a brig of 162 tons burthen. One fourth belonged to his brother, and the other fourth was owned by persons not related to his family. The brig was commanded by Thomas Wainer, Paul Cuffe's nephew, whose talents and character were perfectly adapted to such a situation.
The ship "Alpha," of 268 tons, carpenter's measure, of which Paul owned three fourths, was built in 1806. Of this vessel, he was the commander; the rest of the crew consisting of seven men of color. The ship performed a
voyage, under his command, from Wilmington to Savannah thence to Gottenburg, and thence to Philadelphia. After Paul's return, in 1806, the brig "Traveller," of 109 tons burthen, was built at Westport, of one half of which he was the owner. After this period, being extensively engaged in his mercantile and agricultural pursuits he resided at Westport.
In his person, Paul Cuffe was tall, well-formed, and athletic; his deportment conciliating, yet dignified and prepossessing; his countenance blending gravity with modesty and sweetness, and firmness with gentleness and humanity; in speech and habit, plain and unostentatious. His whole exterior indicated a man of respectability and piety, and such would a stranger have supposed him to be at first view. His prudence, strengthened by parental care and example, was, no doubt, a safeguard to him in his youth, when exposed to the dissolute company which unavoidably attends a seafaring life; whilst the religion of Jesus Christ, influencing his mind, under the secret guidance of the Holy Spirit of Truth, in silent reflection, added, in advancing manhood, to the brightness of his character, and instituted or confirmed his disposition to practical good.
He became fully convinced of the principles of truth, as held by the Society of Friends, and, uniting himself in membership with them, it pleased the great Head of the Church, in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, who respecteth not the persons of men, in his own due time,
to entrust him with a gift in the ministry, which he frequently exercised, to the comfort and edification of his friends and brethren.
When he was prevented from going abroad, as, usual, in the pursuit of his business, on account of the rigors of the winter, he often devoted a considerable portion of his time in teaching navigation to his own sons, and to the young men in the neighborhood in which he resided. And even on his voyages, when opportunities occurred, he employed himself in imparting a knowledge of this invaluable science to those under him, so that he had the honor of training up, both amongst the white and colored population, a considerable number of skilful navigators.
He was careful to maintain a strict integrity and uprightness in all his transactions in trade, and, believing himself to be accountable to God for the mode of using and acquiring his possessions, he was at all times willing, and conceived it to be his bounden duty, as a humble follower of a crucified Lord, to sacrifice his private interests, rather than engage in any enterprise, however lawful in the eyes of the world, or however profitable, that might have a tendency, in the smallest degree, either directly or indirectly, to injure his fellowmen. On these grounds, he would not deal in intoxicating liquors, or in slaves, though he might have done either, without violating the laws of his country, and with great prospects of pecuniary gain.
He turned his attention to the British settlement at Sierra Leone, being induced to believe, from various communications
he had received from Europe and other sources, that his endeavors to contribute to its welfare, and to that of his fellow-men, might not be ineffectual. On examination, he found his affairs were in so prosperous and flourishing a state as to warrant the undertaking; and, being fully convinced that he was called upon to appropriate a portion of what he had freely received from the hands of an ever bountiful Providence, to the benefit of his unhappy race, he embarked, in the commencement of 1811, in his own brig "Traveller," manned entirely by persons of color, his nephew, Thomas Wainer, being the captain. After a passage of about two months, they arrived at Sierra Leone, where Paul remained about the same length of time, during which interval he made himself acquainted with the real state and condition of the colony. He had frequent conversations with the Governor and principal inhabitants, during which opportunities he suggested several important improvements. Amongst other things, he recommended the formation of a society, for the purpose of promoting the interests of its members and the colonists in general; which measure was immediately acceded to and adopted, and the society named, "The Friendly Society of Sierra Leone," composed principally of respectable men of color.
Paul Cuffe terminated his labors and his life, which he departed in peace, the 7th of the 9th mo., 1817, being then in the fifty-ninth year of his age.*
* I am indebted for this account of PAUL CUFFE to the Address of Rev. Peter Williams, delivered in 1812, and since published in the Liverpool Mercury.
Joseph Congdon, Esq., of New Bedford, has kindly obtained for me the following valuable documents, bearing on PAUL CUFFF'S exertions in behalf of equal suffrage:--
To the Honorable Council and House of Representatives, in General Court assembled, for the State of the Massachusetts Bay, in New England:
The petition of several poor negroes and mulattoes, who are inhabitants of the town of Dartmouth, humbly showeth,--
That we being chiefly of the African extract, and by reason of long bondage and hard slavery, we have been deprived of enjoying the profits of our labor or the advantage of inheriting estates from our parents, as our neighbors the white people do, having some of us not long enjoyed our own freedom; yet of late, contrary to the invariable custom and practice of the country, we have been, and now are, taxed both in our polls and that small pittance of estate which, through much hard labor and industry, we have got together to sustain ourselves and families withall. We apprehend it, therefore, to be hard usage, and will doubtless (if continued) reduce us to a state of beggary, whereby we shall become a burthen to others, if not timely prevented by the interposition of your justice and your power.
Your petitioners further show, that we apprehend ourselves to be aggrieved, in that, while we are not allowed the privilege of freemen of the State, having no vote or influence in the election of those that tax us, yet many of our colour (as is well known) have cheerfully entered the field of battle in the defence of the common cause, and that (as we conceive) against a similar exertion of power (in regard to taxation), too well known to need a recital in this place.
We most humbly request, therefore, that you would take our unhappy case into your serious consideration, and, in your wisdom and power, grant us relief from taxation, while under our present
depressed circumstances; and your poor petitioners, as in duty bound, shall ever pray, &c.
JOHN CUFFE,
ADVENTUR CHILD,
PAUL CUFFE,
SAMUEL GRAY,
X his mark.
PERO HOWLAND, X his mark.
PERO RUSSELL, X his mark.
PERO
COGGESHALL.
Memorandum in the hand-writing of John Cuffe:--
"This is the copy of the petition which we did deliver unto the Honorable Council and House, for relief from taxation in the days of our distress. But we received none. JOHN CUFFE."
There is also a copy of the petition, with the date, "January 22d, 1781," not signed, by which it would appear that they intended to renew their application to the government for relief.
"The town [Dartmouth] took in consideration the form of Government, &c.
"The Committee recommend
freehold estate within the same town of the annual income of three pounds, or
any estate of the value of sixty pounds,'--for the following reason: such
qualification appears to your Committee to be inconsistent with the liberty we
are contending for, so long, especially, as any subject, who is not a qualified
voter, is obliged to pay a poll tax. "(Signed,) EDWARD POPE, Chairman. Extract from the Town Warrant
of Dartmouth, dated February 20, 1781: "To choose an agent or agents
to defend an action against John and Paul Cuff, at the next Court to be holden
at Taunton." At the meeting, March 8,
1781,--"The Honorable Walter Spooner, Esquire, chosen agent, in behalf of the
town, to make answer to John and Paul Cuff at the next Inferior Court to be held
at Taunton."
"To the Selectmen of the Town of Dartmouth, Greeting: "We the subscribers, your
humble petitioners, desire that you would, in your capacity, put a stroke in
your next warrant for calling a town meeting, so that it may legally be laid
before said town, by way of vote, to know the mind of said town, whether all
free negroes and mulattoes shall have the same privileges in this said Town of
Dartmouth as the white people have, respecting places of profit, choosing of
officers, and the like, together with all other privileges in all cases that
shall or may happen or be brought in this our said Town of Dartmouth. We, your
petitioners, as in duty bound, shall ever pray. (Signed,) JOHN CUFFE, PAUL CUFFE.
This "Request" bears the
following endorsement:-- "A true copy of the request
which John Cuffe and Paul Cuffe delivered unto the Selectmen of the Town of
Dartmouth, for to have all free negroes and mulattoes to be entered equally with
the white people, or to have relief granted us jointly from taxation,
&c. "Given under my hand, JOHN CUFFE." "DARTMOUTH, June 11, 1781. "Then received of John Cuffe,
eight pounds twelve shillings silver money, in full for all John Cuffe's and
Paul Cuffe's Rates, until this date; also, for all my Court charges. Received by
me, "RICHARD COLLENS, Constable."
"John and Paul Cuff, of Dartmouth, Dr., to Elijah Dean, of Taunton,-- To summoning the assessors of
Dartmouth to Taunton Court, 21. £140 [On the back.] "Rec'd of John Cuff
twenty-four shillings, being the contents of the within acc't, in behalf of
Elijah Dean. "(Signed) EDWARD POPE." It was ascertained by these
proceedings, that taxes must be paid, the receipts being forwarded; and this
case, although no action followed in Court, settled the right of the colored man
to the elective franchise in the State of Massachusetts. RICHARD JOHNSON, who married
a daughter of Paul Cuffe, resided at New Bedford nearly fifty years. In early
life, he was engaged as a mariner, and filled every capacity, from a cabin boy
to a captain.
During the war of 1812, he
was taken prisoner, but was released, after having been confined six months. He was distinguished for
prudence and sagacity in his business operations, and, despite the obstacles
that prejudice against color so constantly strewed in his path, he succeeded in
his mercantile affairs, accumulated a competency, and retired from business
several years since. Mr. Johnson was always ready
to extend the hand of relief to his enslaved countrymen, and no one was more
ready to assist, according to his ability, in the elevation of his people. He was one of the earliest
friends of Mr. Garrison; a subscriber to his paper, from the time the first
number was issued in Baltimore, and for several years an efficient agent for the
Liberator; and very active in circulating Mr. Garrison's "Thoughts on
Colonization," in 1832. In all the vicissitudes through which the anti-slavery
cause has been called to pass, Mr. J. always maintained a straight-forward,
consistent course, firmly adhering to the pioneer who first sounded the
alarm. He died in peace, February
15, 1853, aged seventy-seven; and the funeral service of himself and wife (whose
death preceded his one day) was numerously attended by New Bedford
citizens. On the Northern New Hampshire
Railroad, some thirty miles from Concord, in the town of Andover, is a station
called Potter's Place. This little village derives its name from RICHARD
POTTER, the celebrated Ventriloquist and Professor of Legerdemain. Within twenty
rods of the track stands a neat white, one-story building, with two projecting
wings, all of Grecian architecture. From this extends, south-westerly, a fine
expanse of level meadow. This house, and the adjacent two hundred acres, were
owned by RICHARD POTTER. There once stood, on pillars before the house, two
graven images, taken from Lord Timothy Dexter's place, in Newburyport. Potter
built the house and cultivated the farm, which were estimated in the days of
Potter, and long before the railroad was built, to be worth $5000. This Potter
owned in fee simple, unincumbered, the fruits of his successful illusions,
optical and auricular. Potter was a colored man,
half-way between fair and black. He for a long time monopolized the market for
such wares as sleight of hand, and "laborious speaking from the stomach." Says
one writer in the Boston Traveller, of November 6, 1851:-- "We well remember how our
astonished eyes first beheld his debut upon the stage,--a portentous-looking
magician from India. And then to see him perform; eat tow, spit fire, and draw
form his mouth yards and yards of ribbon, all made out of tow; far down in his
crop to hear him command an egg to all over him, from head to foot, from foot to
head, etc., etc. And then his comic songs! Donning another attire, he would
hobble around the stage, an old woman; and the old woman would tell over her
various troubles, in successive stanzas, always concluding with the cheerful
refrain--'Howsever, I keep up a pretty good heart.' " Richard was born in the town
of Hopkinton, Mass., and, when quite a boy, was prevailed upon to engage himself
in the service of Samuel Dillaway, Esq., of Boston,--a relative of the family
being on a wedding tour to that pleasant town. After being 'brought up' by Mr.
Dillaway, he became a valued and esteemed servant in the family of Rev. Daniel
Oliver, of Boston; and in his kitchen, he studied out the theory and began the
practice of legerdemain. Mr. Oliver's son, late Adjutant General of
Massachusetts, often alludes to the winter evening amusements afforded to the
children at home by the tricks and pranks of Potter. He, who was so successful in
these, his first efforts, and so able to set up business on his own account,
could not long be retained as a servant. He followed his vocation, ever after,
till death arrested him in his course. Columbian Hall, and Concert Hall, in the
olden time, were the prominent places, in Boston, for Potter's levees. Potter was temperate, steady,
attentive to his business, and his business was his delight. He took as much
pleasure in pleasing others, as others did in being pleased. I have never heard
a lisp against his character for honesty and fair dealing. He was once the
victim of persecution from a Mr. Fitch, who had him arrested as a juggler.
Potter plead his own case, and secured an equittal. Close by Potter's house, in a
small enclosure, stands two
monumental slabs, of white marble; one, for his wife, Sally H.,--the other,
The Marshpee Indians also did
noble service in our revolutionary struggle. During the discussion of the
subject of the militia laws before the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention
of 1853, it was stated that the practice of excluding colored men from the
militia did not exist previous to the United States Militia Law of 1792, which
first introduced the word "white"; and in confirmation of this statement, the
following interesting fact in our own State history was mentioned. During the
War of the Revolution, when the county of Barnstable was required to raise a
regiment of four hundred men in the Continental army, the Indian district of
Marshpee, in that county, furnished twenty-seven colored soldiers, who fought in
the battles, and all but one of them perished, and he died a pensioner a few
years ago. At that time, (1776,) Marshpee had a population of three hundred and
twenty-seven colored persons, of whom fourteen were negroes married to Indian
women. There were sixty-four married couples and thirty-three widows on
the plantation; so that, in proportion to adult male population, Marshpee
furnished a larger quota for that regiment than any white town in the county. A
census taken after the Revolutionary War, showed that there were seventy-three
colored widows in Marshpee, whose husbands had been slain or died in the service
of their country during that war. And yet, the Legislature of
Massachusetts, in 1788-89, treated these Indians with extreme rigor, by
abolishing their charter--under which, in 1763, they had been incorporated into
a district, with right to choose their selectmen--and putting them under
guardians, who had power to take all their lands and income, and treat the
proprietors as paupers. Under these laws, the Indians could make no contract and
hold no property, and the overseers could take all their earnings, bind out
their children without their parents' consent; and, still further, by a
subsequent act, these overseers, from whose decision there was no appeal, could
sell the proprietors, male or female adults, to service, for three years at a
term, and renew it at pleasure. These laws, and worse,
against these poor Indians, who all the time were sole owners of ten thousand
acres of land, were continued in force until 1834, when, principally by the
efforts of Benj. F. Hallett, Esq., as their counsel, in exposing their
injustice, the system was broken up, and the district of Marshpee was
incorporated under free laws, and the property divided among the proprietors in
fee. They are now a very prosperous and thriving community, deserving
the interest and encouragement of every wise statesman or true
philanthropist. Among the Marshpee volunteers
in the War of the Revolution were the following:--Francis Websquish, Samuel
Moses, Demps Squibs, Mark Negro Tom Cæsar, Joseph Ashur, James Keeter, Joseph
Keeter, Daniel Pocknit, Job Rimmon, George Shaun, Castel Barnet, Joshua Pognit,
James Rimmon, David Hatch, James No Cake, Abel Hoswitt, Elisha Keeter, John
Pearce, John Mapix, Amos Babcock, Hosea Pognit, Church Ashur, Gideon
Turnpum. In 1783, Parson Holly
presented a memorial to the Legislature, in behalf of the seventy-three widows
whose husbands had died in their country's service. The wife of Samuel Adams, of
revolutionary celebrity, one day informed her husband that a friend had made her
a present of a female slave. Mr. Adams replied, in a very decided manner, "She
may come, but not as a slave; for a slave cannot breathe in my house. If she
comes, she, must come free." The woman took up her abode with the family of this
champion of liberty; and there she lived free and died free. Some of the colored citizens,
in 1796, instituted at Boston the African Society. Its objects were
benevolent ones, as
set forth in the preamble, which also expressed its loyalty as
follows:--"Behaving ourselves, at the same time, as true and faithful citizens
of the commonwealth in which we live, and that we take no one into the Society
who shall commit any injustice or outrage against the laws of their
country." I subjoin the names of the
members of the "African Society."
The following obituary of one
who will be long remembered in Boston is inserted here as connected with the
associations of by-gone days. ISAAC WOODLAND was a native
of Maryland, but many years since, he adopted for his home the State of
Massachusetts. His life here was marked with an active zeal for the fugitive
from Southern bondage. His money was always generously appropriated for their
aid and comfort. At one of the meetings in Belknap Street Church, when the
question whether Boston jail should longer confine George Latimer as a slave was
the theme of discussion in every gathering, I well remember Isaac Woodland
walking up the aisle, and placing upon the table a handful of silver, with the
remark that he had more shot in the locker, if by that means the man could be
kept from slavery. In the olden time, when the abolitionists of Boston
celebrated the 14th of July, commemorative of the abolition of slavery in the
State, (the day was not historical, for no special act of emancipation had taken
place, but the grateful heart of the colored man thus wished to signalize the
fact that slavery had departed from the old Bay State,) in their processions,
his towering and manly form was always the observed of all observers. And when
that was superseded by the glorious First of August, the Jubilee of British West
India Emancipation, no one name was more sure of appointment as Marshal than
his; and, surely, but few, if any, could better adorn the office. His occupation was that of
grain inspector, and by his application and integrity in business, he won the
respect and patronage of a large circle of Boston merchants. He was genial and mirthful,
fond of children and friends, but yet had that in him which, when roused in
defence of his race, was not easily subdued. This last trait was fully
illustrated in an encounter on one of the wharves, several years since, between
a party of white and colored laborers, when, but for his prowess and Herculean
strength, the fate of his companions would have been much worse than the event
proved. He was "in war a tiger chafed by the hunter's spear; but in peace, more
gentle than the unweaned lamb." His death took place in Boston, May 24, 1853,
aged 68. The following celebrated
epitaph from the old burial ground of Concord, Mass., although it has been often
published, will bear to be reprinted here. It is understood to have been written
by Daniel Bliss, Esq., a lawyer at Concord, before the Revolutionary War. He was
the son of a minister of that place, whose name and history occupy a large space
in the ecclesiastical annals of the town. This single production will secure to
its author for ever the credit of taste, ingenuity, and an enlightened moral
sense;
and proves that sound abolition sentiments were cherished then as strongly as
at the present day. The following inscription is
taken from a gravestone in a burying-ground in the town of North Attleboro',
Mass., near what was formerly called "Hatch's Tavern." It is an interesting
memento of what the state of things was in this commonwealth seventy years ago.
The testimony thus borne to the goodness of "Cæsar's" heart certainly reflects
but little credit on the person who could make him or keep him a
slave. A number of the chivalric
portion of the colored Bostonians, having taken the initiatory steps for a
military company, petitioned the Legislature, in the year 1852, for a charter,
the claims of which were advocated by Charles Lenox Remond and Robert Morris,
Esqs.; but, like the Attucks petitioners, they, too, "had leave to withdraw." In
February, 1853, the subject was again presented to the Constitutional
Convention, and Robert Morris, Esq., before a committee of that body, alluded to
an old law of the Massachusetts colony, which called upon all negroes,
inhabitants of
the colony, of the age of sixteen and upwards, to make their appearance in
case of alarm, armed and equipped, in connection with the regularly enrolled
militia company, under a penalty of twenty shillings. And they always did
appear, and performed efficient service. He further remarked, that a charter had
been lately granted to an Irish company, and said that the colored citizens, who
are native born, desired the same rights which were given to our adopted
brethren. "We do not want," said he, "a step-mother in the case, who will butter
the bread for one, and sand it for another. We hunger and thirst for prosperity
and advancement, and, so far as in your power lies, we wish you to do all you
can to aid us in our endeavors. We wish you to make us feel that we are of some
use and advantage, in this our day and generation." William J. Watkins, Esq.,
concluded an able argument as follows:-- "We love Massachusetts; if
she reciprocates that love, let her show forth her love by her works. Let her
throw around us the mantle of her protection, and then, O Massachusetts, if we
forget thee, "may our right hand forget its cunning, and our tongue cleave to
the roof of our mouth." Yes! let the old Bay State
treat us as men, and she shall elicit our undying, indissoluble attachment; and
neither height, nor depth, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present,
nor things to come, shall ever be able to alienate our affection from her. We
will be with her in the sixth trouble, and in the seventh; we will neither leave
nor forsake
her. Amid the angry howling of the tempest, as well as in the cheering
sunshine, we shall be ever found, a faithful few, indomitable, unterrified, who
know their friends to love them with that affection which nought but the
destroying angel can annihilate. "Again, grant us this
petition, and it will induce in us a determination to surmount every obstacle
calculated to impede our progress; to rise higher, and higher, and
HIGHER, until we scale the Mount of Heaven, and look down, from our lofty and
commanding position, upon our revilers and persecutors. Yes, sir; it will incite
us to renewed diligence, and cause our arid desert to rejoice and blossom as the
rose. It will inspire us with confidence, and encourage us to hope, amid the
almost tangible darkness that envelopes us. We care not for the hoarse, rough
thunder's voice, nor the lightning's lurid gleamings, if we are yet to be a
people; if we are yet to behold the superstructure of our liberties consummated
amid paeans of thanksgiving, and shouts from millions, redeemed, regenerated,
and disenthralled." Sixty-five colored citizens
of Boston petitioned the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention, in June,
1853,-- "That the Constitution be so amended as to remove the disabilities of
colored citizens from holding military commissions and serving in the
militia." An amendment was offered,
"That it is inexpedient to act thereon;" when Henry Wilson, Charles Sumner, E.
L. Keyes, D. S. Whitney, and others, advocated the colored
man's equality. The following are extract is from the speech of Hon. Henry
Wilson, in support of his amendment, viz.: "Resolved, That no
distinction shall ever hereafter be made, in organizing the volunteer militia of
the Commonwealth, by reason of color or race." "If it be true," said Mr.
Wilson, that our 'volunteer system' is 'not contemplated by the laws of the
United States,' --that it is the creature of Massachusetts law--that 'no
reference in the law is made to color'--that the 'officers' authorized 'to grant
petitions for raising companies' have 'control and authority' over the 'whole
subject'--and that they may grant petitions for companies without distinction of
color,--then it is in accordance with the ideas, and sentiments of the people,
to declare in the fundamental law of the Commonwealth, that in the organization
of these volunteer companies, no distinction on account of color or race shall
ever be made by those 'officers' having 'control and authority over the whole
subject.' This is my proposition--nothing more, nothing less. If our voluntary
militia system is the creature of local law, purely a Massachusetts system, 'not
contemplated by the laws of the United States,' no distinction on account of
race or color should be allowed. The Constitution of this Commonwealth knows no
distinction of color or race. A colored man may fill any office in the gift of
the people. A colored man may be the 'Supreme Executive Magistrate' of
Massachusetts, and 'Commander-in-chief of the army and navy, and of the military
forces of
the State by sea and land,' and he 'shall have full power from time to time
to train, instruct, exercise, and govern the militia,' and 'to lead and conduct
them, and with them to encounter, repel, resist, expel and pursue,' 'and also to
kill, slay and destroy' the invading enemies of the Commonwealth. If a colored
man may be by the Constitution 'Captain General and Commander-in-chief and
Admiral' of the Commonwealth, should he be denied admission into the ranks of
her volunteer militia? The colored men of Massachusetts have been denied
admission into the volunteer militia, although the Committee tell us that 'no
reference is made by law to color or race.' If 'officers,' who are authorized by
law 'to grant petitions for companies,' and who have 'control and authority over
the whole subject,' have made distinctions on account of color or race, when 'no
reference is made to color' in the laws, then they should be compelled by
constitutional authority to abandon the position they have without law assumed,
and to carry out the idea which pervades our Constitution, that all men, of
every race, are equal before the laws of this Commonwealth. The democratic idea
of the equality before the law of all men, no matter where they were born or
from what race they sprung, is the sentiment of the people. "This right, claimed by the
colored men of Massachusetts, to become members of the volunteer militia, is of
little practical importance to them or to the public. They feel the exclusion as
an indignity to their race. If we have the power to remove that unjust
exclusion, we are false to the
principles and ideas upon which our Constitution is founded, if we do not do
so. If we have not the power, or if its exercise would bring us in conflict with
the laws of the United States, which we acknowledge to be the supreme laws of
the land, we must submit to the necessity imposed upon us, and bow to what we
cannot control. I have said, Sir, that the question was of little practical
importance, whether the right of the colored men of Massachusetts to become
members of the volunteer militia was admitted or not. To them, it can be of
little practical value, although they have wives, children and homes, and a
country, to defend. To the country, it is of little practical importance. We are
strong and powerful now, able to drive into the ocean any power on earth that
should step with hostile foot upon the soil of the Republic. But it was not
always so. In our days of weakness, the men of this wronged race gave their
blood freely for the defence and liberties of the country. "The first victim of the
Boston massacre, on the 5th of March, 1770, which made the fires of resistance
burn more intensely, was a colored man. Hundreds of colored men entered the
ranks and fought bravely on all the fields of the Revolution. Graydon, of
Pennsylvania, in his Memoirs, informs us that many of the Southern officers
disliked the New England regiments, because so many colored men were in their
ranks. When the country has required their blood in days of trial and conflict,
they have given it freely, and we have accepted it; but in times of peace, when
their blood is not needed, we spurn and trample them under foot.
I have no part in this great wrong to a race. Wherever and whenever we have
the power to do it, I would give to all men, of every clime and race, of every
faith and creed, freedom and equality before the law. My voice and my vote shall
ever be given for the equality of all the children of men before the laws of the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts and the United States." The petition was received,
referred, and finally rejected, on the ground that it could not be granted
without bringing Massachusetts into conflict with the United States Constitution
and the laws of the land. On the last day of the
Convention, the following petition was presented by the Hon. E. L. Keyes, of
Dedham:--
To the Convention for revising and amending the Constitution
of Massachusetts: The undersigned, acknowledged
citizens of this Commonwealth, (notwithstanding their complexional differences,)
and therefore citizens of the United States, with the feeling and spirit
becoming freemen, and with the deepest solicitude, respectfully submit-- That having petitioned your
honorable body for such a modification of the laws as that no able-bodied male
citizen shall be forbidden or prevented from serving, or holding office or
commission, in the militia, on account of his color, their petition was duly
referred and considered, but not granted, and therefore they are still a
proscribed and injured class. The reason assigned for the rejection of their
request, in the report submitted by the Committee to whom the subject was
referred, was, "that this Convention cannot incorporate into the Constitution of
Massachusetts any provision which
shall conflict with THE LAWS of the United States." In the course of the
debate that ensued upon this report, the Attorney General of Massachusetts [Hon.
Rufus Choate] said,--"You caw raise no colored regiment, or part of a regiment,
that shall be of the militia of the United States--none whatever. . . . It is
certain that, if they were to go upon parade, and to win Bunker Hills,
yet they never can be part of the militia of the United States. . . . Nay, more;
he did not see how he could do any thing for this colored race, by putting them
in one of the high places of the Commonwealth, with weapons in their hands, and
allow our glorious banner to throw around them all the pomp and parade and
condition of war; the color cleaves to them there, and on parade is only
the more conspicuous." Another distinguished member
of the Convention [Hon. Benj. F. Hallett] said,--"If Massachusetts should send a
colored commander-in-chief at the head of her militia, the United States
would not recognise his authority, and would at once supersede him." Your petitioners feel bound
to protest, (in behalf of the colored citizens of Massachusetts,) that all such
opinions and declarations constitute-- (1) A denial of their
equality as citizens of this Commonwealth, and are clearly at variance with the
Constitution of this State, which knows nothing of the complexion of the people,
and which asserts [Art. I.] that "all men are born free and EQUAL, and have
certain natural, essential and inalienable rights; among which may be reckoned
the right of enjoying and DEFENDING their lives and liberties; that of
acquiring, possessing and protecting property; in fine, that of seeking and
obtaining their safety and happiness." It would be absurd to say that the
General Government, or that Congress, has the constitutional right to declare,
if it think proper, that the white citizen of Massachusetts shall not be
enrolled in the militia of the country; and it is not to be supposed, for a
moment,
that, if such a proscriptive edict were to be issued, it would be tamely
submitted to. It is, surely, just as great an absurdity, just as glaring an
insult, to assume that colored citizens may be legally excluded from the
national militia. (2) In the Constitution of
the United States, not a sentence or a syllable can be found, recognising any
distinctions among the citizens of the States, collectively or individually, but
they are all placed on the same equality. Article IV., Section 2d, declares--
"The citizens of each State shall be entitled to all the privileges and
immunities of citizens in the several States." It is not possible to make a more
unequivocal recognition of the equality of all citizens; and, therefore,
whatever contravenes or denies it, in the shape of legislation, is manifestly
unconstitutional. Whatever may have been the compromises of the Constitution, in
regard to those held in bondage as chattel slaves, none were ever made, or
proposed, respecting the rights and liberties of citizens. (3) It is true that, by the
United States Constitution, Congress is empowered "to provide for organizing,
arming and disciplining the militia"; it is also true, that Congress, in
"organizing" the militia, has authorised none but "white" citizens to be
enrolled therein; nevertheless, it is not less true, that the law of Congress,
making this unnatural distinction, is, in this particular, unconstitutional, and
therefore ought to exert no controlling force over the legislation of any of the
States. To organize the militia of the country is one thing; to dishonor and
outrage a portion of the citizens, on any ground, is a very different thing. To
do the former, Congress is clothed with ample constitutional authority; to
accomplish the latter, it has no power to legislate, and resort must be had, and
has been had, to usurpation and tyranny. Your petitioners, therefore,
earnestly entreat the Convention, by every consideration of justice and
righteousness, not to adjourn without asserting and vindicating the entire
fitness and equal right
of the colored citizens of Massachusetts to be enrolled in the national
militia; or, if this be not granted, then they respectfully ask that this
protest may be placed on the records of the Convention, and published with the
official proceedings, that the stigma may not rest upon their memories of having
tamely acquiesced in a proscription, equally at war with the American
Constitution, the Massachusetts Bill of Rights, and the claims of human
nature. WILLIAM C. NELL, This petition having been
read, it was ordered to be entered upon the records, by a vote of 97 to 66; but
subsequently, on motion of Mr. Stetson, of Braintree, the vote was
reconsidered. Hon. B. F. Hallett, for
Wilbraham, upon a question of privilege, spoke at some length in defence of his
action in the matter, and in favor of reconsideration, which, under the previous
question, was carried--97 to 57; and, on motion of Mr. Bird, of Walpole, the
whole question was laid on the table without dissent. This final action was
highly discreditable to the Convention; for the petitioners,
having been virtually excluded from the pale of American citizenship by that
body, had a right at least to have their protest against such an exclusion
placed on the records of the Convention; nor was there a sentence or word in
their petition uncalled for or offensively used. The limits of this work will
not allow of an elaborate or statistical report of the present condition of the
colored Americans, though very much that is encouraging is at the compiler's
disposal. It will be found that, throughout the book, references are made to
representative cases of individual enterprise and genius, sufficient, it is
presumed, to convey a general idea of the improvements daily developed by that
class, which has commonly been stigmatized as incapable of mental and social
elevation. So far as Massachusetts is
concerned, it is safe to say that, in many respects, her record is one to be
proud of. Her colored citizens (in all but the militia clause in the
Constitution) stand, before the law, on an equality with the whites. Her public
schools are accessible to all, irrespective of complexion,--prophetic of the
day, soon, I hope, to be ushered in, when the mechanic's shop and the merchant's
counting-room will be alike ready to extend to them equal facilities with those
of another and more favored race. New Bedford occupies a very
prominent position in all that contributes to the prosperity of the colored
American, in general intelligence, business, enterprise, and public spirit; much
of which is justly attributable to the impetus given by Paul Cuffe's efforts for
the. franchise. Some of his descendants
yet live in New Bedford. The colored voters there hold the balance of power,
and hence exert a potent on election day. The faithful Friends, or Quakers, have
always borne such a testimony at New Bedford, as materially to have aided the
progress of the colored citizens. Worcester can boast, among
her colored mechanics, Wm. H. Brown, whose well-established reputation as an
upholsterer reflects great credit upon the large firm in Boston with whom he
served a faithful apprenticeship. Salem, Springfield, and
Lowell, together with many smaller localities, have good and true colored men
among their inhabitants, sustaining creditable business relations, and the
owners of real estate in a fair proportion with their white fellow-citizens. Boston compares favorably, in
this respect, with larger cities in the United States. Several causes have
combined to retard the progress of colored mechanics; but these are being
removed, and, in a few years, the results will be manifest. Business and
professional men are continually increasing. In addition to the mechanical,
artistical, and professional colored men in Boston, elsewhere mentioned, it may
be noted, that the two most popular gymnasium galleries are in the
proprietorship of J. B. Bailey and Peyton Stewart; the prince of caterers is J.
B. Smith; a dentist highly recommended is J. S. Rock; a young artist in crayon
portraits is winning his way to excellence and reputation; and other equally
meritorious aspirants,--women included,
--are soaring to those heights that challenge the ambition of earth's gifted
children. Real estate to the value of, at least, $200,000, is in the. hands of
our colored citizens. During the struggle for equal school rights, many of the
largest tax payers removed into the neighboring towns, and withdrew their
investments from Boston real estate. American colorphobia is never
more rampant towards its victims, than when one would avail himself of the
facilities for mental improvement, in common with the more favored dominant
party,--as if his complexion was, indeed, prima facie evidence that he was an
intruder within the sacred portals of knowledge. In Boston, the so-called
"Athens of America," large audiences have been thrown almost into spasms by the
presence of one colored man in their midst; and, on one occasion, (in the
writer's experience,) a mob grossly insulted a gentleman and two ladies, who did
not happen to exhibit the Anglo-Saxon (constitutional) complexion. But, within a few years past,
this spirit of caste has lost much of its virulence, owing somewhat to the
efforts put forth by the colored people themselves. For ten years, they
sustained the Adelphic Union Library Association, and were generally fortunate
in securing the most talented and distinguished gentlemen as lecturers. Though
proscribed themselves, they removed from the colored locality, opened a hall in
the central part of the city, and magnanimously invited all to avail themselves
of its benefits. A number of white young men associated themselves with this
Society,
and participated in several public elocutionary exhibitions; and their
lecture-room was usually visited by representatives from all classes of the
community, which has had a tendency to excite something of a reciprocal feeling
on the part of other association's,--now extending itself through all the
ramifications of society; so that the presence of colored persons at popular
lectures is now a matter of common occurrence, and excites scarcely any notice
or remark. This agreeable state of things superseded the necessity of an
exclusive organization, though social literary clubs, mostly composed of colored
members, have continued to exist. In New Bedford, a deserved
rebuke was administered to colorphobia, which grew out of an attempt to
prescribe colored patrons of the Lyceum from the privileges heretofore shared by
them in common with others. This persecution aroused the indignation of those
ever-to-be-honored friends of equal rights, CHARLES SUMNER and RALPH WALDO
EMERSON. They were both announced to lecture, but, on learning the proceedings,
they immediately recalled their engagements, rather than sanction, by their
presence on the rostrum, such an outrage on the rights of man. This noble deed
was not without its effect, and, as a legitimate consequence, prompted the
freemen of New Bedford to establish an independent Lyceum, where men,
irrespective of accidental differences, could freely assemble, and have
dispensed to them the precious stores of knowledge. Various circumstances
combined to create an impetus in favor of the free Lyceum, which completely
superseded the other, and thus a victory was achieved in humanity's behalf
A similar triumph, in many respects, was also won in Lynn, where opposition
was manifested to a Lyceum lecture by Charles Lenox Remond. A majority united in
the formation of another institution, thus proving that, where there is a will,
a way can always be found for united hearts to bear a faithful and effective
testimony against proscription and tyranny. Since then, Samuel R. Ward,
Frederick Douglass, and other distinguished colored lecturers, have been
welcomed to Lyceum platforms in different parts of the country. To Raynal, who expressed
surprise that America had not produced any celebrated man, Jefferson
replied,--"When we shall have existed as a nation as long as the Greeks before
they had a Homer, the Romans a Virgil, or the French a Racine, there will be
room for inquiry;" and I would say, Let the evil spirit of American pro-slavery
and prejudice only remove its feet from the neck of its outraged victims, and if
improvement be not made commensurate with the means afforded, then,--but not
till then,--will we admit the truth of the gratuitous assertion, that the
Author of the universe has stamped upon the brow of the colored American a mark
of inferiority. This feeling must have moved
C. V. Caples, a colored teacher, when he uttered the following eloquent words at
an early Anti-Slavery Convention in Boston:--"I am pained," said he, "when I
think of the condition of colored men in the United States. My blood is as warm
as yours, Mr. President, or that of any patriot; and when I behold the finger
of scorn pointed at my brethren, and the curled lip, my soul weeps. I think,
there may be thus insulted one possessing the highest attributes of man; a mind,
perhaps, that, if trained like other minds, might lead to great deeds,--some
Cincinnatus, capable of influencing the destinies of a nation, a Hampden, to
inspire patriotism, or a Milton, 'pregnant with celestial fire.' " The colored man's friends are
constantly claiming for him an equality of privileges, based on his nativity,
loyalty, and the immutable law of God. There have been those, however, sometimes
found deficient in a trying hour. Such "fallings from grace" doubtless occur in
the ranks of every reform; for all who profess are not always fully imbued with
the principle, thereby losing opportunities of squaring their practice with
their preaching. To those colored friends, however, who constantly harp upon
real or supposed derelictions of white Abolitionists, it is but seasonable to
hint, that some of their own number are very indifferent to practical
Anti-Slavery, and that, at the South, there are black, as well as white,
slaveholders,--a fact teaching humility to both classes, while, at the same
time, it proves the identity of both with the human family. These Anti-Slavery
tests are presented in the every-day routine of business and social life, and
ofttimes prove severe trials, except to those of the genuine radical stamp. All
reformers owe it to their high calling to be consistent; not to place their
light under a bushel but to let its rays be conspicuous, as a direct means of
influencing public sentiment.
A few years since, when the
State of Massachusetts was agitated, from Cape Cod to Berkshire, with the
exclusion of colored passengers from equal railroad privileges, many an instance
occurred where Abolitionists wholly identified themselves with the
proscribed,--"remembering those in bonds as bound with them;" and, on some
occasions, encountering peril of life and limb, and sharing indignities equally
with those whose sin was the "texture of hair and hue of the skin." It is with the most grateful
emotions that I would here record the names of WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON and
WENDELL PHILLIPS, both of whom, on separate occasions, remonstrated against the
colonization of colored friends from the cars, and, in the crisis, exiled
themselves to the "Jim-Crow car," rather than remain in comfort with the
oppressor. Such exhibitions of fidelity to principle were not lost upon their
fellow-passengers. There is abundant reason to
believe that these and-similar incidents, in connection with the eloquent
appeals of CHARLES LENOX REMOND and other Anti-Slavery lecturers, were
instrumental in removing all odious restrictions from the Eastern Railroad; and,
at this day, who ventures to exclude a colored passenger, in this section of
country? The idea has been consigned to the tomb of the capulets, from whence we
do not anticipate a resurrection. Until within a few years, the Boston Directory
had a Liberia department for persons of color; but it luckily fell into the
hands of an Anti-Slavery man, GEORGE ADAMS, Esq., who, to his honor
be it remembered, abolished this inglorious distinction, inserted the names
of colored citizens among "the rest of mankind," and, to this day, no orb has
been so eccentric as to wander from its sphere in consequence thereof. "So
shines a good deed in a naughty world." Live the true life, speak the true word,
and God will bless the effort. There is a sun-dial in Italy,
with the inscription, "I mark only the hours that shine,"--inculcating
the lesson, that though this life is not all happy and beautiful, yet we should
not dwell always upon the darker portion of the picture, but remember to look
also upon the bright side. What a satisfaction to the proscribed colored
American is the fact, that, in this slavery-cursed land, there are those true
hearts ready to accord the rights and privileges to others so prized by
themselves; that, in the highways and byways of life, on the railroad car and in
the steamboat, in the lyceum and college, in the street, the store, and the
parlor, a noble band is found, united in purpose, uncompromising in principle,
fearless in action, whose examples are like specks of verdure amidst universal
barrenness,--as scattered lights amidst thick and prevailing darkness.
JUDE HALL--LEGISLATIVE POSTPONEMENT OF
EMANCIPATION--LAST SLAVE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE--SENATOR MORRILL'S TRIBUTE TO A
COLORED CITIZEN. JUDE HALL was born at Exeter,
N. H., and was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, under General Poor. He served
faithfully eight years, and fought in most all the battles, beginning at Bunker
Hill. He was called a great soldier, and was known in New Hampshire to the day
of his death by the name of "Old Rock." Singular to relate, three of
his sons have been kidnapped at different times, and reduced to slavery. James
was put on board a New Orleans vessel; Aaron was stolen from Providence, in
1807; William went to sea in the bark Hannibal, from Newburyport, and was sold
in the West Indies, from whence he escaped after ten years of slavery, and
sailed as captain of a collier from Newcastle to London. The anecdote of the slave of
Gen. Sullivan, of New Hampshire, is well known. When his master told him that
they were on the point of starting for the army, to fight for liberty, he
shrewdly suggested, that it would be a
great satisfaction to know that he was indeed going to fight for his
liberty. Struck with the reasonableness and justice of this suggestion, Gen. S.
at once gave him his freedom. It is not very surprising,
that in the time of the Revolutionary War, when so much was said of freedom,
equality, and the rights of man, the poor African should think that he had some
rights, and should seek that freedom which others valued so highly. There were
slaves then, even in New Hampshire, and their owners, like the Egyptians of old,
and the Carolinians now, were unwilling to "let them go." Here is an extract
from the Journal of New Hampshire, touching this matter, showing how justice and
humanity were postponed, as repentance often is, to a more convenient
opportunity:-- "JUNE 9, 1780. Agreeable to
order of the day, the petition of Negro Brewster and others, negro slaves,
praying to be set free from slavery, being read, considered, and argued by
counsel for petitioners before this House, it appears that at this time this
House is not ripe for a determination in this matter. Therefore, ordered, That
the further consideration of the matter be postponed till a more convenient
opportunity." Senator Morrill, of New
Hampshire, in his speech at Washington, in 1820, on the Missouri question,
alluded to a colored man in his own State, by the name of CHESWELL, who, with
his family, were respectable in point of property, ability, and character. He
held some of the first offices of the town in which he resided, was appointed
Justice of the Peace for the county, and was perfectly competent to perform
all the duties of his various offices in the most prompt, accurate, and
acceptable manner. "In New Hampshire," says Dr.
Belknap, in 1795, "those blacks who enlisted into the army for three years, were
entitled to the same bounty as the whites. This bounty their masters received as
the price of their liberty, and then delivered up their bills of sale, and gave
them a certificate of manumission. Several of these bills and certificates were
deposited in my hands; and those who survived the three years' service were
free."* Massachusetts Historical
Collection, Vol. IV., p. 203. New Hampshire papers of a
quite recent date record the death, at Hanover, of Mrs. JANE E. WENTWORTH, a
colored woman, at the age of three score and ten. Graduates at Dartmouth will
recollect her as Aunt Jenny, the wash-woman, and nurse in sickness. Her parents
were slaves, kidnapped when very young, and came by inheritance in possession of
the family of Mrs. House, of Hanover. They were subsequently sold to a gentleman
in Salem, N. H., where they remained until they were emancipated by the laws of
the State. Jenny was born in Hanover, in 1777, was sold with her parents, and
upon becoming free, she married Charles Wentworth, a slave of Gov. Wentworth.
They then removed to Hanover, where they remained till their death. Jenny
outlived her husband several years, and was one of the last of the African race
who in our early history were held in bondage in New England.
SEVEN HUNDRED BRITISH SOLDIERS ESCORTED
BY A COLORED PATRIOT--REV. LEMUEL HAYNES--JUDGE HARRINGTON'S
ANTI-FUGITIVE-SLAVE-LAW DECISION. AUGUST 16th, 1777, the Green
Mountain Boys, aided by troops from New Hampshire, and some few from Berkshire
County, Massachusetts, under the command of Gen. Stark, captured the left wing
of the British army near Bennington. As soon as arrangements could be made,
after the prisoners were all collected,--something more than seven
hundred,--they were tied to a rope, one on each side. The rope not being long
enough, Gen. Stark called for more; when Mrs. Robinson, wife of Hon. Moses
Robinson, said to the General, "I will take down the last bedstead in the house,
and present the rope to you, on one condition. When the prisoners are all tied
to the rope, you shall permit my negro man to harness up my old mare, and hitch
the rope to the whiffletree, mount the mare, and conduct the British and tory
prisoners out of town." The General willingly accepted Mrs. Robinson's
proposition. The negro mounted the mare, and thus conducted the left wing of the
British army into Massachusetts, on their way to Boston.
Gen. Schuyler writes from
Saratoga, July 23, 1777, to the President of Massachusetts Bay, "That of the few
continental troops we have had to the Northward, one third part is composed of
men too far advanced in years for field service, of boys, or rather, children,
and, mortifying barely to mention, of negroes." The General also addressed a
similar letter to John Hancock, and again to the Provincial Congress, in which
he stated that the foregoing were facts which were altogether
incontrovertible. LEMUEL HAYNES was born in
Hartford, Conn., July 18, 1753. His father was an African, his mother, white. It
was his good fortune to fall into kind hands, and he enjoyed excellent
advantages of education, both before and after the Revolution. He ultimately
became a ripe scholar, and, in 1804, received the honorary degree of A. M. from
Middlebury College, Vt. After completing a theological course of study, he
preached in various places in Connecticut, until the year 1788, when he made a
permanent settlement in West Rutland, Vt., and remained there thirty years,
being one of the most popular preachers in the State. In 1805, Mr. Haynes preached
his noted sermon from Gen. iii. 4, the fame of which, and his discussion with
the venerable Hosea Ballou, was world-wide. He was no less distinguished
for his patriotism than for his theological attainments. He enlisted as a minute
man in 1774, and became connected with the American army. After the battle of
Lexington, in 1775, be joined the army
at Roxbury. Two years after, he was a volunteer in the expedition to
Ticonderoga, to stop the inroads of Burgoyne's Northern army. His neighbors and
friends often heard him describe his sufferings while engaged in that
campaign. His social qualities were of
a high order. He was a somewhat eccentric man, very musical, and full of wit and
anecdote, but serious and reverent when the occasion demanded. He was a kind
neighbor and a warm friend. He lived to the age of 81, dying on the 28th of
September, 1833. The opinion of Judge
Harrington, of Vermont, in the case of a person claimed as a fugitive slave, is
probably familiar to most Abolitionists. In answer to some inquiries with regard
to the particulars of the case, by Hon. Samuel E. Sewall, of Massachusetts, the
Hon. Dorastus Wooster, of Middlebury, Vt., says:-- "The transaction to which you
allude is somewhat an ancient one. The case occurred before my time; but I have
the history of it from the lips of an eye-witness, who was present at the
time,--the Hon. Horatio Seymour, formerly a Senator from this State in Congress.
There was a person of color in Middlebury, who was claimed as a slave by his
master, from the State of New York. He was brought before two Justices of the
Peace, and they decided to surrender him. Loyal Case, Esq., counsel for the
slave, brought him up, on a habeas corpus, to the Supreme Court, then in
session, for his liberation. The master brought forward documentary and other
evidence to show his title to
the slave. Judge Harrington, who was then on the bench, gave the opinion of
the Court. He said that the evidence of title was good, as far as it went, but
the chain had some of its links broken. The evidence did not go far enough. If
the master could show a bill of sale, or grant, from the Almighty, then his
title to him would be complete: otherwise, it would not. And as he had not shown
such evidence, the Court refused to surrender him, and discharged him. This is
the opinion of the Court, as delivered by Judge Harrington, as well as can be
recollected after such a lapse of time. The transaction took place about the
year 1807. Judge Harrington is now dead. He possessed a powerful mind, not fond
of technicalities: had a strong sense of justice, and was a great friend to
liberty." Two points in this case merit
particular attention:-- 1. The decision was made only
about seventeen years after the Constitution of the United States went into
operation. 2. It was the solemn and
deliberate decision of the Supreme Court of Vermont, not the opinion of Judge
Harrington alone. As such, it becomes of great weight as a legal authority, and
should be cited whenever a person, claimed as a fugitive slave, is brought
before any Court.
ADMISSION OF HON. TRISTAM
BURGES--DEFENCE OF RED BANK--ARREST OF MAJOR GENERAL PRESCOTT BY PRINCE--COLORED
REGIMENT OF RHODE ISLAND--SPEECH OF DR. HARRIS--LOYALTY DURING THE DORR
REBELLION. Tim Hon. Tristam Burges, of
Rhode Island, in a speech in Congress, January, 1828, said:--"At the
commencement of the Revolutionary War, Rhode Island had a number of slaves. A
regiment of them were enlisted into the Continental service, and no braver men
met the enemy in battle; but not one of them was permitted to be a soldier until
he had first been made a freeman." "In Rhode Island," says
Governor Eustis, in his able speech against slavery in Missouri, 12th December,
1820, "the blacks formed an entire regiment, and they discharged their duty with
zeal and fidelity. The gallant defence of Red Bank, in which the black regiment
bore a part, is among the proofs of their valor." In this contest, it will be
recollected that four hundred men met and repulsed, after a terrible and
sanguinary struggle, fifteen hundred Hessian troops, headed by Count Donop. The
glory of the defence
of Red Bank, which has been pronounced one of the most heroic actions of the
war, belongs in reality to black men; yet who now hears them spoken of in
connection with it? Among the traits which distinguished the black regiment, was
devotion to their officers. In the attack made upon the American lines, near
Croton river, on the 13th of May, 1781, Colonel Greene, the commander of the
regiment, was cut down and mortally wounded but the sabres of the enemy only
reached him through the bodies of his faithful guard of blacks, who hovered over
him to protect him, and every one of whom was killed. Lieu tenant-Colonel Barton,
of the Rhode Island militia, planned a bold exploit for the purpose of
surprising and taking Major-General Prescott, the commanding officer of the
royal army at Newport. Taking with him, in the night, about forty men, in two
boats, with ours muffled, he had the address to elude the vigilance of the ships
of war and guard boats, and, having arrived undiscovered at the General's
quarters, they were taken for the sentinels, and the General was not alarmed
till his captors were at the door of his lodging chamber, which was fast closed.
A negro man, named Prince, instantly thrust his head through the panel door and
seized the victim while in bed. The General's aid-decamp leaped from a window
undressed, and attempted to escape, but was taken, and, with the General,
brought off in safety.* * Thacher's Military Journal,
August 3, 1777.
I have received from Mr.
George E. Willis, of Providence, the following list of names, as among the
colored soldiers in the Rhode Island Regiment during the Revolutionary
War:-- RICHARD COZZENS, a fifer in
the Rhode Island Regiment, was born in Africa, and died in Providence. in
1829. In this connection, the
following extracts from an address delivered, in 1842, before the Congregational
and Presbyterian Anti-Slavery Society, at Francestown, N. H., by Dr. HARRIS, a
Revolutionary veteran, will be read with great interest:-- "I sympathize deeply," said
Dr. Harris, "in the objects of this Society. I fought, my hearers, for the
liberty which you enjoy. It surprises me that every man does not rally at the
sound of liberty, and array himself with those who are laboring to abolish
slavery in our country. The very mention of it warms the blood in my veins, and,
old as I am, makes me feel something of the spirit and impulses of '76.
"Then liberty
meant something. Then, liberty, independence, freedom, were in every
man's mouth. They were the sounds at which they rallied, and under which they
fought and bled. They were the words which encouraged and cheered them through
their hunger, and nakedness, and fatigue, in cold and in heat. The word slavery
then filled their hearts with horror. They fought because they would not be
slaves. Those whom liberty has cost nothing, do not know how to prize it. "I served in the Revolution,
in General Washington's army, three years under one enlistment. I have stood in
battle, where balls, like hail, were flying all around me. The man standing next
to me was shot by my side--his blood spouted upon my clothes, which I wore for
weeks. My nearest blood, except that which runs in my veins, was shed for
liberty. My only brother was shot dead instantly in the Revolution. Liberty is
dear to my heart--I cannot endure the thought, that my countrymen should be
slaves. "When stationed in the State
of Rhode Island, the regiment to which I belonged was once ordered to what was
called a flanking position,--that is, upon a place which the enemy must pass in
order to come round in our rear, to drive us from the fort. This pass was every
thing, both to them and to us; of course, it was a post of imminent danger. They
attacked us with great fury, but were repulsed. They reinforced, and attacked us
again, with more vigor and determination, and again were repulsed. Again they
reinforced, and attacked us the third time, with the most desperate courage and
resolution, but a third time were repulsed. The
contest was fearful. Our position was hotly disputed and as hotly
maintained. "But I have another object in
view in stating these facts. I would not be trumpeting my own acts; the only
reason why I have named myself in connection with this transaction is, to show
that I know whereof I affirm. There was a black regiment in the same
situation. Yes, a regiment of negroes, fighting for our liberty
and independence,--not a white man among them but the officers,-- stationed in
this same dangerous and responsible position. Had they been unfaithful, or given
way before the enemy, all would have been lost. Three times in succession
were they attacked, with most desperate valor and fury, by well disciplined and
veteran troops, and three times did they successfully repel the assault,
and thus preserve our army from capture. They fought through the war. They were
brave, hardy troops. They helped to gain our liberty and independence. "Now, the war is over, our
freedom is gained--what is to be done with these colored soldiers, who have shed
their best blood in its defence? Must they be sent off out of the country,
because they are black? or must they be sent back into slavery, now they have
risked their lives and shed their blood to secure the freedom of their masters?
I ask, what became of these noble colored soldiers? Many of them, I fear, were
taken back to the South, and doomed to the fetter and the chain. "And why is it, that the
colored inhabitants of our nation, born in this country, and entitled to all the
rights of freemen, are held in slavery? Why, but because they are
black? I have often thought, that, should God see fit, by a miracle,
to change their color, straighten their hair, and give their features and
complexion the appearance of the whites, slavery would not continue a year. No,
you would then go and abolish it with the sword, if it were not speedily
done without. But is it a suitable cause for making men slaves, because God has
given them such a color, such hair and such features, as he saw fit?" During the Dorr excitement,
the colored population of Rhode Island received high encomiums from the papers
of the State for their conduct. The New York Courier and Enquirer
said:--"The colored people of Rhode Island deserve the good opinion and kind
feeling of every citizen of the State, for their conduct during the recent
troublous times in Providence. They promptly volunteered their services for any
duty to which they might be useful in maintaining law and order. Upwards of a
hundred of them organized themselves for the purpose of acting as a city guard
for the protection of the city, and to extinguish fires, in case of their
occurrence, while the citizens were absent on military duty. The fathers of
these people were distinguished for their patriotism and bravery in the war of
the Revolution, and the Rhode Island colored regiment fought, on one occasion,
until half their number were slain. There was not a regiment in the service
which did more soldierly duty, or showed itself more devotedly patriotic." A colored military company,
called the "National Guard," has recently been formed in Providence, using, by
special grant, the State arms.
HON. CALVIN GODDARD'S TESTIMONY--CAPTAIN
HUMPHREYS' COLORED COMPANY--FAC SIMILE OF GENERAL WASHINGTON'S
CERTIFICATE--HAMET, GENERAL WASHINGTON'S SERVANT-- POOR JACK--EBENEZER
HILLS--LATHAM AND FREEMAN--FRANCHISE OF COLORED CITIZENS--DAVID
RUGGLES--PROGRESS. HON. CALVIN GODDARD, of
Connecticut, states that in the little circle of his residence, he was
instrumental in securing, under the Act of 1818, the pensions of nineteen
colored soldiers. "I cannot," he says, "refrain from mentioning one black man,
PRIMUS BABCOCK, who proudly presented to me an honorable discharge from service
during the war, dated, at the close of it, wholly in the handwriting of George
Washington. Nor can I forget the expression of his feelings, when informed,
after his discharge had been sent to the War Department, that it could not be
returned. At his request, it was written for, as he seemed inclined to spurn the
pension and reclaim the discharge." There is a touching anecdote
related of Baron Steuben, on the occasion of the disbandment of the American
army. A black soldier, with his wounds unheated, utterly destitute, stood on the
wharf, just as a vessel bound for his distant
home was getting under weigh. The poor fellow gazed at the vessel with tears
in his eyes, and gave himself up to despair. The warm-hearted foreigner
witnessed his emotion, and, inquiring into the cause of it, took his last dollar
from his purse, and gave it to him, while tears of sympathy trickled down his
cheeks. Overwhelmed with gratitude, the poor wounded soldier hailed the sloop,
and was received on board. As it moved out from the wharf, he cried back to his
noble friend on shore, "God Almighty bless you, master Baron!" During the Revolutionary War,
and after the sufferings of a protracted contest had rendered it difficult to
procure recruits for the army, the Colony of Connecticut adopted the expedient
of forming a corps of colored soldiers. A battalion of blacks was soon enlisted,
and, throughout the war, conducted themselves with fidelity and efficiency. The
late General Humphreys, then a Captain, commanded a company of this corps. It is
said that some objections were made, on the part of officers, to accepting the
command of the colored troops. In this exigency, Capt. Humphreys, who was
attached to the family of Gen. Washington, volunteered his services. His
patriotism was rewarded, and his fellow officers were afterwards as desirous to
obtain appointments in that corps as they had previously been to avoid them. The following extract from
the pay roll of the second company, fourth regiment, of the Connecticut line of
the
Revolutionary army, may rescue many gallant names from oblivion:-- * See the annexed fac simile of the original certificate of BAKER'S
discharge. The Hartford Review for
Sept., 1839, gives the following account of a colored man by the name of HAMET,
then living in Middletown, who was formerly owned by Washington:--"Hamet is,
according to his own account, nearly
one hundred years old. He draws a pension for his services in the
Revolutionary War, and manufactures toy drums for his support. He has a white
wife and one child. His hair is white with age, and hangs matted together in
masses over his shoulders. His height is about four feet six inches. He retains
a perfect recollection of his massa, and missus Washington, and has several
remembrancers of them. Among these, there is a lock of
the General's hair, and his (the General's) service sword. He converses in three
or four different languages,--the French, Spanish and German, besides his native
African tongue." A clergyman in Connecticut,
during the Revolutionary War, manifested, on all occasions, his zeal in the
cause of freedom and his country, but, at the same time, held in bondage a
colored man named Jack. To contend for liberty, and hold the poor African in
slavery, was, according to Jack's conception of right and wrong, a manifest
inconsistency. Under this impression, and anxious to obtain that liberty which
is the inherent and natural right of man, Jack went to his master one day, and
addressed him in the following language:-- "Master, I observe you alway keep preaching about liberty and praying for liberty, and
I love to hear you, sir, for liberty be a good thing. You preach well and you
pray well; but one thing you remember, master,--Poor Jack is not free yet."
Struck with the propriety and force of Jack's admonition, the clergyman, after a
momentary pause, told Jack if he would behave well in his service for one year
longer, he should be free.
Jack fulfilled the condition, obtained his freedom, and became a man of some
property and respectability.* * Book of American
Anecdotes. EBENEZER HILLS died at
Vienna, New York, August, 1849, aged one hundred and ten. He was born a slave,
in Stonington, Connecticut, and became free when twenty-eight years of age. He
served through the Revolutionary War, and was at the battles of Saratoga and
Stillwater, and was present at the surrender of Burgoyne. In a letter to the author,
Parker Pillsbury, of New Hampshire, says:--"The names of the two brave men of
color, who fell, with Ledyard, at the storming of Fort Griswold, were LAMBO
LATHAM and JORDAN FREEMAN. All the names of the slain, at that time, are
inscribed on a marble tablet, wrought into the monument--the names of the
colored soldiers last,--and not only last, but a blank space is left between
them and the whites; in genuine keeping with the "Negro Pew"
distinction--setting them not only below all others, but by themselves, even
after that. And it is difficult to say why. They were not last in the fight.
When Major Montgomery, one of the leaders in the expedition against the
Americans, was lifted upon the walls of the fort by his soldiers, flourishing
his sword and calling on them to follow him, JORDAN FREEMAN received him on the
point of a pike, and pinned him dead to the earth. [ Vide Hist. Collections
of Connecticut.] And the name of JORDAN FREEMAN stands away down, last on
the list of heroes,--perhaps the greatest hero of them all."
The seventy-second
anniversary of the memorable tragedy at Groton Heights, in 1781, was celebrated
by the people of New London and vicinity, on Wednesday, September 7, 1853. Of
the address of Hon. Robert C. Winthrop on that occasion, the New York
Express says:-- "It was beautifully eloquent
and appropriate. His father was born in New London, and his ancestors for a
century and a half had lived there. The very name of Groton came from Groton
Manor in England, an estate once owned by the Winthrops. The names of New London
and the Thames originated in a natural love for the great metropolis of the old
world and the river which passed by, for these were once in the neighborhood of
the homes of those who planted some of the earliest colonies in America. Mr. W.
pictured the events of the 6th of September, the bravery of the volunteers, the
shocking murders, the dead and surviving, the sufferings of Ledyard, the
revolutionary struggle, and all in letters of gold. His address charmed alike
the lettered and unlettered among his hearers, and that is the test of true
eloquence." The orator's omission to make
a brief allusion, even, to the two colored soldiers, called out the following
tribute from William Anderson, of New London, Connecticut:-- "I stood," he says, "on the
heights of Groton, a few days since, listening to the praises of the white
heroes, from the lips of Hon. R. C. Winthrop, W. I. Hammersley, Esq., Gov.
Seymour, and others. I saw there, on the battle-ground, the descendants of the
gallant Ledyard, (or, rather, the connections,) with those of the Averys, the
Lathams, the Perkinses, the Baileys, and others, in the
full enjoyment of that liberty so dearly bought by their ancestors. I was
glad that they were free, and living out their God-given rights. My mind became
excited with the scene; but, on reflection, my excitement was calmed down by the
sober thought of an unpleasant reality, and you will ask, why was I sad? Well,
as Shakspeare says, 'I will to you a tale unfold'; and,
while you bear with me in the recital, I know your sympathies will attend me in
the sequel. "September 6th, 1781, New
London was taken by the British, under the command of that traitor, Arnold. The
small band composing the garrison retreated to the fort opposite, in the town of
Groton, and there resolved either to gain a victory or die for their country.
The latter pledge was faithfully redeemed, and by none more gallantly than the
two colored men; and, if the survivors of that day's carnage tell truly, they
fought like tigers, and were butchered after the gates were burst open. One of
these men was the brother of my grandmother, by the name of Lambert, but called
Lambo,--since chiselled on the marble monument by the American classic
appellation of 'Sambo.' The name of the other man was Jordan Freeman.
Lambert was living with a gentleman in Groton, by the name of Latham, so, of
course, he was called Lambert Latham, Mr. Latham and Lambert, on the day of the
massacre, were work in a field, at a distance, from the house. On hearing the
alarm upon the approach of the enemy, Mr. Latham started for home, leaving
Lambert to drive the team up to the house. On arriving at the house, Lambert was
told
that Mr. Latham had gone up to the fort. Lambert took the cattle from the
team, and, making all secure, started for the point of defence, where he arrived
before the British began the attack. And here let me say, my dear friend, that
there was not any negro pew in that fort, although there was some praying as
well as fighting. But there they stood, side by side, and shoulder to shoulder,
and, after a few rounds of firing, each man's visage was so blackened by the
smoke of powder, that Lambert and Jordan had but little to boast of on the score
of color. "The assault on the part of
the British was a deadly one, and manfully resisted by the Americans, even to
the clubbing of their muskets after their ammunition was expended; but finally,
the little garrison was overcome, and, on the entrance of the enemy, the British
officer inquired, "Who commands this fort?" The gallant Ledyard replied, "I once
did; you do now,"--at the same time handing his sword, which was immediately run
through his body to the hilt by the officer. This was the commencement of an
unparalleled slaughter. Lambert, being near Col. Ledyard when he was slain,
retaliated upon the officer by thrusting his bayonet through his body. Lambert,
in return, received from the enemy thirty-three bayonet wounds, and thus
fell, nobly avenging the death of his commander. These facts were given me on
the spot, at the time of the laying of the corner-stone, by two veterans who
were present at the battle. And now I would ask, has Connecticut done her duty
towards us, while she permits foreigners to
exercise the right of suffrage,--yes, even those who were fighting against us
in the last war,--while we, "native, and to the manner born," are not allowed to
peep into the ballot-box? Among the many great orators at Groton Heights, the
last 6th of September, I heard not the first word spoken of our forefathers'
valor, or of our present disenfranchisement. "My dear friend, I well
remember the last war between this country and Great Britain. I was then a mere
schoolboy. The school where I went was also attended by several hundred boys;
and, one day, we were all marshalled out, and under drum and fife, marched down
to help construct a battery, near the water's edge, below the mouth of the
harbor; and proudly did we feel, that we little fellows could do something for
our country, if nothing more than lugging a small turf, or carrying wooden pins
for securing the turf. I have often thought of that day's work and of its close,
as being so truly in keeping with past and present usage. At the close of the
day, we returned to town, treading time to the music, with the promise that we
should receive some food--of which we had not tasted any since morning. But,
alas! The proverb was verified in that case, "that the last should be
first,"--for, on arriving at the house, the order was given to open ranks, and
those in the rear, being the men, passed up the ranks, filling the house, to the
exclusion of the boys, who returned home to a late supper, thinking of ardor,
patriotism, and hunger; but nevertheless, ready for another tramp, if called
on." The colored inhabitants of
Connecticut assembled in convention,
in 1849, to devise means to secure the elective franchise, denied to seven
thousand of their number. A gentleman present gives the following incident:--"A
young man, Mr. WEST, of Bridgeport, spoke with a great deal of energy, and with
a clear and pleasant tone of voice, which many a lawyer, statesman, or
clergyman, might covet, nobly vindicating the rights of the brethren. He said
that the bones of the colored man had bleached on every battle-field where
American valor had contended for national independence. Side by side with the
white man, the black man stood and struggled to the last for the inheritance
with the white men now enjoy, but deny to us. His father was a soldier slave,
and his master said to him, when the liberty of the country was achieved,
'Stephen, we will do something for you.' But what have they ever done for
Stephen, or for Stephen's posterity? This orator is evidently a young man of
high promise, and better capable of voting intelligently than half of the white
men who would deny him a freeman's privilege." At the Troy Convention, held
October, 1847, Rev. Amos G. Beman gave vent to his feelings in a most eloquent
speech on the pro-slavery results of the colored suffrage question, in his
native State, Connecticut, remarking that nine-tenths of the Irish residents
in Connecticut voted against the colored American; and, though he had loved
Ireland, revered her great men, sympathized with her present and past
afflictions, and some of her blood flowed in his veins, he could not forego
administering the burning rebuke which he believed
due for their recreancy to the cause of human rights, and to the men who had
never done harm to them. He alluded to the conversion of Judge Daggett, which
has been graphically delineated by another writer, as follows:-- "While the black laws of
Connecticut were in force, Chief Justice Daggett decided that we were not
citizens of the United States, and that the colored people there had no claims
to the privileges of American citizens. But time rolled on; he had become
acquainted with the intelligent and enterprising colored citizens of that State;
he had finished his term and retired. But a few years ago, when the question was
before the people of Connecticut--Shall the colored people of the State have the
right to vote?--while his fellow-citizens were voting, three to one, in the
negative, the old gentleman, from his retirement, stepped forth, in his
white-topped boots, with his silver locks of eighty winters flowing beneath his
venerable brim; leaning upon his staff, he walked to the polls, amid popular
excitement, and voted in the affirmative." Not a few great men, on the bench, at
the bar, or in the pulpit, have undergone similar changes. These changes will
multiply, under the influence of the praiseworthy exertions of her gallant, but
proscribed, colored citizens, encouraged by the good and true around them. In
the struggle for enfranchisement, victory, at no distant day, is destined to
perch upon their banners. In addition to what Mr.
Phillips has said of DAVID RUGGLES, in earlier pages of this book, the following
reminiscences of that gifted son of Connecticut are worthy to be recorded here.
August 1st, 1841, a complimentary soiree was given to Mr. Ruggles in Boston,
at which he made a speech, in the course of which he said:-- "I have had the pleasure of
helping six hundred persons in their flight from bonds. In this, I have tried to
do my duty, and mean still to persevere, until the last fetter shall be broken,
and the last sigh heard from the lips of a slave. But give the praise to Him who
sustains us all, who holds up the heart of the laborer in the rice swamp, and
cheers him when, by the twinkling of the North Star, he finds his way to
liberty. Six hundred in three years I have saved; had it been in one year, I
should have been nearer my duty, nearer the duty of every American, when he
reflects that it was the blood of colored men, as well as whites, which
crimsoned the battle-fields of Bunker Hill and the rest, in the struggle to
sustain the principles embodied in our Declaration of Independence." Mr. Ruggles, for a brief
period, successfully edited the Mirror of Liberty. He died in 1849, and
highly eulogistic notices of him appeared in the Boston Liberator and the
Chronotype, the editors of these papers having long been conversant with
the trials, perseverance and martyrdom of this "brave soldier in the battle of
life." Rev. J. C. BEMAN gives the
following account of the origin of his name. He says that when his father was
presented with manumission papers, he was asked what name he had selected, and
replied that he had always loathed slavery, and wanted to be a man; hence he
adopted the name, Be-man.
At the Colored Men's
Convention held at Hartford, in October, 1854, Rev. A. G. BEMAN, of New Haven,
made a report on the condition and prospects of the colored people of that city
and county. He contrasted their present position with what it was twenty years
ago. Then, not a man of them could enter his habitation and say, "This is
mine"; not a single church, nor the shadow of any school or other place for the
education of their children, was in existence or prospect. To have looked for
the strictly temperate, moral and religious, had been as fruitless as to search
for hailstones in boiling water. Now, there are about two hundred
thousand dollars' worth of real estate, besides bank and railroad stock,
four Methodist churches, one Congregational, one Episcopal, and one Baptist, and
a Literary Society with a Circulating Library, in possession of the colored
people of New Haven city. There are four schools in full and prosperous
operation. How can any man, said Mr. B., who has lived in the midst of the one
thousand and upwards colored people of New Haven, and witnessed the progress
they have made in spite of almost every obstacle, publicly say, as the Hon. H.
Olmstead has done, in his report on Colonization to the Legislature of 1851,
that "the colored men in this State are dying out, their hopes crushed, their
manhood gone"?
NEGRO PLOT--DEBATE IN THE STATE
CONVENTION OF 1821 ON THE FRANCHISE OF COLORED CITIZENS--NEW YORK COLORED
SOLDIERY--MILITARY CONVENTION IN SYRACUSE, 1854--EXTRACT FROM A SPEECH OF H. H.
GARNET--CYRUS CLARKE'S VICTORY AT THE BALLOT BOX--J. M. WHITFIELD--STATISTICAL
AND OTHER FACTS. As early as 1712, there had
been an insurrection of the slaves in New York, and the recollection of this,
and a general distrust of the negro population, rendered the citizen of that
city peculiarly suspicious of their movements; and when, in 1741, the cry was
raised of a "negro plot," there ensued a scene of confusion and alarm, of folly,
frenzy and injustice, which scarcely has a parallel in this, or any other,
country. It happened that a Spanish vessel, partly manned with negroes, had
previously been brought into New York as a prize, and that all the men had been
condemned as slaves, in the Court of Admiralty, and were sold at vendue. Now,
these men had the impudence to say notwithstanding they were black, that they
had been free men in their own country, and to grumble at their hard usage in
being sold for slaves. One of them had been
bought by the owner of a house in which fire had been discovered, and a cry
was raised among the people--"The Spanish negroes!"--"Take up the Spanish
negroes!" They were immediately incarcerated, and, a fire occurring in the
afternoon of the same day, the rumor became general, that the slaves, in a body,
were concerned in these wicked attempts to burn the city. The negroes were brought to
trial, May 29, 1741. The principal evidence against them was one Mary Burton,
the common informer, who was rewarded by the sum of one hundred dollars from the
city authorities. She continued to implicate parties, until the "people of
consequence" began to be annoyed by her, when the prosecutions became unpopular,
and the excitement subsided. There was some evidence against them from negroes,
as, by a law of the colony, the evidence of slaves was competent against each
other, though not allowed to be used against white men. The prisoners had no
counsel, while the Attorney General, assisted by two members of the bar,
appeared against them. The evidence had little consistency, and was extremely
loose and general. The arguments of the lawyers were chiefly declamatory
respecting the horrible plot, of the existence of which, however, no sufficient
evidence was introduced. "The monstrous ingratitude of the black tribe (was the
language of one of them in addressing the jury) is what exceedingly aggravated
their guilt; their slavery among us is generally softened with great
indulgence." The prisoners were immediately convicted, and were sentenced by the
Court, in a
brutal address, (which is singularly indicative of the general excitement on
the subject,) to be burnt to death. "You, abject wretches," said the Judge, "the
outcast of the nations of the earth, are treated here with tenderness and
humanity"! The prisoners protested their innocence, and utterly denied any
knowledge of any plot whatever; but, when they were taken out to execution, the
poor creatures were much terrified; and, when chained to the stake, and the
executioner was ready to apply the torch, they admitted all that was required of
them. An attempt was then made to procure a reprieve; but a great multitude had
assembled to witness the executions, and the excitement was so great, that it
was considered impossible to return the prisoners to prison; they were,
accordingly, burned at the stake. John Ury, the son of a former
Secretary of the South Sea Company, a non-juring clergyman, and a man of
education, was convicted, on the evidence of Mary Burton, though denying all
knowledge of any plot, or even of the witnesses who testified against him. After his execution, a day of
thanksgiving to Almighty God was observed by public command, for the delivery
from the late execrable conspiracy. But the public mind was at rest for a short
time only. A few negroes in Queen's county, on Long Island, having formed
themselves into a military company for amusement on the Christmas holidays, a
letter was written to the authorities there by the Attorney General, and the
slaves were severely chastised for this daring piece of insolence. The cry of a
new plot was immediately
raised, which resulted in the execution of other slaves. The whole number of
persons taken into custody was over one hundred and fifty. Of these, four white
persons were hanged; eleven negroes were burnt, eighteen were hanged, and fifty
were sold, principally in the West Indies. Thus ended the famous "Negro
Plot" of New York. Upon a review of the evidence, as reported by one who had
implicit faith in the existence of a conspiracy, we have no difficulty in
pronouncing the whole thing to have been a complete delusion--the natural result
of the condition of society at that day. This opinion is confirmed by Bancroft,
United States historian, and Dunlap, in the History of New York.* * Chandler's State
Trials. Dr. Clarke, in the Convention
which revised the Constitution of New York, in 1821, speaking of the colored
inhabitants of the State, said:--My honorable colleague has told us, that, as
the colored people are not required to contribute to the protection or defence
of the State, they are not entitled to an equal participation in the privileges
of its citizens. But, Sir, whose fault is this? Have they ever refused to do
military duty when called upon? It is haughtily asked, who will stand in the
ranks shoulder to shoulder with a negro? I answer, no one, in time of peace; no
one, when your musters and trainings are looked upon as mere pastimes; no one,
when your militia will shoulder their muskets and march to their trainings with
as much unconcern as they would go to a sumptuous entertainment or a splendid
ball. But, Sir, when
the hour of danger approaches, your 'white' militia are just as willing that
the man of color Should be set up as a mark to be shot at by the enemy, as to be
set up themselves. In the War of the Revolution, these people helped to fight
your battles by land and by sea. Some of your States were glad to turn out corps
of colored men, and to stand 'shoulder to shoulder' with them. "In your late war, they
contributed largely towards some of your most splendid victories. On Lakes Erie
and Champlain, where your fleets triumphed over a foe superior in numbers and
engines of death, they were manned, in a large proportion, with men of color.
And, in this very House, in the fall of 1814, a bill passed, receiving the a
probation of all the branches of your government, authorising the Governor to
accept the services of a corps of two thousand free people of color. Sir, these
were times which tried men's souls. In these times, it was no sporting matter to
bear arms. These were times, when a man who shouldered his musket, did not know
but he bared his bosom to receive a death wound from the enemy, ere he laid it
aside; and, in these times, these people were found as ready and as willing to
volunteer in your service as any other. They were not compelled to go; they were
not drafted. No; your pride had placed them beyond your compulsory power. But
there was no necessity for its exercise; they were volunteers; yes, Sir,
volunteers to defend that very country from the inroads and ravages of a
ruthless and vindictive foe, which had treated them with insult, degradation,
and slavery.
"Volunteers are the best of
soldiers. Give me the men, whatever be their complexion, that willingly
volunteer, and not those who are compelled to turn out. Such men do not fight
from necessity, nor from mercenary motives, but from principle." Said Martindale, of New York,
in Congress, 22d of January, 1828:--"Slaves, or negroes who had been slaves,
were enlisted as soldiers in the War of the Revolution; and I myself saw a
battalion of them, as fine martial-looking men as I ever saw, attached to the
Northern army, in the last war, on its march from Plattsburg to Sackett's
Harbor." During the Revolutionary War,
the Legislature of New York passed an Act granting freedom to all slaves who
should serve in the army for three years, or until regularly discharged. (See 2
Kent's Com., p. 255.) The poor requital for the
colored man's valor was forcibly alluded to by Henry H. Garnet at the
anniversary of the American Anti-Slavery Society, in New York city, May, 1840.
"It is with pride," said he, "that I remember, that in the earliest attempts to
establish democracy in this hemisphere, colored men stood by the side of your
fathers, and shared with them the toils of the Revolution. When Freedom, that
had been chased over half the world, at last thought she had here found a
shelter, and held out her hands for protection, the tearful eye of the colored
man, in many instances, gazed with pity upon her tattered garments, and ran to
her relief. Many fell in her defence, and the grateful soil received them
affectionately into its bosom.
No monumental piles distinguish their 'dreamless beds'; scarcely an inch on
the page of history has been appropriated to their memory; yet truth will give
them a share of the fame that was reaped upon the fields of Lexington and Bunker
Hill; truth will affirm that they participated in the immortal honor that
adorned the brow of the illustrious Washington." I am indebted to Rev.
Theodore Parker, of Boston, for the following historical sketch of the New York
colored soldiery:-- "Not long ago, while the
excavations for the vaults of the great retail dry goods store of New York were
going on, a gentleman from Boston noticed a large quantity of human bones thrown
up by the workmen. Every body knows the African countenance: the skulls also
bore unmistakable marks of the race they belonged to. They were shovelled up
with the earth which they had rested in, carted off and emptied into the sea to
fill up a chasm, and make the foundation of a warehouse. "On inquiry, the Bostonian
learned that these were the bones of colored American soldiers, who fell in the
disastrous battles of Long Island, in 1776, and of such as died of the wounds
then received. At that day, as at this, spite of the declaration that 'all men
are created equal,' the prejudice against the colored man was intensely strong.
The black and the white had fought against the same enemy, under the same
banner, contending for the same 'unalienable right' to life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness. The same shot with promiscuous slaughter had
mowed down Africans and Americans. But in the grave, they must be divided. On
the battle-field, the blacks and whites had mixed their bravery and their blood,
but their ashes must not mingle in the bosom of their common mother. The white
Saxon, exclusive and haughty even in his burial, must have his place of rest
proudly apart from the grave of the African he had once enslaved. "Now, after seventy-five
years have passed by, the bones of these forgotten victims of the Revolution are
shovelled up by Irish laborers, carted off, and shot into the sea, as the
rubbish of the town. Had they been white men's relics, how would they have been
honored with sumptuous burial anew, and the purchased prayers and preaching of
Christian divines! Now, they are the rubbish of the street! "True, they were the bones of
Revolutionary soldiers,--but they were black men; and shall a city that kidnaps
its citizens, honor a negro with a grave? What boots it that he fought for our
freedom; that he bled for our liberty; that he died for you and me? Does the
'nigger' deserve a tomb? Ask the American State--the American Church! Three quarters of a century
have passed by since the retreat from Long Island. What a change since then!
From the Washington of that day to the world's Washington of this, what a
change! In America, what alterations! What a change in England! The Briton has
emancipated every bondman; slavery no longer burns his soil on either Continent,
the East or West. America has a population of slaves greater than the people of
all England in the reign
of Elizabeth. Under the pavement of Broadway, beneath the walls of the
Bazaar, there still lie the bones of the colored martyrs to American
Independence. Dandies of either sex swarm gaily over the threshhold, heedless of
the dead African, contemptuous of the living. And while these faithful bones
were getting shovelled up and carted to the sea, there was a great slave-hunt in
New York: a man was kidnapped and carried off to bondage by the citizens, at the
instigation of politicians, and to the sacramental delight of 'divines.' "Happy are the dead Africans,
whom British shot mowed down! They did not live to see a man kidnapped in the
city which their blood helped free." Within a recent period,
several military companies have been formed in New York city, exclusively of
colored men. They have been organized, in part, through the exertions of
Captains Simmons and Hawkins, and are designated as the "Hannibal Guards," the
"Free Soil Guards," and the "Attucks Guards." The New York Tribune says
of one of these companies, in announcing their parade, "They looked like men,
handled their arms like men, and, should occasion demand, we presume would fight
like men." At the New York State
Convention of the Soldiers of 1812, held at Syracuse, June 21, 1854, the
following resolutions were adopted:-- Resolved, That in view
of the resulting benefits to the nation at large, and in view of the dangers and
hardships encountered by the soldiers of the war of 1812,--in view of the state
of our finances,
and especially in view of the fact that the soldiers of that war are now aged
and rapidly dropping away,--and in view of the precedent established by Congress
in reference to the soldiers of the Revolutionary War,--all officers and
soldiers in the war of 1812, now living, and the widows of such as are deceased,
should be provided for by a liberal annuity, to be continued during their
natural lives, and that such provisions should extend to and include both the
Indian and African race, for services either on sea or land, who enlisted or
served in that war, and who joined with the white man in defending our rights
and maintaining our independence. Resolved, That we
cordially invite the coöperation of the officers and soldiers of the war of
1812, in all the other States of the Union; that they be respectfully and
earnestly requested to hold similar Conventions in their own States, to call
upon their respective Legislatures to instruct their members in Congress to make
just and ample provision, by grants of land and annuities, for the officers and
soldiers of 1812, and for the widows of such as are deceased; and that without
distinction of race or color. LEWIS and MILTON CLARKE
several years since made their escape from Kentucky slavery, and have
distinguished themselves by their public advocacy of human rights. Their father
was a Scotchman, who came to this country in time to be in the earliest scenes
of the American Revolution. He was at the battle of Bunker Hill, and continued
in the army to the close of the war. When his children were about being sold at
auction, the venerable father, though debilitated from the effects of the wounds
received in the war, was nevertheless roused by this outrage upon his rights and
upon those of his children. "He had never
expected," he said, "when fighting for the liberties of this country, to see
his own wife and children sold in it to the highest bidder." But what were the
entreaties of an agonized old man in the sight of eight or ten hungry heirs? CYRUS CLARKE, brother to
Lewis and Milton, became a resident of Hamilton Village, N. Y., and, possessing
all the necessary qualifications of white men to vote, went to the polls and
presented his ballot, when he was challenged, and told that, being a colored
man, he could not vote unless possessed of two hundred and fifty dollars' worth
of real estate. Clark replied to the challenger, "I am as white as you,
and don't you vote?" Friends and foes warmly contested what constituted a
colored man under the New York statute. The officers finally came to the
conclusion that to be a colored man, an individual must be at least one half
blood African. Mr. Clarke, the Kentucky slave, then voted, he being
nearly full white. It is believed that the
debate on the military services of colored men had great influence in obtaining
for them the right of suffrage; though it must also be recorded, that colored
citizens were ungenerously made subject to a property qualification of two
hundred and fifty dollars. Plutus must be highly esteemed where his rod can
change even a negro into a man. If two hundred and fifty dollars will perform
this miracle, what would it require to elevate a monkey to the enviable
distinction? The friends of freedom are now attempting to remove this
restriction, and we feel assured the right will triumph in the Empire State.
In Watkins, Schuyler county,
on the 13th of August, 1855, a colored man (John D. Berry, Esq.) was chosen to
sit as a juror in a criminal trial, and the citizens appeared very well
satisfied. JAMES M. WHITFIELD, the
colored poet, is a resident of Buffalo. His time is almost constantly occupied
in his business as a hair-dresser, and he writes in such intervals of leisure as
he is able to realize. He is uneducated,--not entirely, but substantially; his
genius is native and uncultivated, and yet his verse possesses much of the
finish of experienced authorship. The following is an extract from poem by him
on the Fourth of July:
I have taken great pleasure
in visiting, in New York city, the Apothecary's Hall of Dr. J. M'Cune Smith, and
also hat of Philip J. White. (Since then, several accomplished
colored physicians have been added to the list.) I found Drs. Smith and White
practical men, conducting their business and preparing medicines with as much
readiness and skill as any other disciples of Galen and Hippocrates. I was also
introduced to a colored carpenter,--not a practical one, but a master
workman, and contractor for buildings. Among the enterprising
Albanians, may be mentioned William H. Topp, a merchant tailor, and a perfect
gentleman, winning golden opinions from all who, in the course of business or
otherwise, become acquainted with him. His store, in Broadway, will not suffer
by comparison with the best in any of the Atlantic cities. He has long been
interested in the ways and means of elevating his oppressed brethren, and, in
their hearts' best affections, evidently stands a-Topp of the
fraternity. It is a fault, with many
colored men, that they do not aim at perfection in a knowledge of their
business, whereas, they should all aim for the highest pinnacle of merit. As a
friend once said to a musical aspirant, "You should strive to be something more
than a superficial scraper of catgut." Policy and principle alike demand this at
the hands of colored Americans. From an elaborate and very
encouraging statistical report, embracing the real estate owned by the colored
citizens of New York, the amount invested by them in business enterprises, and
their general prosperity, as a class, prepared by Dr. J. M'Cune Smith, I copy
the following statements.
The Colored Home and Orphan
Asylum contain all the colored poor, dependent on public support, with a very
few exceptions. In New York city, the colored population to the white, fairly
estimated, is as one to twenty-five; hence, the colored population of that city
is twenty-seven per centum less burdensome, than is the white population, to the
poor fund. And this happy state of things has arisen, in part, from the fact,
that the former class have mutual benefit societies, with a cash capital of
$30,000, from which they take care of their sick and bury their dead. The sending of children to
school is a fair test of the intelligence of a people. During the year 1850,
there were 3,393 colored children in attendance in common schools, in New York
city, which is nearly the same proportion as there were white children attending
the same class of schools. In reviewing these facts, it
must be borne in mind, that but one quarter of a century has elapsed since a
large portion of the colored population of New York has been freed from slavery;
and that, during the earlier portion of this time, the very possession of the
newly-gotten freedom had in it an enjoyment so full and perfect, that the
getting of money became a secondary consideration, to say nothing of the
dependent and thriftless habits which slavery had engendered. Nor should it be
forgotten, that, during the same fourth of a century, we have borne the brunt of
competition with a flood of emigrants from the old world; for nearly all such
emigrants were immediate and direct competitors
in our callings, having on their side the odds of complexional sympathy and
political influence, from the moment their landing upon our shores. The following business card
is inserted for its historical significance, having a two-fold application to
the purposes of this book. This example supersedes the necessity of exclusive
colored action, and, at the same time, is an exhibition of practical
anti-slavery. May such instances speedily multiplied!
ONE of the partners (Mr.
WILLIAMS) is a COLORED MAN, has been connected with the CROCKERY TRADE of New
York for twenty years, and for several years has conducted the business on his
own account. A leading object in establishing the present firm, both by the
parties themselves and their friends and advisers, having been to contribute to
the SOCIAL ELEVATION OF THE COLORED PEOPLE, they feel warranted in making an
appeal for patronage, as they now do, to all that class of merchants throughout
the country who sympathise with the object now expressed, and who would gladly
avail themselves of so direct a method and so favorable an opportunity to
subserve it. We hope to see all such in our establishment, and we express the
confidence that the favors bestowed upon us by our friends will be the interest
of themselves as well as us. JAMES WILLIAMS,
OLIVER CROMWELL--SAMUEL
CHARLTON--HAGAR--CONSISTENT FOURTH OF JULY CELEBRATION. THE Burlington Gazette
gives the following account of an aged colored resident of that city, which will
be read with much interest:-- "The attention of many of our
citizens has, doubtless, been arrested by the appearance of an old colored man,
who might have been seen, sitting in front of his residence, in East Union
street, respectfully raising his hat to those who might be passing by. His
attenuated frame, his silvered head, his feeble movements, combine to prove that
he is very aged; and yet, comparatively few are aware that he is among the
survivors of the gallant army who fought for the liberties of our country, 'in
the days which tried men's souls.' "On Monday last, we stopped
to speak to him, and asked him how old he was. He asked the day of the month,
and, upon being told that it was the 24th of May, replied, with trembling lips,
'I am very old--I am a hundred years old to-day.' "His name is OLIVER CROMWELL,
and he says that he was born at the Black Horse, (now Columbus,) in this
county, in the family of John Hutchin. He enlisted in company commanded by
Capt. Lowery, attached to the Second New Jersey Regiment, under the command of
Col. Israel Shreve. He was at the battles of Trenton, Princeton, Brandywine,
Monmouth, and Yorktown, at which latter place, he told us, he saw the last man
killed. Although his faculties are failing, yet he relates many interesting
reminiscences the Revolution. He was with the army at the retreat of the
Delaware, on the memorable crossing of the 25th of December, 1776, and relates
the story of the battles on the succeeding days with enthusiasm. He gives the
details of the march from Trenton to Princeton, and told us, with much humor,
that they 'knocked the British about lively' at the latter place. He was also at
the battle of Springfield, and says that he saw the house burning in which Mrs.
Caldwell was shot, at Connecticut Farms." I further learn, that
Cromwell was brought up a farmer, having served his time with Thomas Hutchins,
Esq., his maternal uncle. He was, for six years and nine months, under the
immediate command of Washington, whom he loved affectionately. "His discharge,"
(says Dr. M'Cune Smith,) "at the close of the war, was in Washington's own
hand-writing, of which he was very proud, often speaking of it. He received,
annually, ninety-six dollars pension. He lived a long and honorable life. Had he
been of a little lighter complexion, (he was just half white,) every newspaper
in the land would have been eloquent in praise of many virtues." He left three
sons and three daughters;
had fourteen children who reached the age of maturity--seven sons and seven
daughters. He saw his grand-children to the third generation. He was a man of
strong natural powers--never chewed tobacco nor drank a glass of ardent spirit.
He died, in the town of his birth, January 24th, 1853, and now sleeps in the
church-yard of the Broad street Methodist Church. "SAMUEL CHARLTON," says Mr.
McDougal, "was born in the State of New Jersey, a slave, in the family of Mr.
M., who owned, also, other members belonging to his family--all residing in the
English neighborhood. During the progress of the war, he was placed by his
master, (as a substitute for himself,) in the army then in New Jersey, as a
teamster in the baggage train. He was in active service at the battle of
Monmouth, not only witnessing, but taking a part in, the struggle of that day.
He was, also, in several other engagements in different sections of that part of
the State. He was a great admirer of General Washington, and was, at one time,
attached to his baggage train, and received the General's commendation for his
courage and devotion to the cause of liberty. Mr. Charlton was about fifteen or
seventeen years of age when placed in the army, for which his master rewarded
him with a silver dollar. At the expiration of his time, he returned to his
master, to serve again in bondage, after having toiled, fought and bled for
liberty, in common with the regular soldiery. Mr. M., at his death, by will,
liberated his slaves, and provided a pension for Charlton, to be paid during his
lifetime. Mr.
Charlton then, with his wife, took up his residence in New York city, with
his son, Charles Charlton. He died twelve years since, being about eighty years
of age. He and his partner were both honored and worthy members of the Dutch
Reformed Church. "An old colored woman," says
the Stamford Advocate, "familiarly known as HAGAR, died in this village,
on Saturday last. Her age is not exactly known, but, from the most reliable data
at our command, we infer that she must have been upward of a hundred years old.
She was born a slave, in Newark, New Jersey, and was brought to Stamford when
she was five or six years old, and lived here until the day of her death. A
lady, Mrs. Knapp, now living, aged ninety-six years, remembers that Hagar used
to carry her when a child. Assuming that Mrs. Knapp must have been three years
old at the time to which her recollection extends, and that Hagar must have been
thirteen to be charged with the care of children, it will make her, at the time
of her death, one hundred and six years old. Another circumstance confirms this
view of the case. During the Revolutionary War, Hagar was a cook in Weed's
Tavern, and her husband, George Dykins, was hostler in the same establishment.
Hagar used to relate, that she once cooked a dinner for General Washington, when
he stopped at the tavern, on his way to Cambridge, Massachusetts, the
head-quarters of the American army, in June, 1775. On the same occasion,
Washington presented to her husband a silver dollar for his name's sake.
Supposing Hagar to have been twenty-seven at that
time, it would make her age one hundred and six, as is the case of the first
supposition. In all probability, this is very nearly her age." The Newark Eagle
published, some time ago, the following account of a consistent celebration of
the Fourth of July, in Woodbridge:-- "We have recently had an
interview with a person who was present at the first abolition meeting ever held
in the United States. It took place in the township of Woodbridge, County of
Middlesex, in this State, on the Fourth of July, 1783, being the first
anniversary of our Independence, after the close of the Revolutionary War. Great
preparations had been made--an ox was roasted, and an immense number had
assembled on the memorable occasion. A platform was erected, just above the
heads of the spectators, and, at a given signal, Dr. Bloomfield, father of the
late Governor Bloomfield, of this State, mounted the platform, followed by his
fourteen slaves, male and female, seven taking their stations on his right hand,
and seven on his left. Being thus arranged, he advanced somewhat in front of his
slaves, and addressed the multitude on the subject of slavery and its evils,
and, in conclusion, pointing to those on his right and left, 'As a nation,' said
he, 'we are free and independent,--all men are created equal, and why should
these, my fellow citizens, my equals, be held in bondage? From this day, they
are emancipated; and I here declare them free, and absolved from all servitude
to me or my posterity.' Then, calling up before him one somewhat advanced
in years--'Hector,' said the Doctor, 'whenever you become too old or infirm
to support yourself, you are entitled to your maintenance from me or my
property. How long do you suppose it will be before you will require that
maintenance?' Hector held up his left hand, and, with his right, drew a line
across the middle joints of his fingers, saying--'Never, never, massa, so long
as any of these fingers remain below these joints.' Then, turning to the
audience, the Doctor remarked,--'There, fellow-citizens, you see that liberty is
as dear to the man of color as to you or me.' The air now rung with shouts of
applause, and thus the scene ended. "Dr. Bloomfield immediately
procured for Hector, either by purchase or setting off from his own farm, three
acres of land, and built him a small house, where he resided and cultivated his
little farm until the day of his death;* and it was
a common remark with the neighbors, that Hector's hay, when he took it to Amboy
to sell, would always command a better price than their own."** * "This took place within the
last nine years, near Metuchin, in New Jersey, at the advanced age of 105 years.
An interesting fact is connected with this gift of freedom and land. The son of
Hector inherited it, and his widow now resides on it. The freed slaves generally
took care of and supported themselves." ** New Jersey disfranchises
twenty-two thousand of her colored population.
JAMES FORTEN--JOHN B. VASHON--MAJOR
JEFFREY--JOHN JOHNSON AND JOHN DAVIS--WM. BURLEIGH--CONDUCT OF COLORED
PHILADELPHIANS DURING THE PESTILENCE-- CHARLES BLACK--JAMES DERHAM--THE JURY
BENCH AND BALLOT BOX--GLEANINGS. * Abridged from a eulogy on
his life and character, delivered at Bethel Church, Philadelphia, March 30,1842,
by ROBERT PURVIS. JAMES FORTEN was born on the
second day of September, 1766, and died on the Ides of March, 1842. He was the
son of Thomas Forten, who died when James was but seven years old. His mother
survived long after he had reached the years of maturity. In early life, he was
marked for great sprightliness and energy of character, a generous disposition,
and indomitable courage, always frank, kind, courteous, and disinterested. In
the year 1775, he left school, being then about nine years of age, having
received a very limited education (and he never went to school afterwards) from
that early, devoted, and worldwide known philanthropist, ANTHONY BENEZET. He was
then employed at a grocery store and at home, when his
mother, yielding to the earnest and unceasing solicitations of her son, whose
young heart fired with the enthusiasm and feeling of the patriots and
revolutionists of that day, with the firmness and devotion of a Roman matron,
but with a heart then truly deemed American, gave the boy of her promise,
the child of her heart and her hopes, to his country; upon the altar of its
liberties she laid the apple of her eye, the jewel of her soul. In 1780, then in his
fourteenth year, he embarked board the "Royal Louis," Stephen Decatur,
Senr., Commander, in the capacity of "powder-boy." Scarce waft from his native
shore, and perilled upon the dark blue sea than he found himself amid the roar
of cannon, the smoke of blood, the dying and the dead. Their ship was so brought
into action with an English vessel, the Lawrence, which, after a severe fight,
in which great loss was sustain on both sides, and leaving every man wounded on
board the "Louis" but himself, they succeeded in capturing, and brought her into
port amid the loud huzzas and acclamations of the crowds that assembled upon the
occasion. Forten, sharing largely in the feeling which so brilliant a victory
had inspired, with fresh courage, and an unquenchable devotion to the interests
of his native land, soon reëmbarked in the same vessel. In this cruise, however,
they were unfortunate; for, falling in with three of the enemy's vessels,--the
Amphyon, Nymph, and Pomona,--they were forced to strike their colors, and become
prisoners of war. It was at this juncture that his mind was harassed with the
most painful forebodings, from a knowledge of the fact that rarely, if ever,
were prisoners of his complexion exchanged; they were sent to the West Indies,
and there doomed to a life of slavery. But his destiny, by a kind Providence,
was otherwise. He was placed on board the Amphyon, Captain Beasly, who, struck
with his open and honest countenance, made him the companion of his son. During
one of those dull and monotonous periods which frequently occur on ship-board,
young Beasly and Forten were engaged in a game at marbles, when, with signal
dexterity and skill, the marbles were upon every trial successively displaced by
the unerring hand of Forten. This excited the surprise and admiration of his
young companion, who, hastening to his father, called his attention to it. Upon
being questioned as to the truth of the matter, and assuring the Captain that
nothing was easier for him to accomplish, the marbles were again placed in the
ring, and in rapid succession he redeemed his word. A fresh and deeper interest
was from that moment taken in his behalf. Captain Beasly proffered him a passage
to England, tempted him with the allurements of wealth, under the patronage of
his son, who was heir to a large estate there, the advantages of a good
education, and freedom, equality and happiness, for ever. "No, No!," was the
invariable reply; "I am here a prisoner for the liberties of my country; I
never, NEVER, shall prove a traitor to her interests!" What sentiment
more exalted! What patriotism more lofty, devoted, and self-sacrificing! Indeed,
with him, the feeling was, "America, with all thy faults, I love thee still";
for, with a full knowledge of the wrongs and outrages which she was then
inflicting upon his brethren and by the "ties of consanguinity and of wrong," we
see this by the persecuted and valiant son of hers, in the very darkest hour of
his existence, when hope seemed to have departed from him, when the horrors of a
hopeless West India slavery, with its whips for his shrinking flesh, and its
chains for hi free-born soul could only be dissipated by severing that tie,
which, by the strongest cords of love, bound him to his native land, we see him
standing up in the spirit of martyrdom, with a constancy of affection, and an
invincibility of purpose, for the honor of his country, that place him above the
noblest of the C'sars, and entitle him to a monument towering above that which a
Bonaparte erected at the Place Vendome. Beasly, having failed in inducing
him to go to England, soon had him consigned to that floating and pestilential
hell, the frigate "Old Jersey,"--giving him, however, as a token of his regard
and friendship, a letter to the Commander of the prison-ship, highly
commendatory of him, and also requesting that Forten should not be forgotten on
the list of exchanges. Thus (as he frequently remarked in after life) did a game
of marbles save him from a life of West India servitude. In the mean while, his
mother, at home, was in a state of mind bordering upon distraction, having
learned that her son had been shot from the foretop of the Royal Louis; but her
mind was relieved, after he had been absent nearly eight months, by his
appearing in person.
To return. While on board the
"Old Jersey," amid the privations and horrors incident to that receiving ship of
disease and death, no less than three thousand five hundred persons died; and,
according to a statement of Edwards, eleven thousand in all perished, while she
remained the receptacle of the American prisoners. And here we have an instance
to record of the most thrilling and stupendous exhibition of his generous and
benevolent heart. Amid all that would make escape from his confinement
desirable, when disease the most loathsome, death the most horrible, was around
him, he was willing to and did endure all. He stifled the longings of his heart
for the enjoyments of home, and for the embraces of his widowed and adored
mother; yes, at a time when, if ever, self would lay in contribution every
feeling of the heart, and every avenue of a generous out-going spirit be
smothered, when the instincts and impulses of nature would unerringly covet in
the closest scrutiny and watchfulness its own interests, JAMES FORTEN, in the
ardor of his own high-toned beneficence, performed an act, which, in my humble
opinion, is unexcelled, perhaps without a parallel, in the annals of our
country's history. It was this: An officer of the American navy was about to be
exchanged for a British prisoner, when the thoughtful mind of Forten conceived
the idea of an easy escape for himself in the officer's chest; but, when about
to avail himself of this opportunity, a fellow-prisoner, a youth, his junior in
years, his companion and associate in suffering, was thought of. He immediately
urged upon him to avail himself of the
chances of an escape so easy. The offer was accepted, and Forten had the
satisfaction of assisting in taking down the "chest of old clothes," as it was
then called, from the side of the prison ship. The individual thus fortunately
rescued was Captain Daniel Brewton,--the present incumbent in the Stewardship at
the Lazaretto. I will read the certificate of Mr. Brewton in regard to this
matter:--
"I do hereby certify, that
James Forten was one who participated in the Revolution, in the year of our Lord
one thousand seven hundred and seventy-six, and was a prisoner on board of the
prison-ship, 'Old Jersey' in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and
eighty, with me. (Signed,) DANIEL BREWTON." J. W. PALMER. It was my great privilege to
see, but a short time ago, this venerable and grateful friend of JAMES FORTEN;
to hear from his own lips a strict confirmation of the facts stated, as well as
to witness the solemn scene which ensued, in his taking for the last time the
hand of his dying benefactor. The old man's tears fell like rain; his stifled
utterance marked the deep emotions of his almost bursting heart. Sad and
dejected, with feelings that made him more ready to die than to live, he
silently retired, stayed with the hope that they would soon meet in a better and
a happier world. After remaining seven months
a prisoner on board this ship, young Forten obtained his release, and, without
shoes
upon his feet, (until he reached Trenton, where he was generously supplied,)
arrived home in a wretchedly bad condition, having, among other evidences of
great hardships endured, his hair nearly entirely worn from his head. He
remained but a short time at home, when, in company with his brother-in-law, he
sailed, in the ship Commerce, for London. He arrived there at a period of the
greatest excitement. The great struggle between liberty and slavery had already
been settled by the decision in the noted case of Somersett, when it was
decreed, that the moment a slave trod the soil of Britain, "no matter in what
language his doom may have been pronounced,--no matter what complexion
incompatible with freedom an Indian or an African sun may have burnt upon
him,--no matter in what disastrous battle his liberty may have been cloven
down,--no matter with what solemnities he may have been devoted upon the altar
of slavery, the first moment he touches the sacred soil of Britain, the altar
and the god sink together in the dust; his body swells beyond the measure of his
chains that burst from around him, and he stands redeemed, regenerated and
disenthralled, by the irresistible Genius of Universal Emancipation." But the accursed slave trade
was still glutting in the blood and sinews of Afric's helpless children, and
that mighty man, that prince of philanthropists, GRANVILLE SHARPE, was directing
his benevolent efforts to its overthrow. At this time, the Christian feeling had
awakened up an indignant nation to a determination for its destruction; and no
small interest was taken in the discussions, both in and out of Parliament,
by our deceased friend. It was among the many pleasing reminiscences of his life
to refer to those scenes, so strikingly analogous to the trials and persecution
of the friends of freedom here, and the hypocritical sophisms of their
opponents. After remaining in London about a year, he returned home, and was
apprenticed, with hi own consent, to Mr. Robert Bridges, sail-maker. He was not
long at his trade, when his great skill, energy, diligence, and good conduct,
commended him to his master, who, neither discriminating nor appreciating a man
by the mere color of the skin in which he may be born, served his own interest
in doing an act commensurate to the merits of young Forten, in promoting him
foreman in his business. This was in his twentieth year. He continued in this
capacity until 1798, when, upon the retirement of Mr. Bridges, he assumed the
entire control and responsibility of the establishment. Having formed for
himself a reputation for capability and industry, he found it no difficult task
to secure the friendship of those, who, perceiving qualities it him which ever
adorn and beautify the human character gave him their countenance and patronage;
for although it was by the force of his own unassisted genius and energy of
character that he rose above those depressing influences which have ever
operated against those
yet he was indebted to some few stanch friends, of whose encouragement and
kindness he was ever wont to speak in terms of gratitude. He continued, with
great consistency of conduct, in prosecuting his business, offering up, on the
altar of filial and fraternal regard, the first fruits of his labor, in
purchasing a house for his mother and widowed sister, which sheltered the one
until the period of her death, and now affords protection and support to the
other in her declining years. With undiminished vigor of mind and body, enjoying
the very best of health, he continued to give personal attention to his business
until confined to his house from that disease, which, in a few months, proved
fatal to him. It was during the long period of his active business life that he
acquired that reputation, which ever remained unclouded, shedding abroad in its
own, clear sky the brightest and noblest qualities of the human heart; so
courteous, polished and gentlemanly in his manners,--so intelligent, social, and
interesting,--so honest, just and true in his dealings,--so kind and benevolent
in his actions,-- so noble and lofty in his bearing,--that none knew him but to
admire, to speak of him but in praise. He lived but to cherish those noble
properties of his soul, and those exalted principles of action, which ever
prompted him to deeds of benevolence, patriotism and honor. Perhaps one of the
strongest traits in his character was that of benevolence. With him, it was no
occasional or fitful impulse, but a living principle of action. Wherever
suffering humanity presented itself, a glow of generous and brotherly sympathy
was
excited in his heart; and not bestowing nor graduating his gifts by the mere
color of the skin, his open hand was ever ready to administer to the wants of
all. Nor was this feeling confined to the giving of his worldly substance. No
danger could appal him, no hindrance prevent, even at the greatest personal
risk, in relieving from danger and death his fellow-man. No less than seven
persons were at different times rescued from drowning by his promptness, energy
and benevolence. From the Humane Society he obtained this certificate:--
"The Managers of the Humane
Society of Philadelphia, entertaining a grateful sense of the benevolent and
successful exertions of JAMES FORTEN in rescuing, at the imminent hazard of his
life, four persons from drowning in the river Delaware at different
times, to wit: one on the--day, 11th mo., 1805; a second on the--day of 1st mo.,
1807; a third on the--day of 4th mo., 1810; and on the--day of 4th mo., 1821,
present this Honorary Certificate as a testimony of their approbation of his
meritorious conduct. By order of the Managers, JOSEPH CRUKESHANK, President. Of his patriotism, who
doubts? He gave the best evidence of his love for his country by consecrating
his life, in "the times that tried men's souls," to her liberties; and when
urged by an honorable gentleman to petition his government for a pension, he
promptly declined, saying, "I was a volunteer, sir." In the last war, when an
invasion was threatened by the British upon our city, he was found,
with twenty of his journeymen, and with hundreds of his persecuted and
oppressed brethren, throwing up the redoubts on the west bank of the Schuylkill.
Indeed, his interest was so strong in any matter connected with his country,
that we would sometimes express our surprise at this. He would reply, "that he
had drawn the spirit of her free institutions from his mother's breast, and that
he had fought for her independence." With all this, however, his sensitive mind
was but too truly pained at her ingratitude, in the wrongs she continued to
inflict upon her unoffending and unfortunate children; believing, as he often
expressed it, that she would bring down the vengeance of Heaven upon her, and
quoting the fearful lines of Jefferson, "I tremble for my country when I
remember that God is just, and that his justice will not sleep for ever."
Perhaps no instance gave greater poignancy to his feelings than the late
atrocious act of the miscalled Reform Convention. For this State, his
attachments were peculiar and strong. Here he was born,--his ancestors were
residents for upwards of one hundred and seventy years. He had paid a large
amount of taxes, and contributed to almost every institution which adorned and
beautified this large city. Here had lived a Franklin, Rush, Rawle, Wistar,
Vaux, Parrish, and Shipley, the very brightest ornaments of Christian love and
philanthropy. Yet no recollection of their principles, no regard for the true
policy of this State, or for justice, humanity, or God, could stay the ruthless
arms of those marauders upon human liberty from striking down the rights of
forty thousand of her tax-paying citizens.
In the year 1800, Mr. Forten
addressed a letter to Hon. George Thatcher, in reference to the law of Congress
'93, authorising the seizure of fugitive slaves. The letter was intended as an
acknowledgment for Mr. Thacher's advocacy of the petition of Mr. Forten and
others, remonstrating against the iniquitous law. In the year 1817, this good
man's principles were put the test. Having, at this time, an extended influence,
a being prominent in the eyes of the community as a man of singular probity and
worth, extorting, even from the jaundiced heart of prejudice, involuntary
respect, he was marked by the enemies of freedom, and every device, which the
scheme of colonization could invent, was attempted to blind and mislead him. It
was about this time, that this society of innate wickedness, mantled in the
cloak benevolence, came stalking over the land, so specious and whining in its
tone, so soft and insinuating in its low breathings, that many were deceived.
But the discriminating mind of JAMES FORTEN penetrated the veil that covered
deformed and damning features. The clique of clerical wolves, who had besieged
him in tones of flattery, assuring him that he would become the Lord Mansfield
of their "Heaven-born republic" on the. western coast of Africa, was told, in
the simplicity of truth, but with sarcasm the more cutting because unaffected,
"That he would rather remain as James Forten, sail-maker, in Philadelphia, than
enjoy the highest offices in the gift of their society." The matter, however,
did not rest here with him. He foresaw
what would be the evil tendencies and effects of this infamous institution,
and the necessity of frustrating the designs of the leagued spirits of this dark
crusade against the rapidly improving condition of his people, and of
incorporating, at once and for ever, the idea in the public mind, that we were
fixtures in this our native country,--"that here we were born, here we would
live, and here die." With this view, and having the coöperation of some of the
most intelligent of his brethren, among whom were our sterling and inflexible
friend to human rights, Robert Douglass, Senr., the good-hearted Absalom Jones,
and last, though not least, the founder of your church, that extraordinary man,
the Rt. Rev. Bishop Allen, a meeting was called in this church, in the month of
January, 1817. The house, upon the occasion, was literally crammed. Mr. Forten
presided as chairman, and a beautiful preamble and resolutions, which had been
previously prepared, went down, in an unanimous vote, as the death-knell to
colonization. Of these resolutions, two were from the pen of Mr. Forten. [After detailing Mr. F.'s
efforts against colonization, Mr. Purvis continues:] His hand was promptly
extended to that pure Christian and exalted philanthropist, WILLIAM, LLOYD
GARRISON. He saw in him all those qualities necessary as a leader in the great
enterprise; and, in his own language, considered him as a chosen instrument, in
the Divine hand, to accomplish the great work of the abolition of American
slavery. Indeed, such was his confidence (and justly so) in the principles
of the American Anti-Slavery Society, and of the men and women who advocated
them, that nothing was ever more painful to his feelings, nothing sooner excited
his indignation, than the attempt to cast reproach upon them. The course pursued
by Mr. Garrison he ever thought conformable to the true anti-slavery principles;
and those principles, founded upon the immutability of eternal truth, had thrown
around him, and all others who acted with him, the influences of its divinity.
Hence, no difficulties nor dangers have intimidated them,--they have gone on,
conquering and to conquer. In no restricted sense, but in its proper
signification and application, he was a friend to human rights. The doctrine of
"Woman's Rights," as it is called, found in him a zealous friend. He believed
that those doctrines would be acknowledged universally, because, as he would
say, we live in an enlightened age,--an age which tolerates a free expression of
opinion, and leaves the mind to the guidance of its own inwardly revealing
light, to the enjoyment of its own individuality; and, setting aside the dogmas
and creeds of established usage and custom, unshackles the immortal mind,
leaving it free and independent, as it was designed by its bountiful Creator.
Yet, while truth, bright, eternal truth, is rising in all the
gorgeousness of her transcendental supremacy, there are those who, not more
egregiously than pertinaciously, cling to their blindness, their infatuation,
meanness, and despotism. But woman is not a mere dependant upon man. The
relation is perfectly reciprocal. God has given to both man and
woman the same intellectual capacities, and made them subjects alike to the
same moral government. He was a man of religion, but no bigot; the last survivor
of the founders of St. Thomas's Episcopal Church, and its most liberal patron
and friend; and, though connected with this institution for more than fifty
years--in close communion with its ordinances for many years back,--he ever
valued the spirit of Christianity, exemplified in the character of men, as being
of infinitely more importance than a mere unity in doctrinal views and creeds.
As a business man, none were more honest and fair--no overreaching,
misrepresentations, or deceiving; and, as a remarkable fact in his history, as
well as a lesson to others, he never had, as I have often heard him declare,
been guilty of that genteel kind of swindling, which all sorts of
professedly good people practice, under the gloss of the name of
note-shaving. Temperate in habits, and,
more especially, an enemy to all intoxicating drinks, having never taken a glass
of ardent spirit in his life, nor permitted its introduction into the premises
among those he employed, he was a ready advocate of the blessed cause of
temperance, and of all other great moral enterprises which are now so rife in
our land. He was a member and the presiding officer of the American Moral Reform
Society, from its origin to the time of his death. In a word, whatever was
right, useful and patriotic, secured in him a friend, advocate and patron. In
the social relations, he was the most affectionate of husbands, and the most
indulgent of parents; as a friend, unwavering and steadfast in his
attachments.
He was a model, not,
as some flippant scribbler asserts, for what are called "colored men," but for
all men. His example will ever be worthy of emulation, his virtues never
forgotten in the community in which he lived. Three or four thousand
persons, it was believed, attended the funeral of Mr. Forten, one half of whom
were white. Among other reminiscences
connected with the Revolution, Mr. Forten often alluded to the part taken by
colored men in the war. He saw the regiments from Rhode Island, Connecticut and
Massachusetts, when they marched through Philadelphia, to meet Cornwallis, who
was then overrunning the South, and said that one or two companies of colored
men were attached to each. The vessels of war of that period were all, to a
greater or less extent, manned by colored men. On board the Royal Louis, in
which Mr. Forten enlisted, there were twenty colored seamen; the Alliance, of
thirty-six guns, Commodore Barry, the Trumbull, of thirty-two guns, Captain
Nicholson, and the ships South Carolina, Confederacy, and Randolph, were all
manned, in part, by colored men. * For this account of Mr.
VASHON, I am indebted to Dr. M. R. DELANY, of Pittsburg. JOHN BATHAN VASHON was born
in Norfolk, Va., in 1792. His mother was a mulatto; his father, Capt. George
Vashon, a white man of French ancestry, who was appointed
Indian Agent under General Jackson, and retained his office under President
Van Buren. Being a colored child, though the offspring of a white man of
standing, there was probably no other care taken of his education than is usual
for one of his class in the United States, under such circumstances. But John
continued to grow a boy of observation, and, as was inseparable from his nature,
to be "interested in whatever was interesting to man." In 1812, during the struggle
in which Europe was engaged to avert the danger threatened by the usurpation of
Napoleon, and the disturbance of the amicable relations which, for a time, had
seemed to exist between the United States and Great Britain, young Vashon, being
now twenty years of age, and full of that curiosity which the ardor and romance
of youth so naturally inspires, without even the poor consolation, as the only
hope for an escape with life or liberty, that he was an acknowledged American
citizen, embarked as a common seaman and soldier on board of the old war
ship "Revenge," destined to cruise through the West Indies and on the coast of
South America. In an engagement on the coast of Brazil, Mr. Vashon, with others,
was made prisoner of war by the English. Among his fellow-prisoners was young
Henry Bears, now Major Henry Bears, a prominent and affluent old citizen of
Pittsburg, Pa., to whom any reference may be made concerning this statement. The
prisoners were all released on exchange. On Mr. Vashon's return to Virginia, he
settled in Fredericksburg, from whence he removed to Dumfries, and subsequently
to Leesburg. While a resident of the latter place, he volunteered in the land
service, at a time when the colored people of that neighborhood were called upon
to aid in the defence of their country, and prevent the British fleet from
ascending the Potomac. In 1822, he left Leesburg,
with his family, (an amiable wife and two children,) and resided in Carlisle,
Penn., for seven years. Here he was much respected as a useful member of the
community; he was the proprietor of a public saloon, a place of general resort
and accommodation for the students of Dickinson College, and the first gentlemen
of the town; an extensive livery stable was also a part of the
establishment. He was not content with
having served his country, but was desirous of becoming especially useful to his
brethren. In 1823, but one year subsequent to his settlement in the town, he
assisted in the formation of a mutual improvement association, and was
immediately chosen Treasurer, in coöperation with his friend and very useful
fellow-citizen, John Peck, as President. This institution was known as the "Lay
Benevolent Society." In 1829, he removed, with his
family, (which now had an addition of a son,) to Pittsburg, Pa. Here, also, Mr.
Vashon made himself much respected in the community, and quite useful among his
brethren. The first public baths in Pittsburg, and probably the first public
baths for ladies established west of the mountains, were the result of his
exertions. He was among the first to promote the assembling
of colored men in National Conventions; and was a prominent advocate of the
equality of the white and colored races, always claiming to be an
American,--a name which he appeared to love but little less than that of
liberty, which it seemed to imply. Immediately after the
National Convention of Colored Men had been field in Philadelphia, Garrison's
"Thoughts on Colonization" made its appearance, for which Mr. Vashon was
appointed by the author an agent. Through his influence, and that of the book
itself, the late Robert Bruce, D. D., then President of the University of
Western Pennsylvania, and several other prominent citizens of Pittsburg,
formerly earnest advocates of the Colonization Society, were happily converted
to anti-slavery views. Mr. Vashon was also a faithful agent for the
Liberator in the same district. In 1833, the first
Anti-Slavery Society west of the mountains was organized by him in the front
parlor of his homestead. He also promoted the formation of an Educational
Institution, and was its first President. Through his efforts, the handsome sum
of twelve hundred dollars was contributed in its support, he himself giving, at
one time, fifty dollars from his own purse. In 1834, he was elected President of
a Temperance Society, and also of a Moral Reform Society, as a testimony to his
devoted and assiduous labors in behalf of those movements. In 1835, being in Boston when
the infuriated mob attacked Mr. Garrison, dragging him like a felon through
the streets, Mr. Vashon was an eye-witness to the terrible scene, which was
heart-rending beyond his ability ever afterwards to express, as, of all living
men, JOHN B. VASHON loved WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON most; and this feeling of
affection toward him continued, for aught that is known, till the day of his
death. When the mob passed along Washington street, shouting and yelling like
madmen the apprehensions of Mr. Vashon became fearfully aroused. Presently there
approached a group which appeared even more infuriated than the rest, and he
beheld, in the midst of this furious throng, Garrison himself, with a rope round
his neck, led on like a beast to the slaughter. He had been on the field of
battle, had faced the cannon's mouth, seen its lightnings flash and heard its
thunders roar, but such a sight as this was more than the old citizen-soldier
could bear, without giving vent to a flood of tears. The next day, the old
soldier, who had helped to preserve his country's liberty on the plighted faith
of security to his own, but who had lived to witness freedom of speech and of
the press stricken down by mob violence, and life itself in jeopardy, because
that liberty was asked for him and his, with spirits crushed and faltering
hopes, called to administer a word of consolation to the bold and courageous
young advocate of immediate and universal emancipation. Mr. Garrison
subsequently thus referred to this circumstance in his paper:--"On the day of
the riot in Boston, he dined at my house, and the next morning called to see me
in prison, bringing with him a new hat for me, in the place of
one that was cut by the knives of the 'men of property and standing from all
parts of the city.' " In this, he proved a "ministering angel" to the
philanthropist in time of trouble. Mr. Vashon was zealous in
promoting the education of his children. One daughter was sent to the excellent
Female Academy of Miss Sarah M. Douglass, in Philadelphia, and his son to the
Oberlin Collegiate Institute, where he graduated with the first honors of his
class, and delivered the valedictory. He subsequently studied in the law office
of the late Hon. Walter Forward, ex-Secretary of the U. S. Treasury, and more
recently Presiding Judge in the Western District of Pennsylvania. A circumstance well worthy of
record took place during the exemplary efforts of this good old American patriot
in preparing his children to fill useful positions in society. During the
collegiate course of his son, (his daughter having previously finished her
education,) a change in his circumstances induced a friend to propose recalling
his son George from college. "I will never do it!" was the
positive reply. "How can you do otherwise?
you must live," said his adviser. "I will stint my market
basket," rejoined the old gentleman. "Yes, but you can't do
without eating," continued his friend. "No, but I can eat less, and
economise by selecting cheaper articles of food," replied the devoted
father.
"That will do well enough to
talk about, friend Vashon, but when it comes to the test, that's another
thing." "Friend J.," replied the old
gentleman, with feeling, "as God is my judge, I will live on potatoes and
herring, and see the last piece of furniture sold out of my house, before my son
shall be left without an education. When he come from that school, he will have
finished his education." Finding that it was in vain
to attempt to advise so contrary to his feelings and designs, his friend left
him. His son did return, indeed, a scholar of the highest order, and is now
Professor of Belles Lettres in Central College, McGrawville, N. Y. When he
applied for admission to the bar, it was granted, after a successful examination
in open Court in New York city. Mr. Vashon was one of the
Vice Presidents of the National Convention of Colored Men, held at Rochester,
July, 1853, and was subsequently chosen a member of the Pennsylvania State
Council. On the 8th of January, 1854, National Convention of the old soldiers of
1812 was held in the city of Philadelphia. This gathering of veterans aroused
the military fire in the old man's breast, and, never having received a pension,
nor government lands, for his services, he determined on taking his seat, as a
soldier delegate, among the defenders of his country. He was amply supplied with
letters and certificates from distinguished gentlemen in his adopted city. In
the best of spirits and hopes, he set out on his mission to the State Council
and the Military Convention. He had proceeded as far as the depot,
when, (he was of corpulent person,) resting on his trunk for relief from his
fatigue, Death, that untiring, but ever certain messenger, unexpectedly summoned
him home to his fathers. Thus departed the good old
citizen-soldier, clothed in the vesture of peace and war. In the language of one
of his friends, in an editorial column, "he fell with his harness on, and died
in the last act of service to his brethren, and in obedience to the summons of
his country, in the person of one of her delegated warriors." Among the brave blacks who
fought in the battle for American liberty was one whose name stands at the head
of this brief notice. Major Jeffrey was a Tennesseean, and, during the campaign
of Major-General Andrew Jackson in Mobile, filled the place of "regular" among
the soldiers. In the charge made by General Stump against the enemy, the
Americans were repulsed and thrown into disorder,--Major Stump being forced to
retire, in a manner by no means desirable, under the circumstances. Major
Jeffrey, who was but a common soldier, seeing the condition of his comrades, and
comprehending the disastrous results about to befall them, rushed forward,
mounted a horse, took command of the troops, and, by an heroic effort, rallied
them to the charge,--completely routing the enemy, who left the Americans
masters of the field. He at once
received from the General the title of "Major," though he could not,
according to the American policy, so commission him. To the day of his death, he
was known by that title in Nashville, where he resided, and the circumstances
which entitled him to it were constantly the subject of popular
conversation. Major Jeffrey was highly
respected by the whites generally, and revered, in his own neighborhood, by all
the colored people who knew him. A few years ago, receiving an
indignity from a common ruffian, he was forced to strike him in self-defence;
for which act, in accordance with the laws of slavery in that, as well as in
many other of the slave States, he was compelled to receive, on his naked
person, nine and thirty lashes with a raw hide! This, at the age of
seventy odd, after the distinguished services rendered his country,--probably
when the white ruffian for whom he was tortured was unable to raise an arm in
its defence,--was more than he could bear; it broke his heart, and he
sank to rise no more, till summoned by the blast of the last trumpet to stand on
the battle-field of the general resurrection. The names of these brave
heroes, JOHNSON and DAVIS, have no where appeared in American history, though,
in reality, a part of the history of the times in which they lived.
The Pittsburg Dispatch, a daily independent paper, of December 19,
1854, has the following notice of them:-- "We are indebted to a friend
for a copy of the Pittsburg Mercury, of March 9, 1814--nearly forty-one
years old. The paper was in its second year, published by John M. Snowden, Esq.
Pittsburg was then a borough. The war between England and this country was
raging, and the paper is chiefly filled with reports of land and naval
operations. General Hull's trial for the surrender of Detroit was then pending.
The frigate President had just returned from a cruise, in which she had run past
the blockading fleet, succeeded in destroying a number of English merchant
vessels, and rescued the American schooner Comet, which had been captured by the
enemy; the privateer Governor Tompkins had also returned home, after escaping
from an English frigate, from which she had 'caught a tartar,' having mistaken
her for a merchantman. The only persons killed on board the General Tompkins
were two colored seamen, JOHN JOHNSON and JOHN DAVIS, of whom Captain Shaler
makes this mention:-- "The name of one of my poor
fellows who was killed ought to be registered in the books of Fame, and
remembered with reverence as long as bravery is considered a virtue. He was a
black man by the name of JOHN JOHNSON. A twenty-four pound shot struck him in
the hip, and took away all the lower part; of his body. In this state, the poor,
brave fellow lay on the deck, and several times exclaimed to his shipmates,
"Fire away, my boys!--No haul a color down!" " 'The other was also a black
man, by the name of JOHN DAVIS,
and was struck in much the same way. He fell near me, and several times
requested to be thrown overboard, saying he was only in the way of
others. While America has such tars, she has little to fear from the tyrants
of Europe.' " On the capture of Washington
by the British forces, it was judged expedient to fortify, without delay, the
principal towns and cities exposed to similar attacks. The Vigilance Committee
of Philadelphia waited upon three of the principal colored citizens, namely,
JAMES FORTEN, BISHOP ALLEN, and ABSALOM JONES, soliciting the aid of the people
of color in erecting suitable defences for the city. Accordingly, two thousand
five hundred colored men assembled in the State House yard, and from thence
marched to Gray's ferry where they labored for two days, almost without
intermission. Their labors were so faithful and efficient, that a vote of thanks
was tendered them by the Committee. A battalion of colored troops was at the
same time organized in the city, under an officer of the United States army; and
they were on the point of marching to the frontier, when peace was
proclaimed. In a letter written during
the week of the mob against the colored people, August, 1842, Henry C. Wright,
says:-- "A colored man, whom I
visited in the hospital, called to see me to-day. He had just got out, and
looked very pitiful. His head was bent down; he said he could not erect it, his
neck was so injured. He is a very intelligent man, and can read and write. His
name is CHARLES BLACK and he resides in Lombard street. He was at home, with
his little boy, unconscious of what was transpiring without. Suddenly, the
mob rushed into his room, dragged him down stairs, and beat him so unmercifully,
that he would have been killed, had not some humane individuals interposed, and
prevented further violence. He was an impressed seaman on board an English
sixty-four gun-ship, in the beginning of the war of 1812. When he heard of the
war, he refused to fight against his country, although he had nine
hundred dollars prize-money coming to him from the ship. He was, therefore
placed in irons, and kept a prisoner on board some time, and then sent to the
well-known Dartmoor prison. He was exchanged, and shipped for France. Shortly
afterwards, he was taken and sent back to Dartmoor--was exchanged a second time,
and succeeded in reaching the United States. He soon joined the fleet on Lake
Champlain, under M'Donough; was with him in the celebrated battle which gave
honor (?) to the American arms. He was wounded, but never
received a pension. His father was in the battle of Bunker Hill, and his
grandfather fought in the old French War." JAMES DERHAM, originally a
slave in Philadelphia, was transferred by his master to a physician, who gave
him a subordinate employment as preparer of drugs. During the American War, he
was sold by this physician to a surgeon, and by the surgeon to Robert Dove, of
New Orleans. Learned in the languages, he speaks with facility English, French
and Spanish. In 1778, at the age of twenty-one, he became the most distinguished
physician at New Orleans.
"I conversed with him on medicine,", says Dr. Rush, "and found him very
learned. I thought I could give him information concerning the treatment of
diseases, but I learned more from him than he could expect from me." WILLIAM BURLEIGH was a
soldier in the war of 1812, and fought in the battle of North Point. He was
recognised by the proper authorities, and participated in the Anniversary of
Veterans, celebrated at Philadelphia, December, 1853. A digression from the
military services of colored men those rendered voluntarily, by the same
despised and persecuted class, in a time of pestilence, seems to me
warrantable in this connection. In the autumn of 1793, the
yellow fever broke out in Philadelphia with peculiar malignity. The insolent and
unnatural distinctions of caste were overturned, and the colored people were
solicited, in the public papers, to come forward and assist the perishing sick.
The same mouth which had gloried against them in prosperity, in its overwhelming
adversity implored their assistance. The colored people of Philadelphia nobly
responded. The then Mayor Matthew Clarkson, received their deputation with
respect, and commended their course. They appointed ABSALOM JONES and WILLIAM
GRAY to superintend the operations, the Mayor advertising the public that, by
applying to them, aid could be obtained. This took place about September. Soon
afterwards, the sickness increased so dreadfully,
that it became next to impossible to remove the corpses. The colored people
volunteered this painful and dangerous duty--did it extensively, and
hired help in doing it. Dr. Rush instructed the two superintendents in the
proper precautions and measures to be used. A sick white man crept to his
chamber window, and entreated the passers-by to bring him a drink of water.
Several white men passed but hurried on. A foreigner came up--paused--was afraid
to supply with this own hands, but stood and offered eight dollars to whomsoever
would. At length, a poor black man appeared; he heard--stopped-- ran for
water--took it to the sick man; and then stayed by to nurse him, steadily and
mildly refusing all pecuniary compensation. SARAH BOSS, a poor black
widow, was active in voluntary and benevolent services. A poor black man, named
SAMPSON, went constantly from house to house, giving assistance every where
gratuitously, until he was seized with the fever and died. MARY SCOTT, a woman of color,
attended Mr. Richard Mason and his son so kindly and disinterestedly, that the
widow, Mrs. R. Mason, settled an annuity of six pounds upon her for life. An elderly black nurse, going
about most diligently and affectionately, when asked what pay she wished, used
to say, "A dinner, massa, some cold winter's day." A young, black woman was
offered any price, if she would attend a white merchant and his wife. She would
take no
money, but went, saying that, if she went from holy love, she might hope to
be preserved, but not if she went for money. She was seized with the fever, but
recovered. A black man, riding through
the streets, saw a white man push a white woman out of the house. The woman
staggered forward, fell in the gutter, and was too weak to rise. The black man
dismounted, and took her gently to the hospital at Bush-Hill. ABSALOM JONES and WILLIAM
GRAY, the colored superintendents, say,--"A white man threatened to shoot us if
we passed by his house with a corpse. We buried him three days afterwards." About twenty times as many
black nurses as white were thus employed during the sickness. The following certificate was
subsequently given by the Mayor:--
"Having, during the
prevalence of the late malignant disorder, had almost daily opportunities of
seeing the conduct of ABSALOM JONES and RICHARD ALLEN, and the people employed
by them to bury the dead, I with cheerfulness give this testimony of my
approbation of their proceedings, as far as the same came under my notice. Their
diligence, attention, and decency of deportment, afforded me, at the time, much
satisfaction. (Signed,) MATTHEW CLARKSON, Mayor. Some years since, a singular
incident occurred in one of the courts of Philadelphia. When the Sheriff was
calling over the names of the jury, he summoned, among others, "George
Jones."
"Here, Sir," answered a voice
from the crowd, and a colored man came forth and took his seat in the
jury-box. "Here is some mistake," said
the Sheriff. "No mistake at all," replied
the juror. "Here is your summons; my name has been regularly drawn, and is on
the jury list." The Judge interfered,--"You
may retire," said he. "I'd rather not, Sir. I am
willing to perform my duty." Here was a dilemma. There was
nothing in the law to exclude a colored man from the jury box, and the Court was
at a loss what to do. At length, the juryman was challenged by one of the
parties, and had to leave the box. This is, perhaps, the only
instance of such an error though it might be supposed that it would be of
frequent, occurrence. The devotion and services of
colored Pennsylvanians have been rewarded by the exclusion of fifty-two thousand
of their number from the ballot-box. An effort, however, has been recently
commenced for restoring to them the franchise, which, we trust, will soon be
successful. In a very neatly printed
pamphlet, prepared by a Committee of the Colored Citizens of Philadelphia,
asking for the same right of suffrage they enjoyed for forty-seven years prior
to the adoption of the present Constitution, in 1838, it is stated, that they
number 30,000 persons in Philadelphia; that they possess $2,685,693 of real and
personal estate; and have paid $9,766.42 for taxes during the past year, and
$392,7792.27 for house, water, and ground rent.
Frederick Douglass, in his paper, says of the people of color in
Philadelphia, and of the State at large:-- "They buy and sell property,
own lumber yards, (two of the most extensive, if not the largest, lumber
merchants in the State are colored men,) and till the soil: there are mechanics,
professional men, and artists, among them; they are developing, not only their
identity, but their equality, with the whites." We rejoice (says the
National Era) in these assurance of the success of the partial freedom
enjoyed by the negro race in Pennsylvania, and sincerely hope that every man of
them may continue true and steadfast in the judicious defence of their cause,
until the justice shall be accorded to industry, intelligence, and wealth, that
has been withheld from poverty and ignorance.
PRINCE WHIPPLE, THE COLORED SOLDIER AT
THE CROSSING OF THE DELAWARE--PROSCRIPTIVE LAW. In the engravings of
Washington crossing the Delaware on the evening previous to the battle of
Trenton, Dec. 25, 1779, a colored soldier is seen, on horseback, quite
prominent, near the Commander-in-Chief, --the same figure that, in other
sketches, is seen pulling the stroke oar in that memorable crossing. This
colored soldier was PRINCE WHIPPLE, body-guard to Gen. Whipple, of New
Hampshire, who was Aid to General Washington. PRINCE WHIPPLE was born at
Amabou, Africa, of comparatively wealthy parents. When about ten years of age,
he was sent by them, in company with a cousin, to America, to be educated. An
elder brother had returned four years before, and his parents were anxious that
their other child should receive the same benefits. The captain who brought the
two boys over proved a treacherous villain, and carried them to Baltimore, where
he exposed them for sale, and they were both purchased by Portsmouth men, Prince
falling to Gen. Whipple. He was emancipated during the war, was much esteemed,
and was once entrusted
by the General with a large sum of money to carry from Salem to Portsmouth.
He was attacked on the road, near Newburyport, by two ruffians; one he struck
with a loaded whip, the other he shot, and succeeded in arriving home in
safety. Prince was beloved by all who
knew him. He was the "Caleb Quotem" of Portsmouth, where. he died at the age of
thirty-two, leaving a widow and children. Their descendants now reside in that
place, one being married to Dr. Isaac H. Snowden, son of Rev. Samuel Snowden, of
Boston. Delaware is yet disgraced by
a statute forbidding the immigration of free colored persons. Even her own
native-born colored citizens, on absenting themselves, cannot return to the
State without being liable to fines and imprisonment. A colored man from
Columbia, Penn., some six years since, going into the State, was informed
against, and fined by a magistrate fifty dollars, after he had been some time in
prison. That noble friend of humanity, THOMAS GARRETT, paid his fine and
costs,--about eighty-six dollars, (a portion of which was contributed, in
Pennsylvania.) The facts were published, when the magistrate sued Mr. Garrett
for libel, and he was bound over in the sum of one thousand dollars. The
magistrate committed an act of dishonesty, left his family and the State several
years to avoid prosecution, and finally his friends obtained a pardon from the
Governor, and he returned, and was reappointed magistrate. Mr. Garrett, fearing
that, as he
had once absented himself, he might do so again, had him bound over in the
sum of five hundred dollars to prosecute the charge; but Mr. Garrett has not
been troubled on the subject since. I learn from Mr. Garrett that
three arrests have since been made in Newcastle county, but the law was so
odious, that the magistrates, fearing their credit would be injured, released
the men on their own recognizance, and they left the State. Judge Booth states
that a colored girl, in order to obtain better wages, left her parents in Sussex
and crossed over to Jersey, where she remained two years. Her mother was then
taken ill, and she returned home to nurse her. After she died, before the
funeral, some fiend in human shape informed against her. The magistrate issued
the writ, and the constable served it before the corpse left the house. Such was
the indignation of the neighborhood, however, (slaveholders though they were,)
that the informer and constable would have been mobbed if they had not desisted
from their attempt. The girl remained at her father's house unmolested.
THOMAS SAVOY--THOMAS HOLLEN--JOHN
MOORE--BENJAMIN BANNEKER--FRANCES EKKEN WATKINS. A CORRESPONDENT of the New
Orleans Picayune gives the following account of THOMAS SAVOY, a "Negro
Veteran," as he was called:-- "Few persons, we think, have
travelled in Texas, who have not heard of THOMAS SAVOY, alias Black Tom,
alias the Special Citizen of Baxar county. He was by trade barber, but by
inclination a soldier, and his history is intimately connected with the warlike
part of that of Texas. He was much fonder, too, of the company of white men than
of that of persons of his own color. Tom was native of Maryland, then a citizen
of Washington, D. C., then a resident of Mississippi, whence he emigrated to
Texas at the beginning of the Revolution, with a company of Mississippi
volunteers, his razor in his pocket, and gun on his shoulder. They joined Gen.
Houston shortly after the battle of San Jacinto, but Black Tom's subsequent
conduct as a soldier elicited the praise of his hard-fighting comrades and
superior officers. The year 1839 was, distinguished in Texan annals by the
expedition under Jordan
to Saltillo, to assist the treacherous Canales in his armed Federalist
attempt against the Mexican Anti-Federalists. He betrayed his little band of
Texan allies, but they their gallant leader gave the united Federalists and the
State Rights Mexican army two its thorough consecutive drubbings as they ever
received, and then returned leisurely home without interruption. Black Tom was
one of Jordan's men, and if he had little occasion or time to use his razor, he
made up for it by a skilful handling of his offensive weapons. In 1842, Gen.
Woll invaded Texas with a Mexican army, and got a good beating at the battle of
Salado. Tom was in the midst of it, and was wounded. He participated in several
subsequent conflicts with the Indians, fighting bravely as usual. He followed
his old Texan comrades under Taylor's banner, and hurried along with them into
battle at Monterey. He was also in the memorable struggle of Buena Vista. Black
Tom then returned to Texas with the Kentucky volunteers, and after that, San
Antonio became his head-quarters. He was, of course, a general favorite, and
lived like a lord; but the wandering spirit that ten years in Texas had made
second nature with him, would now and then break out, and Black Tom would be
missing. The next thing heard of him, he was at a frontier post, or far up in
the Indian country, in the midst of danger. On the 15th of July, 1853, the body
of a man was found two miles west of San Antonio. A coroner's inquest was held,
and a verdict returned of 'Came to his death from cause unknown.' The body was
that of old Tom!"
THOMAS HOLLEN, of Dorset
county, Maryland, was in the Revolutionary War, attached to the regiment of Col.
Charles Gouldsbury, and was wounded by a musket ball in the calf of his leg. He
died in 1816, aged seventy-two, at the town of Blackwood, N. J., and was buried
in the Snowhill church-yard, east of Woodbury. He had an uncle who fought by his
side in the same war. Rev. James Hollen, of the African M. E. Church, is a
nephew Thomas Hollen. JOHN MOORE was skipper of the
sloop Roebuck, one hundred and ten tons, which was captured in Chesapeake Bay,
between Spry and Poole's Islands, by the British seventy-four Dragon. He was
placed on board the brig Bashaw, when, provoked by insolent treatment, he struck
an officer with the tiller, for which he was detained prison at Halifax for
eighteen months. The sloop and cargo were confiscated. Mr. Moore now resides in
Newport, R. I. BENJAMIN BANNEKER was born in
Baltimore county, near the village of Ellicott's Mills, in the year 1732. His
father was a native African, and his mother the child natives of Africa; so
that, to no admixture of the blood the white man was he indebted for his
peculiar and extraordinary abilities. His father was a slave when he married but
his wife, who was a free woman, and possessed of great
energy and industry, very soon afterwards purchased his freedom. Banneker's
mother was named Morton before her marriage, and belonged to a family remarkable
for its intelligence. When upwards of seventy, she was still very active; and it
is remembered of her, that at this advanced age, she made nothing of catching
her chickens, when wanted, by running them down. A nephew of hers, Greenbury
Morton, was a person of note, notwithstanding his complexion. Prior to 1809,
free people of color, possessed of a certain property qualification, voted in
Maryland. In that year, a law was passed, restricting the right of voting to
free white males. Morton was ignorant of the law till he offered to vote at the
polls in Baltimore county; and it is said, that, when his vote was refused, he
addressed the crowd in a strain of pure and impassioned eloquence, which kept
the audience, that the election had assembled, the breathless attention while he
spoke. When Benjamin was old enough,
he was employed to assist his parents in their labor. This was at an early age,
when his destiny seemed nothing better than that of a child of poor and ignorant
free negroes, occupying a few acres of land, in a remote and thinly peopled
neighborhood; a destiny which, certainly, at this day, is not of very brilliant
promise, and which, at the time in question, must been gloomy enough. In the
intervals of toil, and when he was approaching, or had attained, manhood, he was
scent to an obscure and distant country school, which he attended until he had
acquired a knowledge of reading and writing,
and had advanced in arithmetic as far as Double Position. In all matters,
beyond these rudiments of learning, he was his own instructor. On leaving
school, he was obliged to labor for years, almost uninterruptedly, for his
support. But his memory being retentive, he lost nothing of the little education
he had acquired. On the contrary, although utterly destitute of books, he
amplified and improved his stock of arithmetical knowledge by the operation of
his mind alone. He was an acute observer of every thing that he saw, or which
took place around him in the natural world, and he sought with avidity
information from all sources of what was going forward in society; so that he
became gradually possessed of a fund of general knowledge which it was difficult
to find among those, even, who were far more favored by opportunity and
circumstances than he was. At first, his information was a subject of remark and
wonder among his illiterate neighbors only; but, by degrees, the reputation of
it spread through a wider circle; and Benjamin Banneker, still a young man, came
to be thought of as one, who could not only perform all the operations of mental
arithmetic with extraordinary facility, but exercise a sound and discriminating
judgment upon men and things. It was at this time, when he was about thirty
years of age, that he contrived and made a clock, which proved an excellent
time-piece. He had seen a watch, but not a clock--such an article not yet having
found its way into the quiet and secluded valley in which he lived. The watch
was, therefore, his model. It took him a good while to accomplish
this feat; his great difficulty, as he often used to say, being to make the
hour, minute, and second hands, correspond in their motions. But the clock was
finished at last, and raised still higher the credit of Banneker in his
neighborhood as an ingenious man, as well as a good arithmetician. As already stated, the basis
of Banneker's arithmetical knowledge was obtained from the school book in which
he had advanced as far as Double Position; but, in 1787, Mr. George Ellicott
lent him Mayer's Tables, Ferguson's Astronomy, and Leadbeater's Lunar Tables.
Along with these books were some astronomical instruments. Mr. Ellicott was
accidentally prevented from giving Banneker any information as to the use of
either books or instruments at the time he lent them; but, before he again met
him, (and the interval was a brief one,) Banneker was independent of any
instruction, and was already absorbed in the contemplation of the new world
which was thus opened to his view. From this time, the study of astronomy became
the great object of his life, and, for a season, he almost disappeared from the
sight of his neighbors. Very soon after the
possession of the books already mentioned had drawn Banneker's attention to
astronomy, he determined to compile an almanac, that being the most familiar use
that occurred to him of the information he had acquired. Of the labor of the
work, few of those can form an estimate, who would at this day commence such a
task with all the assistance afforded by accurate tables and well digested
rules. Banneker had no such aid; and it is narrated
as a well-known fact, that he commenced and had advanced far in the
preparation of the logarithms necessary for his purpose, when he was furnished
with a set of table by Mr. George Ellicott. About this time, he began the record
of his calculations, which is still in existence, and is left with the society
for examination. The first almanac which
Banneker prepared, fit for publication, was for the year 1792. By this time, his
acquirements had become generally known, and among others who took an interest
in him was James McHenry, Esq. Mr. McHenry wrote a letter to Goddard &
Angell, then the almanac publishers in Baltimore, which was probably the means
of procuring the publication of the first almanac. In their editorial notice,
Messrs. Goddard & Angell say "They feel gratified in the opportunity of
presenting to the public, through their press, what must be considered as an
extraordinary effort of genius; a complete and accurate Ephemeris for the year
1792, calculated by a sable descendant of Africa," &c. And they further say
"That they flatter themselves that a philanthropic public, in this enlightened
era, will be induced to give their patronage and support to this work, not only
on account of its intrinsic merits, (it having met the approbation of several of
the most distinguished astronomers of America, particularly the celebrated Mr.
Rittenhouse,) but from similar motives to those which induced the editors to
give this calculation the preference,--the ardent desire of drawing modest merit
from obscurity, and controverting the long-established illiberal prejudice
against the blacks."
The motives alluded to by
Goddard & Angell, in the extracts just quoted, of doing justice to the
intellect of the colored race, were a prominent object with Banneker himself;
and the only occasions when he overstepped a modesty which was his peculiar
characteristic, were, when he could, by so doing, "controvert the
long-established illiberal prejudice against the blacks." We find him,
therefore, sending a copy of his first almanac to Mr. Jefferson, the Secretary
of State under General Washington, with an excellent letter, to which Mr.
Jefferson made the following reply:--
PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 31, 1791. Sir,--I thank you sincerely
for your letter of the 19th instant, and for the almanac it contained. Nobody
wishes more than I do to see such proofs as you exhibit, that Nature has given
to our black brethren talents equal to those of the other colors of men, and
that the appearance of a want of them is owing only to the degraded condition of
their existence, both in Africa and America. I can add, with truth, that no one
wishes more ardently to see a good system commenced for raising the condition,
both of their body and mind, to what it ought to be, as fast as the imbecility
of their present existence, and other circumstances which cannot be neglected,
will admit. I have taken the liberty of sending your almanac to Monsieur de
Condorcet, Secretary of the Academy of Sciences, at Paris, and members of the
Philanthropic Society, because I considered it a document to which your whole
color had a right, for their justification against the doubts which have been
entertained of them. I am, with great esteem, sir, THO. JEFFERSON. {Mr. BENJAMIN BANNEKER, near Ellicott's
When he published his first
almanac, Banneker was fifty-nine years old, and had high respect paid to him by
all the scientific men of the country, as one whose color did not prevent his
belonging to the same class, as far as intellect went, with themselves. After
the adoption of the Constitution in 1789, commissioners were appointed to run
the lines of the District of Columbia, the ten miles square now occupied by the
seat of government, and then called the "Federal Territory." The commissioners
invited Banneker to be present at the runnings, and treated him with much
consideration. Banneker continued to
calculate and publish his almanacs until 1802, and the folio already referred to
and now before the society, contains the calculations clearly copied, and the
figures used by him in his work. The hand-writing, it will be seen, is very
good, and remarkably distinct, having a practised look, although evidently that
of an old man, who makes his letters and figures slowly and carefully. His
letter to Mr. Jefferson gives a very good idea of his style of composition, and
his ability as a writer. The title of the almanac is here transcribed at length,
as a matter of curious interest at this latter day. If it claims little of the
art and elegance and wit of the almanacs of Punch or of Hood, it is,
nevertheless, considering its history, a far more surprising production. "Benjamin Banneker's
Pennsylvania, Delaware, Virginia, and Maryland Almanac and Ephemeris, for the
year of our Lord 1792, being Bissextile or leap year, and the sixteenth year of
American
Independence, which commenced July 4, 1776: containing the motions of the Sun
and Moon, the true places and aspects of the Planets, the rising and setting of
the Sun, and the rising, setting, and southing, place and age of the Moon,
&c. The Lunations, Conjunctions, Eclipses, Judgment of the Weather,
Festivals, and remarkable days." In 1804, Banneker died, in
the seventy-second year of his age, and his remains are deposited, without a
stone to mark the spot, near the dwelling which he occupied during his
life-time. During the whole of his long
life, he lived respectably and much esteemed by all who became acquainted with
him, but more especially by those who could fully appreciate his genius and the
extent of his acquirements. Although his mode of life was regular and extremely
retired, living alone, having never married,--cooking his own victuals and
washing his own clothes, and scarcely ever being absent from home,--yet there
was nothing misanthropic in his character; for a gentleman who knew him, thus
speaks of him:-- "I recollect him well. He was a brave looking, pleasant man,
with something very noble in his appearance. His mind was evidently much
engrossed in his calculations; but he was glad always to receive the visits
which we often paid to him." Another of Mr. Ellicott's correspondents writes as
follows:--"When I was a boy, I became very much interested in him, (Banneker,)
as his manners were those of a perfect gentleman; kind, generous, hospitable,
humane, dignified and pleasing, abounding in information on all the various
subjects and incidents of the day; very
modest and unassuming, and delighting in society at his own house. I have
seen him frequently. His head was covered with a thick suit of white hair, which
gave him a very venerable and dignified appearance. His dress was uniformly of
superfine drab broadcloth, made in the old style of a plain coat, with a
straight collar and long waistcoat, and a broad-brimmed hat. His color was not
jet black, but decidedly negro. In size and personal appearance, the statue of
Franklin, at the Library in Philadelphia, as seer from the street, is a perfect
likeness of him." The foregoing account of Mr.
Banneker is taken from a Memoir read before the Historical Society of Maryland,
by JOHN H. B. LATROBE, which was undoubtedly published to serve the purposes of
the American Colonization Society. Rev. JOHN T. RAYMOND, a distinguished colored
Baptist clergyman, issued an edition of the pamphlet, in the pre face to which
he says:--"I have snatched it from their [the Colonizationists] foul purpose, in
order to produce a contrary effect. Our people are now too wise to be entangled
in their meshes." Maryland has not only
produced gifted colored men but has contributed a fair proportion of women who
have proved good their claim to equality. FRANCES ELLEN WATKINS, born in
Baltimore, has contended with a thousand disadvantages from early life, and
though now a young woman, is actively engaged, on her own responsibility, as
an Anti-Slavery lecturer in the Eastern States. She has published a small
volume of poems, which certainly are very creditable to her, both in a literary
and moral point of view, and indicate the possession of a talent, which, if
carefully cultivated, and properly encouraged, cannot fail to secure for herself
a poetic reputation, and to deepen the interest already so extensively felt in
the liberation and enfranchisement of the entire colored race. I make the following brief
extracts from her book, which is entitled, "Poems and Miscellaneous Writings, by
Frances Ellen Watkins."
Christianity is a system
claiming God for its author and the welfare of man for its object. It is a
system so uniform, exalted and pure, that the loftiest intellects have
acknowledged its influence, and acquiesced in the justness of its claims. Genius
has bent from his erratic course to gather fire from her altars, and pathos from
the agony of Gethsemane and the sufferings of Calvary. Philosophy and science
have paused amid their speculative researches and wondrous revelations, to gain
wisdom from her teachings and knowledge from her precepts. Poetry has culled her
fairest flowers and wreathed her softest, to bind her Author's "bleeding brow."
Music has strung her sweetest lyres and breathed her noblest strains to
celebrate his fame; whilst Learning has bent from her lofty heights to bow at
the lowly cross. The constant friend of man, she has stood by him in his hour of
greatest need. She has cheered the prisoner in his cell, and strengthened the
martyr at the stake. She has nerved the frail and shrinking heart of woman for
high and holy deeds. The worn and weary have rested their fainting heads upon
her bosom, and gathered strength from her words and courage from her counsels.
She has been the staff of decrepit age, and the joy of manhood in its strength.
She has bent over the form of lovely childhood, and suffered it to have a place
in the Redeemer's arms. She has stood by the bed of the dying, and unveiled the
glories of eternal life; gilding the darkness of the tomb with the glory of the
resurrection.
THE LAST OF BRADDOCK'S MEN--PATRIOTIC
SLAVE GIRL--BENJAMIN MORRIS--CONSISTENCY OF A REVOLUTIONARY HERO--SIMON
LEE--MAJOR MITCHELL'S SLAVE--GENERAL WASHINGTON'S DESIRE TO EMANCIPATE
SLAVES--HON. A. P. UPSHUR'S TRIBUTE TO DAVID RICH--TRIBUTE TO WASHINGTON BY THE
EMANCIPATED-AGED SLAVE OF WASHINGTON--INSURRECTION AT SOUTHAMPTON--VIRGINIA
MAROONS IN THE DISMAL SWAMP. THE Lancaster (Ohio)
Gazette, February, 1849, announces the death, at that place, of SAMUEL
JENKINS, a colored man, aged 115 years. He was a slave of Capt. Breadwater, in
Fairfax county, Virginia, in 1771, and participated in the memorable Campaign of
Gen. Braddock. ISHMAEL TITUS (says the
Springfield Republican) died in Williamstown, Mass., January 27th, 1855,
at the extraordinary age of 109 or 110 years. He was born a slave in Virginia,
and when Gen. Braddock set out on his ill-fated expedition, the master of
Ishmael was employed by the Commissary to transport subsistence stores for the
army; and, as the wagon was heavily loaded, an additional horse was added to the
team, and the boy Ishmael was placed on this third horse as rider; and in that
capacity, he followed the army to the scene of its disaster. Like most of the
slaves, he had no distinct knowledge of his age; but, judging from his
recollection of the event, and his own story, he must have been nine or ten
years old at the time. His mental faculties were remarkably active for a person
of his years, and after the lapse of nearly a century, he was wont to recount
the striking impression made upon his young mind by the red coats of the British
soldiers, which he supposed were "colored with blood,"--unfortunately too true
in this instance. He ran away from his master,
and went into the vicinity of Springfield, Mass., about the close of the
Revolution, and was then, apparently, thirty-eight or forty years of age. His
story has always been consistent, and no one in that place has ever doubted its
correctness. His mind seemed more than a match for his body, and physical
infirmities crept upon him, until he seemed to realize all the evils which
afflicted "Uncle Ned," and, like him, it is to be hoped that he has received his
reward. Hiram Wilson says that an
extremely aged woman lives at the Grand River settlement, Canada, who was a
slave girl in Virginia at the time of the French and Indian War of 1755. At the
time of the Revolutionary War, she was employed in running bullets for the
Americans. Her patriotism was but miserably rewarded, for she was held as a
slave till she was about eighty years of age, when she fled to Canada for
freedom, where, under monarchical institutions and laws, she is protected in her
old age. No one can reasonably rebuke her, for the utterance of an earnest
"God save the Queen!"
The Legislature of Virginia,
in 1783, emancipated several slaves who had fought in the Revolutionary War, and
the example was followed by some individuals, who wished to exhibit a
consistency of conduct rare even in those early days of our country's history.
The Baltimore papers of September 8th, 1790, make mention of the fact that Hon.
General Gates, before taking his departure, will, his lady, for their new and
elegant seat on the banks of the East River, summoned his numerous family and
slaves about him, and, amidst their tears of affection and gratitude, gave them
their freedom; and, what was still better, made provision that their liberty
should be a blessing to them. Sometimes, for other than
national services, the colored man's worth is appreciated by men who claim the
right to own their brother-men, as is seen in the following clause from the Will
of A. P. Upsher, a member of President Tyler's Cabinet:-- "3. I emancipate, and set
free, my servant, DAVID RICH, and direct my executors to give him one hundred
dollars. I recommend him, in the strongest manner, to the respect, esteem and
confidence of any community in which he may happen to live. He has been my slave
for twenty-four years, during which time he has been trusted to every extent,
and in every respect. My confidence in him has been unbounded; his relation to
myself and family has always been such as to afford him daily opportunities to
deceive and injure us, and yet he has never been detected in a serious fault,
nor even in an intentional breach of the decorums of his station. His
intelligence is of a high order, his integrity above all suspicion, and his
sense of right and propriety always correct, and even delicate
and refined. I feel that he is justly entitled to carry this certificate from
me into the new relations which he now must form. It is due to his long and most
faithful services, and to the sincere and steady friendship which I bear him. In
the uninterrupted and confidential intercourse of twenty-four years, I have
never given, nor had occasion to give him, an unpleasant word. I know no man who
has fewer faults, or more excellencies, than he." Throughout this work will be
found allusions to several colored persons, bond and free, who were either
servants or slaves of General Washington, or through some other relation, were
led to cherish grateful and pleasant memories of the treatment they received
from him. Some he manumitted, others he specially rewarded for deeds of valor
and integrity of conduct; and, though he did not emancipate the majority of his
own slaves until after the decease of Lady Washington, there yet seemed a
constant struggle of his better nature to do that which, neglected, has left
In a letter written by
General Washington to Tobias Lear, in England, in 1794, he assigns the following
reasons for empowering Mr. Lear to sell a portion of his landed estate:-- "I have no scruple in
disclosing to you, that my motives to these sales are to reduce my income, be it
more or less, to specialities,-- that the remainder of my days may thereby be
more tranquil and
free from care, and that I may be enabled, knowing what my dependence is, to
do as much good as my resources will admit; for although, in the estimation of
the world, I possess a good and clear estate, yet so unproductive is it, that I
am oftentimes ashamed to refuse aid which I cannot afford unless I sell part of
it to answer this purpose. Besides these, I have another motive, which makes me
earnestly wish for these things--it is, indeed, more powerful than all the
rest--namely, to liberate a certain species of property which I possess, very
repugnantly to my own feelings, but which imperious necessity compels, until I
can substitute some other expedient by which expenses not in my power to avoid,
however well disposed I may be to do it, can be defrayed." In Washington's Will, special
provision is made for his "mulatto man William, calling himself William Lee,"
granting him his immediate freedom, an annuity of thirty dollars during his
natural life, or support, if he preferred (being incapable of walking or any
active employment) to remain with the family. "This I give him," says
Washington, "as a testimony of my sense of his attachment to me, and for his
faithful services during the Revolutionary War." The colored soldiers, and
others, who were objects of his solicitude, were found North and South, wherever
marched the Continental army. From among those in Virginia, the few following
cases have been preserved. The Detroit Tribune,
August 10th, 1851, says:--"A short time since, we chronicled the death of a
negro who had reached the venerable age of one hundred years. It may not be
known to many of our readers, that there is now living, near this city, in the
enjoyment of good health
and the frugal comforts of life, a negro, who is nearly, or quite, a century
old. His name is BENJAMIN MORRIS, and he is residing on the Charles Moran farm,
where he has a life lease, and where, by the aid of a few friends, he tills
enough ground to earn for himself a plain but comfortable subsistence. His life
has been quite eventful. He was born at Snowhill, in Virginia. His master's name
was Bob Scofield, as he says, using, probably, the familiar term by which he was
known throughout the neighborhood in which he resided. He lived with Scofield
until after the Revolutionary War. During the war, he was engaged to drive a
baggage wagon; and so well did his behavior please General Washington, who
happened to notice him, that his master, at the close of the war, gave him his
freedom, at the request of that great and good man. His deed of manumission he
has now,--of a truth, the 'palladium of his liberties' in this negro-hunting age
and country. From Virginia, Morris went to Cuba, where he stayed but a short
time, returning to this country and settling, at Louisville, Ky. Thence he came
to Detroit, in time to witness the surrender of Hull, and the closing acts of
the war of 1812 upon the frontier. Since then, he has been engaged in labor of
various kinds, supporting himself and wife in comfortable circumstances. About
three years ago, she died, and he has since lived alone in a little cottage on
the Moran farm. He is a member, we believe, of the First Baptist Church of this
city, from the members of which he receives such little aids, from time to time,
as he needs. He is still quite erect
and vigorous, and able to labor a good deal. He walks down to church nearly
every Sabbath and returns, a total distance of nearly six miles. We trust the
old man is to live many years yet in comfort and peace, to reap the reward of
his services to our country, small though they may have been, at a time when the
weakest forces told on a country's destinies hanging in equipoise." A correspondent of the
Alexandria (D. C.) Gazette, writing from Fairfax County, Va., November
14, 1835, says:-- Upon a recent visit to the
tomb of Washington,. I was much gratified by the alterations and improvements
around it. Eleven colored men were industriously employed in levelling the earth
and turfing around the sepulchre. There was an earnest expression of feeling
about them, that induced me to inquire if they belonged to the respected lady of
the mansion. They stated that they were a few of the many slaves freed by George
Washington, and they had offered their services upon this last melancholy
occasion, as the only return in their power to make to the remains of the man
who had been more than a father to them; and they should continue their labors
so long as any thing should be pointed out for them to do. I was so interested
in this conduct, that I inquired their several names, and the following were
given me:--Joseph Smith, Sambo Anderson, William Anderson, his son, Berkley
Clark, George Lear, Dick Jasper, Morris Jasper, Levi Richardson, Joe Richardson,
Wm. Moss, Wm. Hays, and Nancy Squander, cooking for the men.
That there were exceptions to
this community of grateful hearts may be learned from an incident mentioned by
James T. Woodbury, Esq., brother of Hon. Levi Woodbury, who, when delivering
lectures on the subject of slavery, not unfrequently adverts to the
circumstances which first drew his attention to the subject. During his stay in
the capital of the United States, he had a wish to visit the tomb of Washington.
He was attended by an aged negro, whose business it had been for many years to
guide travellers to that consecrated spot. This old man was formerly the slave
of General Washington. Mr. Woodbury asked him if he had any children. "I have
had a large family," he replied. "And are they living?" inquired the gentleman.
The voice of the aged father trembled with emotion, and the tears started to his
eyes, as he answered:--"I don't know whether they are alive or dead. They were
all sold away from me, and I don't know what became of them. I am alone in the
world, without a child to bring me a cup of water in my old age." Mr. Woodbury
looked on the infirm and solitary being with feelings of deep compassion. "And
this," thought he, "is the fate of slaves, even when owned by so good man as
General Washington! Who would not be an Abolitionist?" In October, 1854, there came
to the house of Isaac and Amy Post, in Rochester, as if by instinct to those
whose names are synonymous with aid and comfort to all earth's suffering
children, an aged colored man, leaning upon his staff,--his clothes poor and
ragged,--who represented
himself as the son of General Washington's serving man, and that he was
fleeing to Canada. Mrs. Angelina J. Knox says, in reference to this case:--"He
was born at Mt. Vernon, on the plantation on which the 'father of our country'
had lived. His father was a servant of George Washington. Years passed on; his
heart pleaded that its pulsations might beat in a land of freedom, and many
attempts had he made, but in vain, to be free. Once he was taken in a rice
swamp, where he had fled for refuge; the blood hounds scented him, and brought
him back to his master. Major Mitchell, of the United States army, had burned
into his forehead the letter M., that thus he might be identified as Mitchell's
slave. I asked him if his master was a Christian. To which he replied, with a
satirical expression,--'Pious? I guess he was pious! He Free Mason, too,--my
last master--O, he biggest Christian! He 'pears pious. Ha he big man--he 'tempt
shoot me, 'cause I won't take off coat, him to whip me. Gun all ready shoot
me--I take off coat--he get rope, tie me to hang me--I kitched him, pulled him
down, and ran away. Dat is de last of him I ever saw. I pretty tired sleeping in
bush. I want to get to Canada--dat's all I want. I want to see my boy dare--dat
is what I want. I want to get out dis country. Dey say dat money is de root of
all evil; but I hab no money, and go pretty hungry sometimes. Colored folks
sometimes 'tray us. Ye aint going to send me back, are ye?'Poor old man--no! no!
I will not send you back. But what is the Christianity of this republic doing,
but sending you back
to bondage? What would the Church do with this old man, with branded brow,
who is now looking with a distrustful eye upon every person with whom he meets?
O, my country, with extended wings, would that thy protection could overshadow
the branded, bleeding fugitive! But, no! True is it, that if this fugitive
should stand on the spot where Warren fell--should he clasp the monument on
Bunker's Hill--should he flee to the home of John Hancock--even there, the
slaveholder may claim him as his chattel slave. Let us, then, shed no more tears
at the tomb of Washington at Mt. Vernon--let us no more boast of liberty--let us
break every yoke, and let the oppressed go free!" SIMON LEE, the grandfather of
William Wells Brown, on his mother's side, was a slave in Virginia, and served
in the War of the Revolution; and, although honorably discharged with the other
Virginia troops, at the close of the war, he was sent back to his master, where
he spent the remainder of his life toiling on a tobacco plantation. Such is the
want of justice toward the colored American, that, after serving in his
country's struggles for freedom, he is doomed to fill the grave of a
slave! NATHANIEL TURNER was born
Oct. 2d, 1800. In his childhood, from some circumstances, his mother and others
said, in his presence, that he would surely be a prophet, as
the Lord had shown him things that happened before his birth. This remark
made a deep impression upon his mind, and affected all his subsequent conduct.
He learned to read with such facility, that he had no recollection whatever of
learning the alphabet, and he grew up a prodigy reverenced among his fellows. He
was never addicted to stealing, or known to have a dollar in his life, to swear
an oath, or drink a drop of spirits. He studiously wrapped himself in mystery,
and devoted his hours to fasting and prayer, and communion with the spirit. He
had a vision, and saw white spirits and black spirits engaged in battle, and the
sun was darkened, the thunder rolled in the heavens, and blood flowed in
streams, and he heard a voice, saying "Such is your luck; such you are called to
see; and let it come rough or smooth, you must bear it." While laboring in the
fields, he discovered drops of blood on the corn, as though it were dew from
heaven, and found on the leaves in the woods characters and numbers, with the
forms of men, in different attitudes, portrayed in blood. From his confession, I
extract the following:-- "And on the appearance of the
sign, [the eclipse of the sun in February, 1831,] I should arise and prepare
myself, and slay my enemies with their own weapons.... I communicated the great
work I had to do to four in whom I had the greatest confidence, (Henry, Hark,
Nelson and Sam). It was intended by us to have begun the work of death on the
4th of July last." The Richmond Whig of
October 31, 1831 in giving an account of Turner's capture, says,--"He is a
shrewd, intelligent
fellow; he insists strongly upon the revelations which he received, as he
understood them, urging him on and pointing to this enterprise. He denied that
any except himself and five or six others knew any thing of it. He does not
hesitate to say that, even now, he thinks he was right, and if his time were to
go over again, he must necessarily act in the same way." A correspondent of the same
paper says,--"Nat had for some time thought closely on this subject, for I have
in my possession some papers given up by his wife, under the lash." "We learn," says the
Petersburg Intelligencer, "that the fanatical murderer, Nat Turner, was
executed, according to his sentence, at Jerusalem, on Friday last, about one
o'clock. He exhibited the utmost composure throughout the whole ceremony, and
although assured that he might, if he thought proper, address the immense crowd
assembled on the occasion, declined availing himself of the privilege, and told
the Sheriff, in a firm voice, that he was ready. Not a limb nor a muscle was
observed to move." Upwards of one hundred slaves
were slaughtered in the Southampton tragedy,--many of them in cold blood, while
walking in the streets,--and about sixty white persons. Some of the alleged
conspirators had their noses and ears cut off, the flesh of their checks cut
out, their jaws broken asunder, and, in that condition, they were set up as
marks to be shot at. The whites burnt one with red hot irons, cut off his ears
and nose, stabbed him, cut his ham-strings, stuck him like a hog, and at last
cut off his head, and spiked it to the whipping-post.
The following fact was
narrated by the Rev. M. B. Cox, late Missionary to Liberia, soon after the event
occurred. Immediately after the insurrection, a slaveholder went into the woods
in quest of some of the insurgents, accompanied by a faithful slave, who had
been the means of saving his life in the time of massacre. When they had been
some time in the woods, the slave handed his musket to his master, informing
him, at the same time, that he could not live a slave any longer, and requesting
him either to set him free or shoot him on the spot. The master took the gun
from the hands of the slave, levelled it at his breast, and shot the faithful
negro through the heart. Dr. Rice, of Virginia,
published a sermon, in 1823, predicting very exactly the Southampton
insurrection. He says:--"Without pretending to be a prophet, I venture to
predict, if ever that horrid event should take place which is anticipated and
greatly dreaded by many among us, some crisp-haired prophet, some pretender to
inspiration, will be the ringleader as well as the instigator of the
act." An American slaver, named the
Creole, well manned and provided in every respect, and equipped for
carrying slaves, sailed from Virginia to New Orleans, on the 30th October, 1841,
with a cargo of one hundred and thirty-five slaves. When eight days out, a
portion of the slaves, under the direction of one of their number, named MADISON
WASHINGTON, succeeded, after a slight struggle, in gaining command of the
vessel. The sagacity, bravery and humanity of this man do honor to his name;
and, but for his complexion, would excite universal admiration. Of the twelve
white men employed on board the well-manned slaver, only one fell a victim to
their atrocious business. This man, after discharging his musket at the negroes,
rushed forward with a handspike, which, in the darkness of, the evening, they
mistook for another musket; he was stabbed with a bowie knife wrested from
the captain. Two of the sailor were wounded, and their wounds were dressed
by the negroes. The captain was also injured, and he was put into the forehold,
and his wounds dressed; and his wife, child and niece were unmolested. It does
not appear that the blacks committed a single act of robbery, or treated their
captives with the slightest unnecessary harshness; and they declared, at the
time, that all they had done was for their freedom. The vessel was carried into
Nassau, and the British authorities at that place refused to consign the
liberated slaves again to bondage, or even to surrender the "mutineers and
murderers" to perish on Southern gibbets. * From an article In the
"Liberty Bell" for 1853, by EDMUND JACKSON. The great Dismal Swamp, which
lies near the Eastern shore of Virginia, and, commencing near Norfolk, stretches
quite into North Carolina, contains a large colony of negroes, who originally
obtained their freedom by the grace of God and their own determined energy,
instead of consent of their owners, or by the help of the Colonization Society.
How long this colony has existed, what is its amount of population, what portion
of the colonists are now fugitives, and what the descendants of fugitives, are
questions not easily determined; nor can we readily avail ourselves of the
better knowledge undoubtedly existing in the vicinity of this colony, by reason
of the decided objections of those best enabled to gratify our curiosity--to
some extent, at least--to furnishing any information whatever, lest it might be
used by Abolitionists for their purposes,--as one of them frankly said when
questioned about the matter. Nevertheless, some facts, or, at least, an
approximation towards the truth of them, are known respecting this singular
community of blacks, who have won their freedom, and established themselves
securely in the midst of the largest slaveholding State of the South; for, from
this extensive Swamp, they are very seldom, if now at all, reclaimed. The
chivalry of Virginia, so far as I know, have never yet ventured on a slave-hunt
in the Dismal Swamp nor is it, probably, in the power of that State to capture
or expel these fugitives from it. This may appear extravagant; but when it is
known how long a much less numerous band of Indians held the everglades of
Florida against the forces of the United States, and how much blood and treasure
it cost to expel them finally, we may find a sufficient excuse for
the forbearance of the "Ancient Dominion" towards this Community of fugitives
domiciliated in their midst. From the character of the
population, it is reasonable to infer that the United States Marshal has never
charged himself with the duty of taking the census of the Swamp; and we can only
estimate the amount of population, by such circumstances as may serve to
indicate it. Of these, perhaps the trade existing between the city of Norfolk
and the Swamp may furnish the best element of computation. This trade between
the Swamp merchants and the fugitives is wholly contraband, and would subject
the white participants to fearful penalties, if they could only be enforced;
for, throughout the slave States, it is an offence, by law, of the gravest
character, to have any dealings whatever with runaway negroes. But, "You no
catch 'em, you no hab em," is emphatically true in the Dismal Swamp, where
trader and runaway are alike beyond the reach of Virginia law. An intelligent
merchant, of near thirty years' business in Norfolk, has estimated the value of
slave property lost in the Swamp, at one and a half million dollars. This city
of refuge, in the midst of society, has endured from generation to generation,
and is likely to continue until slavery is abolished throughout the land. A
curious anomaly this community certainly presents; and its history and destiny
are alike suggestive of curiosity and interest. That there are those at the
South who desire the abolition of slavery, the following extract from a speech
of P. A.
Bolling, Esq., in the House of Delegates, in Virginia, 1832 will show:-- "Mr. Speaker, it is in vain
for gentlemen to deny the fact,--the feelings of society are fast becoming
adverse to slavery. The moral causes which produce that feeling are on the
march, and will march on, until the groans of slavery are heard no more in this
else happy land. Look over world's wide page! see the rapid progress of liberal
feelings! see the shackles falling from nations who have writhed under the
galling yoke of slavery! Liberty is going over the whole earth, hand-in-hand
with Christianity. The ancient temples of slavery, rendered venerable a by their
antiquity, are crumbling into dust; ancient prejudices are fleeing before the
light of truth,--are dissipated by its rays, as the idle vapor by the bright
sun. The noble sentiment--
The Richmond Enquirer
advocates the erection of a monument to the memory of PETER FRANCISCO, a colored
man, born a slave in Virginia, but emancipated at the commencement of the
Revolution, and enlisted as a soldier. He served all through the war, and was
subsequently Sergeant-at-Arms of the Virginia Legislature.
DAVID WALKER--JONATHAN OVERTON--DELPH
WILLIAMSON--GEO. M. HORTON. DAVID WALKER was born in
Wilmington, North Carolina September 28, 1785. His mother was a free woman but
his father was a slave. His innate hatred to slavery was early developed. When
yet a boy, he declared that the slaveholding South was not the place for him,
and, receiving his mother's blessing, he turned his back upon North Carolina,
and, after many trials, reached Boston Mass., where he took up his permanent
residence. He applied himself to study,
in order to contribute some thing to the cause of humanity. In 1827, he entered
into the clothing business, in Brattle street; married in 1828 and in 1829,
published his "APPEAL," which, as Henry H. Garnet truly says, "produced more
commotion among slaveholders than any volume of its size that was ever issued
from the American press. They saw that it was bold attack upon their idolatry,
and that, too, by a black man, who once lived among them. It was merely a smooth
stone which this David took up, yet it terrified a host of Goliahs. The
Governor of Georgia wrote to the Hon. Harrison Gray Otis, then Mayor of Boston,
requesting him
to suppress the "Appeal." His Honor replied to Southern censor, that he had
no power nor disposition to hinder Mr. Walker from pursuing a lawful course in
utterance of his thoughts." Mr. Walker died in Bridge
street, in 1830, aged thirty-four. His son, Edward Garrison Walker, now resides
in Charlestown, Mass., with his mother, Mrs. Dewson. Mr. Walker was a faithful
member of the Methodist Church in Boston, whose pastor was the venerable Father
Snowden. JONATHAN OVERTON, (says the
Edenton Whig,) a colored man, and a soldier of the Revolution, died at
this place, at the advanced age of one hundred and years. The deceased served
under Washington, and at the battle of Yorktown, besides other less important
engagements. He was deservedly held in great respect by our citizens; for, apart
from the feeling of veneration which every American must entertain for the
scanty remnant of Revolutionary heroes, of which death is fast depriving us the
deceased was personally worthy of the esteem and consideration of our community.
He has lived among us longer than the ordinary period allotted to human life,
and always sustained a character for honesty, industry, and integrity. It is not
always that the eulogies or epitaphs of persons, in much more exalted positions
than his, contain much truth as does this brief tribute to the humble and
patriotic negro. We learn that several gentlemen have made arrangements to have
the burial accompanied by every mark of respect.
The Wilmington Journal
states that there is an old negro in the county of Sampson, belonging to a Mr.
Williamson, he was one hundred and fourteen years old on the last Fourth of
July. He has been recently visited by a correspondent of the Journal, who
states that he found him cheerful and in fine health, and busily engaged in
making himself a pair of pants--without spectacles-- he being a tailor by trade.
His first master, Archibald Bell, died about ninety-eight years ago, at which
time Delph was thirteen years of age. He remembers seeing Lord Cornwallis and
his army, as well as other persons and things of note in those early days. He
was taken prisoner near the residence of William Fryer. He saw the Tories kill
John Thompson--he (Thompson) lingering some three days. The old fellow lives by
himself, not another soul being near him. He is a sort of doctor, and travels as
much as fifty miles to see sick persons, and many persons visit him for medical
aid. He cooks, washes, milks, and makes his own clothes, in a very independent
manner. He is four feet high, and weighs one hundred and five pounds. His
present owner, Mr. Williamson, is seventy-four, and therefore an old man to the
rest of the world, but quite a youth in comparison to Delph. There is little
reason for doubting the old negro's age, of which he himself is confident,
besides having been known in Sampson from time immemorial almost. The following is a portion of
an "Explanation" which prefaces a volume of poems by GEORGE M. HORTON, a
North Carolina slave. The volume was published by Mr. Gales, formerly of
North Carolina, but afterwards of the firm of Gales & Seaton, Washington, D.
C., who also wrote the "Explanation." Mr. Gales is no Abolitionist and would not
be likely, therefore, to exaggerate the talents and character of an African
slave:-- "GEORGE, who is the author of
the following poetical effusions, is a slave, the property of Mr. James Horton,
of Chatham county, North Carolina. He has been in the habit, some years past, of
producing poetical pieces, sometimes on suggested subjects, to such persons as
would write them while he dictated. Several compositions of his have already
appeared in the Raleigh Register. Some have made the way into Boston
newspapers, and have evoked expressions of approbation and surprise. Many
persons have now become much interested in the promotion of his prospect, some
of whom are elevated in office and literary attainments. None will imagine it
possible, that pieces produced as these have been, should be free from blemish
in composition or taste. The author is now thirty-two years of age, and has
always labored in the field on his master's farm, promiscuously with the few
others which Mr. Horton owns, in circumstances of the greatest possible
simplicity. His master says he knew nothing of his poetry, but as he heard of it
from others. George knows how to read, and is now learning to write. All his
pieces are written down by others; and his reading, which is done at night, and
at the usual intervals allowed to slaves, has been much employed
on poetry, such as he could procure, this being the species of composition
most interesting to him. It is thought best to print his productions without
correction, that the mind of the reader may be in no uncertainty as to the
originality and genuineness of every part. We shall conclude this account of
George, with an assurance that he has ever been faithful, honest and industrious
slave. That his heart has felt deeply and sensitively in this lowest possible
condition of human nature, will easily be believed, and is impressive confirmed
by one of his stanzas:-- RALEIGH, July 2, 1829.
HON. CHARLES PINCKNEY'S
TESTIMONY--CAPTAIN WILLIAMSON--SALE OF A REVOLUTIONARY SOLDIER--SLAVES FREED BY
THE LEGISLATURE--VETERAN OF FORT MOULTRIE--JEHU JONES--MANUEL PEREIRA--JOHN
PAUL--COMPLEXIONAL BARRIERS--REVOLT OF 1738--THE BLACK SAXON'S--DENMARK VEAZIE'S
INSURRECTION IN 1822--WILLIAM G. NELL. THE celebrated Charles
Pinckney, of South Carolina, in his speech on the Missouri question, and in
defence of slave representation of the South, made the following
admissions:-- "At the commencement of our
Revolutionary struggle with Great Britain, all the States had this class of
people. The New England States had numbers of them; the Northern and Middle
States had still more, although less than the Southern. They all entered into
the great contest with similar views. Like brethren, they contended for the
benefit of the whole, leaving to each the right to pursue its happiness in its
own way. They thus nobly toiled and bled together, really like brethren. And it
is a remarkable fact that, notwithstanding, in the course of the Revolution,
Southern States were continually overrun by the British, and every negro in them
had an opportunity of running
away, yet few did. They then were, as they still are, as valuable a part of
our population to the Union as any other equal number of inhabitants. They were
in numerous instances the pioneers, and in all, the laborers of your armies. To
their hands were owing the erection of the greatest part of the fortifications
raised for the protection of our country. Fort Moultrie gave, at an early period
of the inexperience and untried valor of our citizens, immortality to American
arms. And in the Northern States, numerous bodies of them were enrolled, and
fought, side-by-side with the whites, the battles of the Revolution." The Charleston Standard
and Mercury, of July, 1854 furnishes these facts:-- "CAPTAIN WILLIAMSON, a free
man of color, died in this city, on Friday, the 7th instant, at the
extraordinary age of one hundred and thirteen years. He was a native of Saint
Paul's Parish, and came out of the estate of Mr. William Williamson, a
successful merchant of Charleston. Out of this estate, also, came 'Good Old
Jacob,' who died a few months since, at the age of one hundred and two years,
and whose death was noticed in our papers. When Jacob's obituary notice was read
to the Captain, 'Why,' said the old man, 'I used to carry him about in my arms
when he was a child.' "Mr. Williamson, before the
Revolution, had removed to his country seat near Wallis Bridge, about fifteen
miles from Charleston. There CAPTAIN WILLIAMSON had charge of his master's large
garden of fifty acres, with its fish-pond,
shrubbery, and splendid collection of native and exotic plants. The Captain
was always a faithful servant, devoted to the service of his master, and
afterwards to his mistress who went to England, and there died. She left him
free, together with his children. Of these he had fourteen, whom only one
survives. For many years, he superintended the farms and gardens of several
persons on Charles Neck. He was remarkably intelligent and faithful, and was
universally respected by his employers and their neighbors. During the war of
the Revolution, he assisted in throwing up the lines for the defence of the
city, and was an ardent lover of his country. In further proof of which, we
refer Dr. Johnson's reminiscences of the Revolution, where the Captain received
honorable notice. There, amongst other instances of his fidelity, it is recorded
that, during the troublesome times following the Revolution, he brought mistress
a large sum of money due to her for rent, from the Sister's ferry, on the
Savannah. For this, he was rewarded by her with a set of silver waistcoat
buttons, which he kept and exhibited with 'commendable pride' to visitors of the
present generation. By his industry, he accumulated a sufficiency for the
comfortable support of himself and his wife, who survives him, and is upwards
eighty years of age. For upwards of fifty years, he been a humble and consistent
member of the Circular Church. He was charitable and kind to the poor, and
willing to assist in every benevolent object. He was highly esteemed by the
whites, and respected by his own color, by
members of both of whom he was followed to his last resting place, on
Saturday evening." The following interesting
account of the trial and execution of a colored man, (said to have been one of
the defenders of Fort Moultrie,) which took place at Charleston in the year
1817, must excite the feelings of every benevolent heart against the ruthless
prejudices engendered by the foul and leporous stain of slavery. A man belonging
to a merchant ship having died, apparently in consequence of poison being mixed
with the dinner served up to the ship's company, the cook and cabin boy were
suspected; because they were, on account of their occupations, the only persons
on board who did not partake of the mess,--the effects of which appeared the
moment it was tasted. As the offence was committed
on the high seas, the cook, though a negro, became entitled to a jury, and, with
the cabin boy, was put upon his trial. The boy, who was a fine-looking lad, was
readily acquitted. The man was then tried. He was of low stature, ill-shapen,
and with a strongly-marked and repulsive countenance. The evidence against him
was--first, that he was cook, and, therefore, who else could have poisoned the
mess? It was, however, overlooked, that two of the crew had absconded since the
ship came into port. Secondly, he had been heard to utter expressions of
ill-humor before he went on board. That part of the testimony was, indeed,
suppressed, which went to explain these expressions. The real proof, no doubt,
was written in the color of his skin, and in the harsh and rugged lines of his
face. He was found guilty.
Mr. Crafts, Jr., a member of
the Charleston bar, and an honor to his profession, who, from motives of
humanity, had undertaken his defence, did not think that a man ought to die on
account of the color of his skin--although prejudice, with jaundiced eyes, might
see nothing but crime and infamy stamped upon it; and moved for a new trial, on
the ground of partial and insufficient evidence. But the Judge, who had urged
his condemnation with a vindictive countenance, entrenched himself in forms, and
found that the law gave him no power on the side of mercy. Mr. C. then forwarded
a representation of the case to the President of the United States, through one
of the Senators of the State; but the Senator treated with levity the idea of
interesting himself in behalf of the life of a negro. He was, therefore, left to
his dungeon and the executioner. Thus situated, he did not,
however, forsake himself; and it was now, when prejudice, and a rigor bordering
on persecution, had spent their last arrow on him, that he modestly, but firmly,
assumed his proper character,--to vindicate not only his own innocence, but the
moral equality of his race, and those mental energies, which the white man's
pride would deny to the blackness of his skin. Maintaining an undeviating
tranquillity, he conversed with ease and cheerfulness, whenever his benevolent
counsel, who continued his kind attentions to the last, visited his cell. "I was
present (says Lieutenant Hall, from whose travels this account extracted,) on
one of these occasions, and observed his tone and manner; he was neither sullen
nor desperate, but quiet
and resigned,--suggesting whatever occurred to him on the circumstances of
his own case, with as much calmness as if he had been uninterested in the event.
Yet, as if he deemed it a duty to omit none of the means placed within his reach
for vindicating his innocence, he paid the most profound attention to the
exhortations of a Methodist preacher, who, for conscience's sake, visited those
who were in prison; and, having his spirit strengthened with religion, on the
morning of his execution, before he was led out, he requested permission to
address a few words of advice to the companions of his captivity. "I have
observed much in them," he added, "which requires to be amended, and the advice
of a man in my situation may be respected." A circle was accordingly formed in
his cell, in which he placed himself, and addressed them at some length, with a
sober and collected earnestness of manner, on the profligacy which he had
noticed in their behavior while they had been fellow-prisoners--recommending to
them the rules of conduct prescribed in that religion in which he now found his
support and consolation. If we regard the quality and
condition of the actors only, there is, assuredly, an astonishing difference
between this scene, and the parting of Socrates with his friends and disciples.
Should we, however, put away from our thoughts such differences as are merely
accidental, and seize that point of coincidence which is most interesting and
important, namely--the triumph of mental energy over death and unmerited
disgrace--the negro will not appear wholly
unworthy of a comparison with the sage of Athens. The latter occupied an
exalted station in the public eye. Although persecuted, even unto death and
ignominy, by a band of triumphant and ruthless despots, he was surround in his
last moments by his faithful friends and disciples whose talents and affection
he might safely trust the vindication of his fame, and the unsullied purity of
his memory. He felt that the hour of his glory must come, and that it would not
pass away. The negro had none of these aids; he was a man friendless and
despised; the sympathies of society were locked up against him; he was to suffer
for an odious crime by an ignominious death; the consciousness of his innocence
was confined to his own bosom, there, probably, to sleep for ever; to the rest
of mankind he wretched criminal--an object, perhaps, of contempt and
detestation, even to the guilty companions of his prison. He had no philosophy
with which to reason down the misgivings which may be supposed to precede a
violent and ignominious dissolution of life; he could make no appeal to
posterity to reverse an unjust judgment. To have borne all this patiently would
have been much; he bore it as a hero and a Christian. Having ended his discourse,
he was conducted to the scaffold, where, having calmly viewed the crowd
collected to witness his fate, he requested leave to address them. Obtaining
permission, he stepped firmly to the edge of the scaffold, and, having commanded
silence by his gestures,--"You are come," said he, "to be spectators of my
sufferings;
you are mistaken; there is not a person in this crowd but suffers more than I
do. I am cheerful and contented; for I am innocent," He then observed,
that he truly forgave all those who had taken any part in his condemnation, and
believed that they acted conscientiously, from the evidence before them, and
disclaimed all idea of imputing guilt to any one. He then turned to his counsel,
who, with feelings which honored humanity, had attended him to the scaffold. "To
you, Sir," said he, "I am, indeed, most grateful. Had you been my son, you could
not have acted by me more kindly;" and observing his tears, he
continued,--"This, Sir, distresses me beyond any thing I have felt yet. I
entreat that you will feel no distress on my account. I am happy." Then, praying
Heaven to reward his benevolence, he took leave of him, and signified his
readiness to die; but requested that he might be excused from having his eyes
bandaged, wishing, with an excusable pride, to give this last proof of the
unshaken firmness with which innocence can meet death. He, however, submitted,
on this point, to the representations of the Sheriff, and expired without the
quivering of a muscle.* * American
Anecdotes. Rev. Theodore Parker gives
the following anecdote of a Massachusetts sea-captain. He commanded a small
brig, which plied between Carolina and the Gulf States. "One day, at
Charleston," said he, " 'a man came and brought to me an old negro slave. He was
very old, and had fought in the Revolution, and been very distinguished
for bravery and other soldierly qualities. If he had not been a negro, he
would have become a Captain, at least, perhaps a Colonel. But, in his age, his
master found no use for him, and said that he could not afford to keep him. He
asked me to take the Revolutionary soldier, carry him South and sell him. I
carried him," said the man, "to Mobile, and tried to get as good and kind a
master for him as I could, for I didn't like to sell a man that had fought for
his country. I sold the old Revolutionary soldier for a hundred dollars to a
citizen of Mobile, who raised poultry, and he set him to attend a hen-coop."
I suppose the South Carolina master drew the pension till the soldier died. "Why
did you do such a thing?" said my friend, who was an Anti-Slavery man. "If I
didn't do it," he replied, "I never could get a bale of cotton, nor a box sugar,
nor any thing, to carry from or to any Southern port. JEHU JONES was proprietor of
a celebrated hotel in the city of Charleston, situated on Broad street, next to
aristocratic St. Michael's church, one of the most public places in the city. He
was a fine, portly looking man, active, enterprising, intelligent, honest to the
letter,--one whose integrity and responsibility were never doubted. He lived in
every way like a white man. His house was unquestionably the best in the city,
and had a wide-spread reputation. Few persons of note ever visited Charleston
without putting up at Jones's, Where they found not the comforts of a private
house, but a table spread every luxury the country afforded.
Mr. Jones maintained the popularity of his house many years, rearing a
beautiful, intelligent and interesting family, and accumulating forty thousand
dollars or more. The most interesting portion of his family were three
daughters, the eldest of whom married a gentleman who subsequently removed to
New York, where he engaged in a respectable and lucrative business. Mr. Jones often exerted his
influence and contributed his means to redeem persons from slavery. For several
years, he carried on an extensive fashionable tailoring establishment, and among
his customers were the wealthiest citizens of Charleston. He had a large number
of apprentices, among whom was my father, (William G. Nell,) who served seven
years and six months. Jehu, a son of Mr. Jones,
visited the North, and was not allowed to return home. The details of this case
are similar to hundreds of others, and prove that the right of locomotion is
denied in the South to free colored persons from the North, even though
they are native-born Southerners. The following extract from South Carolina
State Documents is conclusive evidence on this point:--
"Our first and great
object is, to prevent the interchange of sentiment between our domestic negroes,
whether bond or free, and negroes who reside abroad, or who have left our State.
To do this, it becomes imperative to establish a law prohibiting free negroes
from coming into the State, and those, in the State from going, under penalty of
imprisonment and fine if they return."
This principle strikes down
the rights of citizens of other States. Though free-born myself, and unable to
trace my genealogy back to slavery, yet I am prohibited from visiting my
father's relatives in a Southern city, except at the risk of pains and
penalties. Why should not my rights citizen of the Old Bay State be as sacred
under the Palmetto Banner as those of any other man, white though he be? Colored seamen from the free
States, and also from British dominions and elsewhere, continue to be removed
from vessels and imprisoned, though for many years efforts have been put forth
by the several powers to abolish the restriction. Complexional distinctions,
growing out of the institution of slavery, exist, to a great and unhappy extent,
even among colored people; and as the Jews and Samaritans of Scripture had no
dealings one with another, so in Charleston, as in many other Southern cities,
social intercourse and intermarriages occur only as exceptions among the two
prominent shades of complexion. In 1810, a Society was in operation in the city
of Charleston, of which my father was a member, composed, as set forth in its
Constitution, of "free brown men only." Its objects were benevolent; its name,
the Humane and Friendly Society; but yet, at the dictation of the
spirit of pro-slavery, it was thoroughly proscriptive in its character. This
tree of caste, though rooted in the South, shades many cities of the North with
its baneful branches; but, through the dissemination of more liberal principles,
its influence daily diminishes.
*From the writings of LYDIA
MARIA CHILD. Mr. Duncan, a rich
slaveholder in South Carolina, was one evening indulging in a reverie after
reading the History of the Norman Conquest, when a dark mulatto opened the door,
and, making a servile reverence, said, in wheedling tones, "Would massa be so
good as to giv' a pass to go to Methodist meeting?" Being an indulgent master,
he granted the permission to him and several others, only bidding them not to
stay out all night. Some time after, when no response was heard to his repeated
bell-ringing, it occurred to him that he had given every one of his slaves a
pass to go to the Methodist meeting. This was instantly followed by the
remembrance, that the same thing had occurred a few days before. Having
purchased a complete suit of negro clothes, and a black mask well-fitted to his
face, he awaited the next request for a pass to a Methodist meeting, when,
assuming the disguise, he hurried after the party. And here, in this lone
sanctuary of Nature's primeval majesty, were assembled many hundreds of swart
figures, some seated in thoughtful attitudes, others scattered in moving groups,
eagerly talking together. He observed that each one, as he entered, prostrated
himself till his forehead touched the ground, and rising, placed his finger on
his mouth. Imitating this signal, he passed in with the throng, and seated
himself behind the glare of the torches. For
some time, he could make out no connected meaning amid the confused buzz of
voices, and half-suppressed snatches of songs. But, at last, a tall man mounted
the stump of a decayed tree, nearly in the centre, of the area, and requested
silence. "When we had our last
meeting," said he, "I suppose most all of you know, that we all concluded it was
best for to join the British, if so be we could get a good chance. But we didn't
all agree about our masters. Some thought we should never be able to keep our
freedom, without we killed our masters in the first place; others didn't like
the thoughts of that; so we agreed to have another meeting to talk about it. And
now, boys, if the British land here in Caroliny, What shall we do with our
masters?" He stepped down, and a tall,
sinewy mulatto stepped into his place, exclaiming, with fierce gestures, "Ravish
wives and daughters before their eyes, as they have done to us. Hunt them
with hounds, as they have hunted us, Shoot them down with rifles, as they
have shot us. Throw their carcasses to the crows, they have fattened on
our bones; and then let the Devil take them where they never rake up fire
o' nights. Who talks of mercy to our masters? "I do," said an aged black
man, who rose up before the fiery youth, tottering as he leaned both hands on
oaken staff. "I do, --because the blessed Jesus always talked of mercy. I know
we have been fed like hogs, and shot at like wild beasts. Myself found the body
of my likeliest boy under the tree where buckra rifles reached him. But, thanks
to
the blessed Jesus, I feel it in my poor old heart to forgive them. I have
been a member of a Methodist church these thirty years; and I've heard many
preachers, white and black; and they all tell me Jesus said, Do good to them
that do evil to you, and pray for them that spite you. Now, I say, let us love
our enemies; let us pray for them; and when our masters flog us, and sell our
pickaninnies, let us break out singing--
Scarcely had the cracked
voice ceased the tremulous chant in which these words were uttered, when a loud
altercation commenced; some crying out vehemently for the blood of the white
men, others maintaining that the old man's doctrine was right. The aged black
remained leaning on his staff, and mildly replied to every outburst of fury,
"But Jesus said, do good for evil." Loud rose the din of excited voices, and the
disguised slaveholder shrank deeper into the shadow.
In the midst of the
confusion, an athletic, gracefully proportioned young man sprang upon the stump,
and, throwing off his coarse cotton garment, slowly turned round and round
before the assembled multitude. Immediately, all was hushed; for the light of a
dozen torches, eagerly held by fierce, revengeful comrades, showed his back and
shoulders deeply gashed by the whip, and still oozing blood. In the midst of
that deep silence, he stopped abruptly, and with stern brevity exclaimed, "Boys!
shall we not murder our masters?" "Would you murder all?"
inquired a timid voice at his right hand. "They don't all cruellize their
slaves." "There's Mr. Campbell,"
pleaded another; "he never had one of his boys flogged in his life. You wouldn't
murder him, would you?" "O, No, no, no," shouted many
voices; "we wouldn't murder Mr. Campbell. He's always good to colored
folks." "And I wouldn't murder my
master," said one of Mr. Duncan's slaves, "and I'd fight any body that set out
to murder him. I an't a going to work for him for nothing any longer, if I can
help it; but he shan't be murdered, for he's a good master." "Call him a good master, if
ye like!" said the bleeding youth, with a bitter sneer in his look and tone. "I
curse the word. The white men tell us God made them our masters; I say, it was
the Devil. When they don't cut up the backs that bear their burdens, when they
throw us
enough of the grain we have raised to keep us strong for another harvest,
when they forbear to shoot the limbs that toil to make them rich, they are fools
who call them good masters. Why should they sleep on soft beds, under
silken curtains, while we, whose labor bought it all, lie on the floor at
the threshhold, or miserably coiled up in the dirt of our
own cabins? Why should I clothe my master in broadcloth and fine linen, when he
knows, and I know, that he is my own brother? and I, meanwhile, have only this
coarse rag to cover my aching shoulders?" He kicked the garment scornfully, and
added, "Down on your knees, if ye like, and thank them that ye are not flogged
and shot. Of me they'll learn another lesson!" Mr. Duncan recognised in the
speaker the reputed son of one of his friends, lately deceased; one of that
numerous class which Southern vice is thoughtlessly raising up, to be its future
scourge and terror. The high, bold forehead, and
flashing eye, indicated an intellect too active and daring for servitude; while
his fluent speech and appropriate language betrayed the fact that his highly
educated parent, from some remains of instinctive feeling, had kept him near his
own person during his life-time, and thus formed his conversation on another
model than the rude jargon of slaves. His poor, ignorant listeners
stood spell-bound by the magic of superior mind, and at first it seemed as if he
might carry the whole meeting in favor of his views. But the aged man, leaning
on his oaken staff, still mildly spoke
of the meek and blessed Jesus, and the docility of African temperament
responded to his gentle words. After various scenes of fiery
indignation, gentle expostulation, and boisterous mirth, it was finally decided,
by a considerable majority, that in case the British landed, they would take
their freedom without murdering their masters; not a few, however, went away in
a wrathful mood, muttering curses deep. With thankfulness to Heaven,
Mr. Duncan again found himself in the open field, alone with the stars. Their
glorious beauty seemed to him, that night, clothed in new and awful power.
Groups of shrubbery took to themselves startling forms; and the sound of the
wind among the trees was like the unsheathing of swords. Again he recurred to
Saxon history, and remembered how he had thought that troubled must be the sleep
of those who rule a conquered people. "And these Robin floods and
Wat Tylers were my Saxon ancestors," thought he. "Who shall so balance effects
and causes, as to decide what portion of my present freedom sprung from their
seemingly defeated efforts? Was the place I saw to-night, in such wild and
fearful beauty, like the haunts of the Saxon Robin floods? Was the spirit
that gleamed forth there as brave as theirs? And who shall calculate what even
such hopeless endeavors do for the future freedom of their race?" These cogitations did not, so
far as I ever heard, lead to the emancipation of his bondmen; but they did
prevent his
revealing a secret, which would have brought hundreds to an immediate and
violent death. After a painful conflict between contending feelings and duties,
he contented himself with advising the magistrates to forbid all meetings
whatsoever among colored people, until the war was ended. He visited Boston several
years after, and told the story to a gentleman, who often repeated it in the
circle of his friends. In brief outline it reached my ears. I have adopted
fictitious names, because I have forgotten the real ones. During the Revolutionary War,
Captain Veazie, of Charleston, was engaged in supplying the French in St.
Domingo with slaves from St. Thomas. In the year 1781, he purchased DENMARK, a
boy of about fourteen years of age, and afterwards brought him to Charleston,
where he proved, for twenty years, a faithful slave. In 1800, DENMARK drew a
prize of $1500 in the lottery, and purchased his freedom from his master for
$600. From that period until the time of his arrest, he worked as a carpenter,
and was distinguished for his great strength and activity, and was always looked
up to by those of his own color with awe and respect. In 1822, DENMARK VEAZIE
formed a plan for the liberation of his fellow-men from bondage. In the whole
history of human efforts to overthrow slavery, a more complicated and tremendous
plan was never formed. A part of the
plan matured was, that on Sunday night, the 16th of June, a force would cross
from James' Island and land on South Bay, and march up and seize the Arsenal and
guard-house; another body, at the same time, would seize the Arsenal on the
Neck; and a third would rendezvous in the vicinity the mills of Denmark's
master. They would then sweep through the town with fire and sword, not
permitting a single white soul to escape. The sum of this intelligence
was laid before the Governor, who, convening the officers of the militia, took
such measures as were deemed the best adapted to the approaching exigency of
Sunday night. On the 16th, at 10 o'clock at night, the military companies, which
were placed under the command of Col. R. Y. Hayne, were ordered to rendezvous
for guard. The conspirators, finding the
whole town encompassed, at 10 o'clock, by the most vigilant patrols, did not
dare show themselves, whatever might have been their plans. In the progress of
the subsequent investigation, it was distinctly in proof, that but for these
military demonstrations, the effort would unquestionably have been made; that a
meeting took place on Sunday afternoon, the 16th, at 4 o'clock, of several of
the ringleaders, at Denmark Veazie's for the purpose of making their preliminary
arrangements and that early in the morning of Sunday, Denmark despatched a
courier to order down some country negroes from Goose Creek, which courier had
endeavored in vain get out of town.
The conspirators, it was
ascertained, had held meetings for four years, without being betrayed. The
leaders were careful to instruct their followers not to mention their plans to
"those waiting men who received presents of old coats, &c., from their
masters," as such slaves would be likely to betray them. DENMARK VEAZIE was betrayed
by the treachery of his own people, and died a martyr to freedom. The slave who
gave information of the projected insurrection was purchased by the Legislature,
who hold out to other slaves the strongest possible motives to do likewise in
similar cases, by giving him his freedom. The number of blacks arrested
was one hundred and thirty-one. Of these, thirty-five were executed, forty-one
acquitted, and the rest sentenced to be transported. Many a brave hero fell; but
History, faithful to her high trust, will engrave the name of DENMARK VEAZIE on
the same monument with Moses, Hampden, Tell, Bruce, Wallace, Toussaint,
Lafayette, and Washington. WM. G. NELL was steward on
board the ship Gen. Gadsden, when she made good her escape from the British brig
Recruit, July 28th, 1812. They put into Boston, where my father took up his
abode. A few days after the escape,
the two captains were at the "Indian Queen Tavern," in Bromfield street. The
British captain was relating the particulars of the chase, when the Yankee
captain (overhearing) acknowledged himself as the one who had given John Bull
the slip.
MASSACRE AT BLOUNT'S FORT--MONSIEUR DE
BORDEAUX--SLAVE FREED BY THE LEGISLATURE. ON the West side of the
Apalachicola River, (says the Hon. Joshua R. Giddings, in a narrative from which
this account is taken,) some forty miles below the line of Georgia, are yet
found the ruins of what was once called "Blount's Fort." Its ramparts are now
covered with a dense growth of underbrush and small trees. You may yet trace its
bastions, curtains, and magazine. At this time, the country adjacent presents
the appearance of an unbroken wilderness, and the whole scene is one of gloomy
solitude, associated, as it is, with one of the most cruel massacres which ever
disgraced the American arms. The fort had originally been
erected by civilized troops, and, when abandoned by its occupants at the close
of the war, in 1815, it was taken possession of by the refugees from Georgia.
But little is yet known of that persecuted people; their history can only be
found in the national archives at Washington. They had been held as slaves the
State referred to; but, during the Revolution, they caught the spirit of
liberty,--at that time so prevalent
throughout our land,--and fled from their oppressors, and found an asylum
among the aborigines living in Florida. During forty years, they had
effectually eluded or resisted all attempts to reënslave them. They were true to
themselves, to the instinctive love of liberty which is planted in every human
heart. Most of them had been born amidst perils, reared in the forests, and
taught from their childhood to hate the oppressors of their race. Most of those
who had been personally held in degrading servitude, whose backs had been
scarred by the lash of the savage overseer, had passed to that spirit land,
where clanking of chains is not heard, where slavery is not known. Some few of
that class yet remained. Their grey hairs and feeble limbs, however, indicated
that they, too, must soon pass away. Of the three hundred and eleven persons
residing in "Blount's Fort," not more than twenty had been actually held in
servitude. The others were descended from slave parents, who fled from Georgia,
and, according to the laws of the slave States, were liable to suffer the same
outrage to which their ancestors had been subjected. The slaveholders, finding
they could not themselves obtain possession of their intended victims, called on
the President of the United States for assistance to perpetrate the crime of
enslaving their fellow-men. General Jackson, Commander of
the Southern Military District, directed Lieutenant-Colonel Clinch to perform
the barbarous task. I was at one time personally acquainted with that officer,
and know the impulses of his generous nature
and can readily account for the failure of his expedition. He marched to the
fort, made the necessary reconnoisance, and returned,
making report that "the fortification was not accessible by land." Orders were then issued to
Commodore Patterson, directing him to carry out the orders of the Secretary of
War. He, at that time, commanded the American flotilla lying in "Mobile Bay,"
and instantly issued an order to Lieutenant Loomis to ascend the Apalachicola
River with two boats, "to seize the people in Blount's Fort, deliver them to
their owners, and destroy the fort." On the morning of the 17th of
September, 1816, a spectator might have seen several individuals standing upon
the walls of that fortress, watching with intense interest the approach of two
small vessels that were slowly ascending the river under full spread canvass, by
the aid of a light southern breeze. They were in sight at early dawn, but it was
ten o'clock when they furled their sails and cast anchor opposite the fort, and
some four or five hundred yards distant from it. A boat was lowered, and soon
a midshipman and twelve men were observed making for the shore. They were met at
the water's edge by some half-dozen of the principal men in the fort, and their
errand demanded. The young officer told them
he was sent to make a demand of the fort, and its inmates were to be given up to
the "slaveholders, then on board the gun-boat, who claimed them as fugitive
slaves!" The demand was instantly
rejected, and the midshipman and his men returned to the gun-boats, and
informed Lieutenant Loomis of the answer he had received. As the colored men entered
the fort, they related to their companions the demand that had been made. Great
was the consternation manifested by the females, and even a portion of the
sterner sex began to be distressed at their situation. This was observed by an
old patriarch, who had drank the bitter cup of servitude--one who bore on his
person the visible marks of the thong, as well as, the brand of his master upon
his shoulder. He saw his friends falter, and he spoke cheerfully to them. He
assured them that they were safe from the cannon-shot of the enemy--that there
were not men enough on board to storm their fort; and, finally, closed with the
emphatic declaration, "Give me liberty, or give me death!" This saying was
repeated by many agonized fathers and mothers on that bloody day. A cannonade was soon
commenced upon the fort, but without much apparent effect. The shots were
harmless; they penetrated the earth of which the walls were composed, and were
there buried without further injury. Some two hours were thus spent, without
injuring any person in the fort. They then commenced throwing bombs. The
bursting of these shells had more effect; there was no shelter from these fatal
messengers. Mothers gathered their little ones around them, and pressed their
babes more closely to their bosoms, as one explosion after another warned them
of their imminent danger. By these explosions, some were
occasionally wounded, and a few killed, until, at length, the shrieks of the
wounded and the groans of the dying were heard in various parts of the
fortress. Do you ask why those mothers
and children were butchered in cold blood? I answer, they were slain for
adhering to the doctrine that "all men are endowed by their Creator with the
inalienable right to enjoy life and liberty." Holding to this doctrine of
Hancock and Jefferson, the power of the nation was arrayed against them, and our
army employed to deprive them of life. The bombardment was continued
some hours with but little effect, so far as the assailants could discover. They
manifested no disposition to surrender. The day was passing away. Lieutenant
Loomis called a council of officers, and put to them the question, "what further
shall be done?" An under officer suggested the propriety of firing "hot shot at
the magazine." The proposition was agreed to. The furnaces were heated, balls
were prepared, and the cannonade was resumed. The occupants of the fort felt
relieved by the change. They could hear the deep humming sound of the cannon
balls, to which they had become accustomed in the early part of the day, and
some made themselves merry at the supposed folly of their assailants. They knew
not that the shot were heated, and were, therefore, unconscious of the danger
which threatened them. Suddenly, a startling
phenomenon presented itself to their astonished view. The heavy embankment and
timbers protecting the magazine appeared to rise from the earth, and
the next instant the dreadful explosion overwhelmed them, and the next found
two hundred and seventy parents and children in the immediate presence of God,
making their appeal for retributive justice upon the government which had
murdered them, and the freemen of the North who sustained such unutterable
crime.* *That is the number
officially reported by the officer in command. Vide Executive Document of the
13th Congress. Many were crushed by the
falling earth and timbers; many were entirely buried in the ruins. Some were
horribly mangled by the fragments of timber and the explosion of charged shells
that were in the magazine. Limbs were torn from the bodies to which they had
been attached; mothers and babes lay beside each other, wrapped in that sleep
which knows no waking. The sun had set, and the twilight of evening was closing
around, when some sixty sailors, under the officer second in command, landed,
and, without opposition, entered the fort. The veteran soldiers, accustomed to
blood and carnage, were horror-stricken as they viewed the scene before them.
They were accompanied, however, by some twenty slaveholders, all anxious for
their prey. These paid little attention to the dead and dying, but anxiously
seized upon the living, and, fastening the fetters upon their limbs, hurried
them from the fort, and instantly commenced their return toward the frontier of
Georgia. Some fifteen persons in the fort survived the terrible explosion, and
they now sleep in servile graves, or moan and weep in bondage.
The officer in command of the
party, with his men, returned to the boats as soon as the slaveholders were
fairly in possession of their victims. The sailors appeared gloomy and
thoughtful as they returned to their vessels. The anchors were weighed, the
sails unfurled, and both vessels hurried from the scene of butchery as rapidly
as they were able. After the officers had retired to their cabins, the
rough-featured sailors gathered before the mast, and loud and bitter were the
curses they uttered against slavery, and against those officers of government
who had thus constrained them to murder women and helpless children, merely for
their love of liberty. But the dead remained
unburied; and the next day, the vultures were feeding upon the carcasses of
young men and young women, whose hearts on the previous morning had beaten high
with expectation. Their bones have been bleached in the sun for thirty-seven
years, and may yet be seen scattered among the ruins of that ancient
fortification. Twenty-two years have
elapsed, and a Representative in Congress, from one of the free States, reported
a bill, giving to the perpetrators of these murders a gratuity of five thousand
dollars from the public treasury, as a token of the gratitude which the people
of the nation felt for the soldierly and gallant manner in which the crime was
committed toward them. The bill passed both Houses of Congress, was approved by
the President, and now stands upon the records of the third session of the
Twenty-Fifth Congress. These facts are all found
scattered among the various
public documents which repose in the alcoves of our national library. But no
historian has been willing to collect and publish them, in consequence of the
deep disgrace which they reflect upon the American arms, and upon those who then
controlled the government. The Savannah
Republican of February, 1855, makes the following mention of a venerable
colored patriarch:- "MONSIEUR DE BORDEAUX is a
native of St. Domingo. He left that island when about thirty or thirty-five
years old, during our Revolutionary War, in company with many French volunteers,
and was present at the siege of Savannah, in 1779. He did not play the part of a
mere 'looker-on in Venice,' but took part in the struggle, and received a severe
and dangerous wound in the hip, which rendered him a cripple for life. He was
near Pulaski when he was wounded, and saw the gallant Pole fall. The old man can
satisfy the curious, probably, as to where Pulaski died, and what
disposition was made of his venerable remains. After the war, Monsieur de
Bordeaux returned to St. Domingo. He left the island again, however, during the
insurrection, and by a profitable mistake of the captain of the vessel in which
he took passage, he was a second time landed at Savannah, where he spent many
years with his friend, the late Daniel Leons, of this city. Some fifty or sixty
years since he removed to South Carolina, where he has resided ever since. "Monsieur de Bordeaux is
considerable over one hundred
years of age; still, he retains a distinct recollection of his vernacular
tongue, the French, and possesses all the vivacity of that nation, no one ever
having seen him depressed in spirits. He has ever enjoyed the highest character
for integrity and truth." A few years since, a slave,
at great hazard, saved the State House at Milledgeville, when in flames. The
Legislature purchased him of his master for $1800, and set him free,--thus
showing their appreciation of the value of liberty, even to the mind of a
slave.
HENRY BOYD--LEWIS HAYDEN--THE HEROIC AND
GENEROUS KENTUCKY SLAVE. HENRY BOYD* was born a
slave in Kentucky. Of imposing stature, well-knit muscles, and the countenance
of one of Nature's noblemen, at the age of eighteen, he had so far won the
confidence of his master, that he not only consented to sell him the right and
title to his freedom, but gave him his own time to earn the money. With a
general pass from his master, Henry made his way to the Kanawha salt works,
celebrated as the place where Senator Ewing, of Ohio, chopped out his
education with his axe! And there, too, with his axe, did Henry Boyd chop
out his liberty. By performing double labor, he got double wages. In the
daytime, he swung his axe upon the wood, and for half the night, he tended the
boiling salt kettles, sleeping the other half by their side. After having
accumulated a sufficient sum, he returned to his master, and paid it over for
his freedom. He next applied himself to learn the trade of a carpenter and
joiner. Such was his readiness to acquire the use of tools, that he soon
qualified himself to receive the wages of a * This account is taken from
the lips of a friend who resided in Cincinnati, and had good opportunity to know
the facts. journeyman. In Kentucky, prejudice does not forbid master mechanics to teach
colored men their trades. He now resolved to quit the
dominions of slavery, and try his fortunes in a free State, and accordingly
directed his steps to the city of Cincinnati. The journey reduced his purse to
the last quarter of a dollar; but, with his tools on his back, and a set
of muscles that well knew how to use them, he entered the city with a light
heart. Little did he dream of the reception he was to meet. There was work
enough to be done in his line, but no master-workman would employ ploy "a
nigger." Day after day did Henry Boyd offer his services from shop to shop,
but as often was he repelled, generally with insult, and once with a
kick. At last, he found the shop of an Englishman, too recently arrived
to understand the grand peculiarity of American feeling. This man put a plane
into his hand, and asked him to make proof man of his skill. "This is in bad
order," said Boyd, and with that he gave the instrument certain nice
professional knocks with the hammer till he brought it to suit his practised
eye. "Enough," said the Englishman, "I see you can use tools." Boyd, however,
proceeded to dress a board in a very able and workmanlike manner, while the
journeymen from a long line of benches gathered round, with looks that bespoke a
deep personal interest in the matter. "You may go to work," said the master of
the shop, right glad to employ so good a workman. The words had no sooner left
his mouth, than his American journeymen, unbottoning
their aprons, called, as one man, for the settlement of their wages.
"What, what," said the amazed
Englishman, "what does this mean?" "It means that we will not
work with a nigger," replied the journeymen. "But he is a first-rate
workman." "But we won't stay in the
same shop with a nigger. We are not in the habit of working with
niggers." "Then I will build a shanty
outside, and he shall work in that." "No, no; we won't work for a
boss who employs niggers. Pay us up, and we'll be off." The poor master of the shop
turned, with a despairing look, to Boyd--"You see how it is, my friend, my
workmen will all leave me. I am sorry for it, but I can't hire you." Even at this repulse, our
adventurer did not despair. There might still be mechanics, in the outskirts of
the city, who had too few journeymen to be bound by their prejudices. His
quarter of a dollar had long since disappeared; but, by carrying a traveller's
trunk or turning his hand to any chance job, he contrived to exist till he had
made application to every carpenter and joiner in the city and its suburbs.
Not one would employ him. By this time, the iron of prejudice, more
galling than any thing he had ever known of slavery, had entered his
soul. He walked down the river's bank below the city, and, throwing himself upon
the ground, gave way to an agony of despair. He had found himself the object of
universal contempt; his
plans were all frustrated, his hopes dashed, and his dear bought freedom made
of no effect! By such trials, weak minds are prostrated in abject and slavish
servility, stronger ones are made the enemies and depredators of society, and it
is only the highest class of moral heroes that come off like gold from the
furnace. Of this class, however, was HENRY BOYD. Recovering from his dejection,
he surveyed the brawny muscles that strung his herculean limbs. A new design
rushed into his mind, a new resolution filled his heart. He sprang upon his
feet, and walked firmly and rapidly towards the city, doubtless with aspirations
that might have fitted the words of the poet--
The first object which
attracted his "eagle eye," on reaching the city, was one of the huge river
boats, laden with pig-iron, drawn up to the landing. The captain of this craft
was just inquiring of the merchant who owned its contents for a hand to assist
in unloading it. "I am the very fellow for you," said Boyd, stripping off his
coat, rolling up his sleeves, and laying hold of the work. "Yes, sure enough,
that is the very fellow for you," said the merchant. The resolution and alacrity
of Boyd interested him exceedingly, and during the four or five days whilst a
flotilla of boats were discharging their cargoes of pig-iron with unaccustomed
despatch, he became familiar with his history, with the exception of all that
pertained to his trade, which Boyd
thought proper to keep to himself. In consequence, our adventurer next found
himself promoted to the portership of the merchant's store, a post which he
filled to great satisfaction. He had a hand and a head for every thing, and an
occasion was not long wanting to prove it. A joiner was engaged to erect a
counter, but failing by a drunken frolic, the merchant was disappointed and
vexed. Rather in passion than in earnest, he turned to his faithful
porter--"Here, Henry, you can do almost any thing, why can't you do this
job?" "Perhaps I could, Sir, if I had my tools and the stuff," was the reply.
"Your tools!" exclaimed the merchant, in surprise, for till now he knew nothing
of his trade. Boyd explained that he had learned the trade of a carpenter and
joiner, and had no objection to try the job. The merchant handed him the money,
and told him to make as good a counter as he could. The work was done with such
promptitude, judgment and finish, that his employer broke off a contract for the
erection of a large frame warehouse, which he was about closing with the same
mechanic who had disappointed him in the matter of the counter, and gave the job
to Henry. The money was furnished, and Boyd was left to procure the materials
and boss the job at his own discretion. This he found no difficulty in
doing; and what is remarkable, among the numerous journeymen whom he employed,
were some of the very men who took off their aprons at his appearance in the
Englishman's shop! The merchant was so much pleased wit his new warehouse, that
he proceeded to set up the intelligent
builder in the exercise of his trade in the city. Thus HENRY BOYD found
himself raised at once almost beyond the reach of the prejudice which had
well-nigh crushed him. He built houses and accumulated property. White
journeymen and apprentices were glad to be in his employment, and to sit at
his table. He is now a wealthy mechanic, living in his own house in
Cincinnati, and his enemies who have tried to supplant him have as good reason
as his friends to know that he is a man of sound judgment and a most vigorous
intellect. LEWIS HAYDEN, once a slave in
Kentucky, but now a free man in Boston, Mass., in his extensive business and
social relations, commands the respect of an increasing circle in the
community. WM. H. CHANNING, in a sketch
entitled, "A Day in Kentucky," says: "I wish to relate what was
told me by one of the daughters of Judge K., as we walked over the estate. " 'It all looks bright, and
peaceful, and happy, does it not?' said she, as, standing on a little knoll
under a group of hickory trees, she pointed over the wide fields to the family
mansion and the cluster of slave huts, at whose doors the children, in swarms,
were playing, with the noisy glee of the African. 'But,' she continued, after a
gloomy pause, 'to us, who know what slavery is, this peace is the green
corruption of a stagnant pool,--the peace of death.
O! worse, far worse! It is the yawning grave of humanity. Do you see that
spreading beech yonder, just on the edge of the hemp field, where the ditch
runs? It was there that my brother Frank received the blow on the forehead, of
which you observed, perhaps, the scar. I will tell you about it. It was his
duty, at that time, to keep the nightly watch; for you know,' she said, turning
to me with a smile of bitter irony, 'that we have to be guardians to
these poor friends, who love us so as never to leave us.'
Well, Frank kept the nightly watch. Armed to the teeth, with a dark lantern, he
passed once or twice, or oftener, round the plantation. One stormy night, some
two years since, he had reached that spot, when suddenly he heard a crackling
sound through the hemp stalks. He cloaked his lantern, drew a pistol, and
stepped behind the tree. In a moment, a man, with stealthy tread, approached the
ditch, which is the boundary of the farm on that side. Frank flashed the light
upon him. It was his own favorite slave, Ned;--of the same age with
himself--almost a foster brother, for his mother was Frank's nurse; his fellow
rambler in the woods, his play-fellow through early years. Hunting, fishing,
swimming, nutting, taming horses, every sport had been shared by them. Frank
loved that man, and Ned, I believe in my heart, loved him. He was high spirited
and manly, though a negro; strong, bold, and somewhat passionate; and, as we
found out afterwards, he had been struck that day by the overseer. It was a
dreadful meeting. "Ned," said my brother, "turn back! I cannot in
honor let you go. I am my father's watchman. You pass that ditch only over my
body. Come! turn back. You know I am your friend; we are all your friends."
"Master Frank," answered the noble fellow,--for he was so, though he almost
killed my brother,--"Master Frank! God knows I would die for you, but, I
forewarn you, I will not be taken. That wretch shall never lay his hand on me
again. Let me pass, I beseech you! let me pass." Frank stood firm. Again Ned
besought him in vain. He then turned to leap aside. Frank cried, "Beware I shall
fire;" and, quick as thought, Ned struck him a stunning blow. He fell, utterly
insensible. And what did that man do? Did he leap the ditch and fly? No! he took
my bleeding brother on his shoulders, he carried him to the nearest slave-hut,
roused the inmates, set him erect by the door, and then, and not till then, made
his escape. Time enough elapsed before Frank could come to himself, and be
carried to the house, and my father waked, for Ned to get clear off; the
darkness, too, and the storm, favored him. He was gone; and I do believe we were
all glad. Frank never blamed him. How could he? In the same case, would he not
have done the same? Well, two months passed away, when, early one morning, the
overseer found Ned asleep under some bushes, and brought him to the house. I
will tell you where he had been afterwards; but see the cunning of the creature,
a cunning and deceit that we sow in all slaves, and therefore ought to reap. He
knelt to my father, and said, "Pardon, master! pardon! I have tried
free bread, and it is not good. No friends for the poor slave among the mean
white folks over the river, and so I have come back to you, master." My father
did not have him punished, but ordered him to be bound with ropes and left in an
empty room. The day passed,--two or three days, indeed,--and Ned was still
bound. Meanwhile, the overseer threatened him with being sent down the
river. You know what that means, don't you? It means, sent to sweat and
starve, and die by inches, in the sugar-fields of Louisiana. Ned caught the
alarm. By connivance of some one, he got a knife, and, when all was still, cut
his ropes, and cautiously made his way out of the house. It was a stormy
night,--his tracks were plain, but he could not help it. He ran to the
neighboring plantation yonder, where his wife lived, and gave his peculiar
whistle under her window. She was awake, and heard him. Poor soul I dare say she
had hardly slept, from anxiety, for the two months after he ran away. She raised
the window. "Jump down!" whispered Ned; "jump down, just as you are; wait not a
second." She jumped, and, catching her in his arms, they escaped together. " 'Next morning, pursuit was
made from both plantations; not that my father wished Ned to be taken, but our
neighbor was not willing to lose the woman, who was a house servant, and very
valuable. The pursuers, however, were deceived by the tracks, which were half
buried up, and chilled and blinded by the storm, which was uncommonly severe for
this part of the world, and at night gave up the
hunt. We heard no more of them till last summer, when, travelling through
Canada, whom should we find, as servant at a hotel in Prescott, but this rascal
Ned. At first, he was shy and grave, and affected perfect ignorance. But it was
always a saying of my father's, "If a nigger has sense enough to run off, and
get safely out of the States, he must be a smart fellow, and has sense enough,
too, to take care of himself, and he shall be free and welcome;" and Ned soon
saw that we were his friends, and told us his adventures. It seems, that when he
first escaped, he made his way good to Canada; but no sooner did he feel himself
safe, than the thought of his wife in slavery so overcame him, that he instantly
resolved to return, at all risks, and free her too. Night and day, he travelled
back, till he reached our plantation, when, utterly overcome with fatigue and
hunger, he fell asleep and was taken. Then, as I have told you, he "played
possum," as the negroes say, till he caught the hint of being sent away, when he
again escaped. And now see how a kind Providence aided those poor creatures.
Would you believe it? The men who pursued them came to the very barn into which
they had crept for concealment when the day broke; they trod, over and over
again, upon their bodies, which were covered by the heaps of straw and hay; they
cursed and swore, and consulted together, and vowed to take them, at the very
ears of their victims; and yet they were kept safe. As soon as it was night,
they set off again, through the snow, and hid themselves a second day in a wood,
half frozen and famished.
The third night they reached the Ohio, by good fortune found a boat, paddled
themselves over, and were safe. Friends forwarded them to Canada; and, when we
saw them, they were as happy as people could be, with every, prospect of
success. And now,' said the beautiful girl, drawing herself up to her full
height and folding her arms, 'I know not what you may think, for some of you
Northerners seem to me, with all deference, to have the spirit of slaves
yourselves; but, Kentuckian as I am, and on this slave soil, I dare to say it,
Ned is a hero,--a hero, whom, if he had lived in the good old days of Greece,
would have had his deeds immortalized in the strains of some Homer.' The conversation of this
spirited woman gave rise to some thoughts, which I will briefly state, for the
benefit of those dull folks, who are too lazy to crack a nut and pick out the
kernel. "1. All slaveholders
are riot insensible to the great outrages daily committed by slavery upon
justice and affection, nor indifferent to the welfare of those whom they know to
be brethren. There are pure-hearted men and women at the South, deserving our
respect, our sympathy, counsel, aid, and prayers. "2. If a Northern man
relishes contempt and insult, he can find it, in any quantity and intensity, by
professing to be an admirer of their 'peculiar domestic institutions' at the
South. Southerners rarely believe such professions, and are apt to think him who
makes them a hypocrite, or, if
they suppose him sincere, to despise him for a mean-spirited, stupid
booby. "3. If, even under slavery,
the African race exhibits such heroic and lovely traits, would they not be noble
men, if bound to their white fellow-freemen by the triple bond of gratitude, and
mutual confidence, and generous emulation?"
CLEVELAND MEETING--DR.
PENNINGTON--EXTRACTS FROM ORATION OF WILLIAM H. DAY--BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF BUCKEYE
PROGRESS. THE colored citizens of Ohio
held a Mass Convention at Cleveland, September 9th, 1852. I cull the following
incidents and tributes, as peculiarly appropriate to a military history of
Colored Americans. At sunrise, a salute was
fired in the public square, in honor of the day, by the "Cleveland Light
Artillery," and another at nine o'clock, as the procession formed, of which the
orator of the day subsequently said :--"They are the first thunders of artillery
that ever awoke the echoes of these hills in honor of the colored people. But
they shall not be the last." Rev. Dr. J. W. C. Pennington
delivered a speech, of which Mr. Howland, a colored phonographic reporter,
says,--"The Doctor took the stand and delighted the Convention with a short,
brilliant and instructive address on the history of the past, and the part which
the colored people have taken in the struggles of this nation for independence,
and its various wars since its achievement." Says the Daily True
Democrat,--"The principal
feature in the ceremonials of this jubilee was the address of our
fellow-citizen, Mr. William H. Day, a performance worthy of its great purpose,
and, therefore, most creditable to the author. Not often have we heard an
address listened to with so absorbing an attention, nor observed an audience to
be more deeply moved, than was Mr. Day's, by some parts of that address. After
noticing the day, the 9th of September, which had been selected for their
jubilation, and illustrating its preeminent suitableness to the occasion, by
happy references to many illustrious events of which it was the anniversary, Mr.
Day addressed himself to an able vindication of the claims of his race, in this
country, to an equal participation in the exercise and enjoyment of those
American rights which large numbers of that race, in common with the men of
fairer complexion, had fought, suffered, and died to establish. Behind the
orator sat seven or eight veteran colored men. Mr. D.'s apostrophe to those
veterans was as touching as admirable, and produced a profound sensation." Happily, it is in our power
to furnish extracts from the speech thus referred to, as follows:-- " 'Of the services and
sufferings of the colored soldiers of the Revolution,' says one writer, 'no
attempt has, to our knowledge, been made to preserve a record.' This is mainly
true. Their history is not written. It lies upon the soil watered with their
blood: who shall gather it? It rests with their bones in the charnel-house: who
shall exhume it? Their bodies, wrapped in sacks, have dropped from
the decks where trod a Decatur and a Barry, in a calm and silence, broken
only by the voice of the man of God--'We commit this body to the deep;' and the
plunge and the ripples passing, the sea has closed over their memory for ever.
Ah! we have waited on shore and have seen the circle of that ripple. We know, at
least, where they went down; and so much, to-day, we come to record. "We have had in Ohio, until
very recently, and if they are living, have here now, a few colored men who have
thus connected us with the past. I have been told, recently, of one in the
Southern portion of the State. "Another, of whom we all
know, has resided, for many years, near Urbana, Champaigne county. He was
invited to, and expected at, this meeting. FATHER STANUP* (as he is
familiarly called) has lived to a good old age. He has been afflicted with
recent sickness, and it may have prostrated him permanently. The frosts of a
hundred winters will shrivel any oak; the blasts of a century will try any
vitality. The aged soldier must soon die. O! that liberty, for which he fought,
be bequeathed to his descendants! The realization of that idea would smooth his
dying pillow, and make the transit from this to another sphere a pleasant
passage. I am credibly informed, that the age of Mr. Stanup is one hundred
and nine; that he was with General Washington; and that his position, in
this respect, has been recognised by officers of the Government." *A correspondent of the
National Era says of Mr. Stanup, that he witnessed most of the battles of
that era, was wounded at the battle of Stony Point, and was left for dead on the
field of conflict. The scars from wounds then received he bears upon his person
still, not without evident consciousness that they are regarded "honorable
scars," as his details denote clearly enough. He is a member of the Baptist
church, which he joined eighty years ago; and yet he talks, with the aid of a
vivid recollection, seemingly, of his conversion, and his baptism in the
Potomac, while "blessing the Lord" for it. His character has not belied his
early profession,--it having been markedly exemplary. He has certainly not
disregarded, during his long life, the scriptural injunction to increase and
multiply and replenish the earth, for he is the father of THIRTY-THREE children,
by two wives only. The youngest of these is now about twenty years of
age.--W.C.N.
"So much for the Revolution.
I could add other facts bearing upon this particular, but do not deem it
necessary. We have adduced proof sufficient to show any American who
breasted the tide of death sweeping over this country in '76. We hold it up,
that men who have denied its truth may observe, that the ignorant may be
enlightened, and that white Americans may be divested of excuse for basing their
exclusive liberty upon the deeds of their fathers. We, to-day, advance with them
to the same impartial tribunal, and demand, that if the reason be good in the
one case, it be made to apply in the other. "In May, 1812, the American
people again engaged in conflict with Great Britain. "The naval engagements of
that war are, perhaps, unsurpassed by any other; and that on the 11th of
September, on Lake Champlain, of that war perhaps the most brilliant of any.
Hear what the Common Council of New York city said of that battle to Commodore
Macdonough. I read from a newspaper of 1815:-- "'Having approached the
chair, his Honor, the Mayor, addressed the Commodore as follow:--"When our
northern frontier was
invaded by a powerful army, when the heroes who have immortalized themselves
on the Niagara were pressed by a superior force, when the capital of the nation
was overrun by hostile bands, when the most important city of the South was
attacked by the enemy, and when he threatened to lay waste our maritime towns
with fire and sword,--at a period so inauspicious and gloomy, when all but those
who fully understand and duly appreciate the firmness and resources of the
American character began to despair of the Republic, you were the first who
changed the fortune of our arms, and who dispelled the dark cloud that hung over
our country. With a force greatly inferior, you met the enemy, vaunting of
his superior strength, and confident of victory; you crushed his proud
expectations, you conquered him; and the embattled hosts which were ready to
penetrate into the heart of our country, fled in dismay and confusion. * * *
* " 'As long as illustrious
events shall. be embodied in history, so long will the victory on Lake
Champlain, obtained under your auspices, command the respect of mankind. And
when you, and all who hear me, shall be numbered among the dead, those who
succeed us, to the most extended line of remote antiquity, will cherish with
exultation those great achievements which are indissolubly connected with the
prosperity and glory of America.--Special Meeting of Common Council, Jan.
7th, 1815. "To colored men, I remark, as
much as to any others, belongs the honor of that battle." [Mr. Day here exhibited a
copy of an old newspaper, the organ of the Government, dated Jan. 12th, 1815,
containing the only full account given any where of the names and equipment of
the six larger vessels and the ten galleys, and added--]
"I recollect something of one
of the men on board the row-galley Viper. That man enlisted under Commodore
Macdonough, was apportioned to a row-galley, stood like a man at his post in the
thickest of the fight, and where the blood of his fellows literally washed the
deck. The honor-marks of that battle he carried to his grave. He sleeps in a
secluded graveyard, yet not entirely unhonored by those for whom he perilled
all. I hold in my hand 'a List of Acts passed by the Thirteenth Congress at its
third session,' the first of which is a series of 'Resolutions, expressive of
the sense of Congress of the gallant conduct of Captain Thomas Macdonough, the
officers, seamen, marines, and infantry serving as marines, on board the United
States squadron on Lake Champlain.' "This same man was shortly
afterward drafted to go to the Mediterranean with Commodore Bainbridge's Relief
Squadron.* Says Dr.
Frost, in his History,--'Commodore Bainbridge proceeded, according to his
instructions, to exhibit his force, now consisting of seventeen sail, before
Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli, and to make arrangements for the security of
American commerce in the Mediterranean. Having settled all for the honor and
interests of his country, he returned to the United States.' So, according to
Dr. Frost, colored men have been of service, where 'the security of
American commerce,' and 'the honor and interests of the country' were concerned.
The colored marine to *The colored marine here
referred to Is Mr. JOHN DAY, father of Mr. WILLIAM H.
DAY.--W.C.N. whom I have referred received an honorable discharge, March 16th, 1816." On the platform on this
occasion were Mr. JOHN JULIUS, who served under General Jackson at New Orleans;
Mr. JOHN BOYER VASHON, who has since deceased, who was in the Jersey
prison-ship; and Mr. L. C. FLEWELLEN, who enlisted in Georgia. Mr. Day also
alluded to Mr. ROBERT VAN VRANKEN, who marched, in 1815, to Plattsburg; and
several others, now residing in the West, whose names escape us, were also
mentioned. Mr. Day, in concluding, remarked:-- "I have purposely omitted
mention of other matters. I have necessarily been mainly historical. We needed
to set forth these facts in form.... I think we have demonstrated this point,
that if colored people are among your Pompeys, and Cuffees, and Uncle Toms, they
are also among your heroes. They have been on Lakes Erie and Champlain, upon the
Mediterranean, in Florida with the Creeks, at Schuylkill, at Hickory Ground, at
New Orleans, at Horse Shoe Bend, and at Pensacola. The presence of some of them
here to-day is a living rebuke to this land." Addressing the large crowd of
white citizens present, Mr. Day said,--"We can be, as we have always been,
faithful subjects, powerful allies, as the documents read here to-day prove: an
enemy in your midst, we would be more powerful still. We ask for liberty;
liberty here--liberty on the Chalmette Plains--liberty wherever floats the
American flag: We demand for the sons of the men
who fought for you, equal privileges. We bring to you, to-day, the tears of
our fathers,--each tear is a volume, and speaks to you. To you, then, we appeal.
We point you to their blood, sprinkled upon your door-posts in your political
midnight, that the Destroying Angel might pass over. We take you to their
sepulchres, to see the bond of honor between you and them kept, on their part,
faithfully,--even until death." A colored military company
has been formed in Cincinnati, --pronounced by competent judges to be well
manned, well officered and well drilled. They have chosen the appropriate
historic name of "Attucks Guards." July 25th, 1855, Miss Mary A. Darnes,
in behalf of an association of ladies, presented the company with a flag. Among
the sentiments expressed by her were the following:-- "Should the love of liberty
and your country ever demand your services, may you, in imitation of that noble
patriot whose name you bear, promptly respond to the call, and fight to the last
for the great and noble principles of liberty and justice, to the glory of your
fathers and the land of your birth. "The time is not far distant
when the slave must be free; if not by moral and intellectual means, it
must be done by the sword. Remember, Gentlemen, should duty call, it will be
yours to obey, and strike to the last for freedom or the grave. "But God forbid that you
should be called upon to witness our peaceful homes involved in war. May our
eyes never behold this flag in any conflict; let the quiet breeze ever play
among its folds, and the fullest peace dwell among you!"
In the State of Ohio, the
average property owned by white citizens is $5.90; that of the colored citizens,
$6.71. Net property of colored people in Cincinnati, $800,000; in the State of
Ohio, $5,000,000. In Cincinnati, among the colored citizens, are to be found
three bank tellers, a superior artist in landscape painting--who has visited
Rome to perfect his education; besides carpenters, cabinetmakers,
stucco-workers, hotel-keepers, shop-keepers, nine daguerreotype artists,--the
gallery kept by Mr. Ball (a colored man) being acknowledged the best in the
Western country. In Cleveland, a city institution has employed a colored
librarian, William H. Day, Esq.
PROCLAMATIONS OF GENERAL JACKSON--FREE
COLORED VETERANS--BATTLE OF NEW ORLEANS--JORDAN B. NOBLE, THE DRUMMER--JOHN
JULIUS--EXTRACT FROM A SPEECH OF HON. ROBERT C. WINTHROP--COTTON BALE
BARRICADE--GEN. PACKENHAM--ANTHONY GILL--DOCUMENTARY FACTS--MIXED POPULATION OF
NEW ORLEANS. IN 1814, when New Orleans was
in danger, and the proud and criminal distinctions of caste were again
demolished by one of those emergencies in which Nature puts to silence, for the
moment, the base partialities of art, the free colored people were called into
the field in common with the whites; and the importance of their services was
thus acknowledged by General Jackson:--
"HEAD QUARTERS, SEVENTH MILITARY DISTRICT, MOBILE, September 21,
1814. "To the Free Colored Inhabitants of Louisiana: "Through a mistaken policy,
you have heretofore been deprived of a participation in the glorious struggle
for national rights, in which our country is engaged. This no longer
shall exist. "As sons of freedom, you are
now called upon to defend our most inestimable blessings. As Americans,
your country looks with confidence to her adopted children for a valorous
support, as a faithful
return for the advantages enjoyed under her mild and equitable government. As
fathers, husbands, and brothers, you are summoned to rally around the standard
of the Eagle, to defend all which is dear in existence. "Your country,
although calling for your exertions, does not wish you to engage in her cause
without remunerating you for the services rendered. Your intelligent minds are
not to be led away by false representations--your love of honor would cause you
to despise the man who should attempt to deceive you. With the sincerity of a
soldier, and in the language of truth, I address you. "To every noble-hearted free
man of color, volunteering to serve during the present contest with Great
Britain, and no longer, there will be paid the same bounty, in money and lands,
now received by the white soldiers of the United States, namely--one hundred and
twenty-four dollars in money, and one hundred and sixty acres of land. The
non-commissioned officers and privates will also be entitled to the same monthly
pay, daily rations, and clothes, furnished to any American soldier. "On enrolling yourselves in
companies, the Major-General commanding will select officers for your
government, from your white fellow-citizens. Your non-commissioned officers will
be appointed from among yourselves. "Due regard will be paid to
the feelings of freemen and soldiers. You will not, by being associated with
white men, in the same corps, be exposed to improper comparisons, or unjust
sarcasm. As a distinct independent battalion or regiment, pursuing the path of
glory, you will, undivided, receive the applause and gratitude of your
countrymen. "To assure you of the
sincerity of my intentions, and my anxiety to engage your invaluable services to
our country, I have communicated my wishes to the Governor of Louisiana, who is
fully informed
as to the manner of enrollments, and will give you every necessary
information on the subject of this address. ANDREW JACKSON, The second proclamation is
one of the highest complicated compliments ever paid by a military chief to his
soldiers. December 18, 1814, General
Jackson issued, in the French language, the following address to his colored
members of his army:--
"SOLDIERS!--When, on the
banks of the Mobile, I called you to take up arms, inviting you to partake the
perils and glory of your white fellow-citizens, I expected much from you;
for I was not ignorant that you possessed qualities most formidable to an
invading enemy. I knew with what fortitude you could endure hunger and thirst,
and all the fatigues of a campaign. I knew well how you loved your native
country, and that you, as well as ourselves, had to defend what man
holds most dear--his parents, wife, children, and property. You have done
more than I expected. In addition to the previous qualities I before knew
you to possess, I found among you a noble enthusiasm, which leads to the
performance of great things. "Soldiers! The President of
the United States shall praiseworthy was your conduct in the hour of danger, and
the representatives of the American people will give you the praise your
exploits entitle you to. Your General anticipates them in applauding your noble
ardor. "The enemy approaches; his
vessels cover our lakes; our brave citizens are united, and all contention has
ceased among them. Their only dispute is, who shall win the prize of valor, or
who the most glory, its noblest reward. By Order, THOMAS BUTLER, Aid-de-Camp."
The New Orleans
Picayune, in an account of the celebration of the Battle of New Orleans
in that city, in 1851, says:-- "Not the least interesting,
although the most novel feature of the procession yesterday, was the presence of
ninety of the colored veterans who bore a conspicuous part in the dangers of the
day they were now for the first time called to assist in celebrating, and who,
by their good conduct in presence of the enemy, deserved and received the
approbation of their illustrious commander-in-chief. During the thirty-six years
that have passed away since they assisted to repel the invaders from our shores,
these faithful men have never before participated in the annual rejoicings for
the victory which their valor contributed to gain. Their good deeds have been
consecrated only in their memories, or lived but to claim a passing notice on
the p
Page 89
"A REQUEST.
Page 90
Page 91
RICHARD POTTER.
Page 92
Page 93
Page 94
In Memory of
RICHARD POTTER,
THE CELEBRATED VENTRILOQUIST,
Who died
Sept. 20, 1835,
Aged 52 years.THE MARSHPEE INDIANS.
Page 95
Page 96
PATRIOTS OF THE OLDEN TIME.
LOYALTY OF AN AFRICAN BENEVOLENT SOCIETY.
Page 97
Page 98
ISAAC WOODLAND.
Page 99
EPITAPHS ON SLAVES.
Page 100
GOD
Wills us free.
MAN
Wills us slaves
I will as God wills.
God's will be done.
Here lies the body of John Jack, a native of Africa,
who died March, 1773, aged about 60 years.
Though born in a land of slaves,
He was born free.
Though he lived in a land of liberty,
He lived a slave;
Till, by his honest, though stolen labors,
He acquired the source of Slavery,
Which gave him his freedom.
Though not long before
Death, the grand tyrant,
Gave him his final emancipation,
And set him upon a footing with kings.
Tho' a slave to vice,
He practiced those virtues
Without which, kings are but slaves.
Page 101
"Here lies the best of slaves,
Now turning into dust;
Cæsar, the Ethiopian, craves,
A place among the just.
His faithful soul is fled,
To realms of heavenly light,
And, by the blood that Jesus shed,
Is changed from black to white.
Jan. 15th he quitted the stage,
In the 77th year of his age,
1780." THE EQUAL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.
Page 102
Page 103
Page 104
Page 105
Page 106
Page 107
Page 108
Page 109
Page 110
JONAS W. CLARK,
EDWARD GRAY,
JOHN
THOMPSON,
ENOCH L. STALLAD
JOHN WRIGHT,
JOHN P. COBURN,
THOMAS
BROWN,
JOHN LOCKLEY,
IRA S. GRAY
BENJAMIN P. BASSETT
BENJAMIN
WEEDEN,
WILLIAM J. WATKINS,
ISAAC H. SNOWDEN,
SIMPSON H. LEWIS,
JOHN J. FATAL,
LEMUEL BURR,
THOMAS CUMMINGS,
N. L. PERKINS,
JOHN OLIVER,
H. L. W. THACKER,
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
JAMES
SCOTT.
Page 111
Page 112
Page 113
Page 114
Page 115
Page 116
Page 117
Page 118
Page 119
CHAPTER II.
NEW HAMPSHIRE.
Page 120
Page 121
Page 122
CHAPTER III.
VERMONT.
Page 123
Page 124
Page 125
Page 126
CHAPTER IV.
RHODE ISLAND.
Page 127
Page 128
Page 129
Page 130
Page 131
Page 132
CHAPTER V.
CONNECTICUT.
Page 133
Page 134
Captain,
DAVID HUMPHREYS,
Privates,
Page 135
Page 136
Page 137
Page 138
Page 139
Page 140
Page 141
Page 142
Page 143
Page 144
EPITAPH FROM THE LIBERTY STREET BURIAL GROUND,
MIDDLETOWN.
In Memory of
JENNY,
Servant to the Rev, Enoch Huntington, and Wife Of Mark Winthrop,
Who died April 28, 1784.
The day of her death she was Mr. Huntington's Property.
Page 145
CHAPTER VI.
NEW YORK.
Page 146
Page 147
Page 148
Page 149
Page 150
Page 151
Page 152
Page 153
Page 154
Page 155
Page 156
"Another year has passed away,
And brings again the glorious day,
When Freedom from her slumber woke,
And broke the British tyrant's yoke--
Unfurled her standard to the air,
In gorgeous beauty, bright and fair--
Pealed forth the sound of war's alarms,
And called her patriot sons to arms!
May those great truths which they maintained
Through years of deadly strife and toil,
Be by their children well sustained,
Till slavery ceases on our soil!"
Page 157
Page 158
Page 159
WILLIAMS, PLUMB & CO.,
IMPORTERS AND WHOLESALE DEALERS
IN
CHINA, GLASS AND EARTHEN WARE,
No. 71 BARCLAY STREET.
DAVID PLUMB,
JAMES J. ACHESON.
Page 160
CHAPTER VII.
NEW JERSEY.
Page 161
Page 162
Page 163
Page 164
Page 165
Page 166
CHAPTER VIII.
PENNSYLVANIA.
JAMES FORTEN.*
Page 167
Page 168
Page 169
Page 170
Page 171
Acknowledged before Alderman
Page 172
Page 173
"Whose hue makes a brother hate
A brother mortal here,"--
Page 174
Page 175
Page 176
Page 177
Page 178
Page 179
Page 180
Page 181
JOHN B. VASHON.*
Page 182
Page 183
Page 184
Page 185
Page 186
Page 187
Page 188
MAJOR JEFFREY.
Page 189
JOHNSON AND DAVIS.
Page 190
Page 191
Page 192
Page 193
Page 194
Page 195
Page 196
Page 197
Page 198
CHAPTER IX.
DELAWARE.
Page 199
Page 200
Page 201
CHAPTER X.
MARYLAND.
Page 202
Page 203
BENJAMIN BANNEKER.
Page 204
Page 205
Page 206
Page 207
Page 208
Your most obedient servant,
Lower Mills,
Baltimore county.}
Page 209
Page 210
Page 211
FRANCES ELLEN WATKINS.
Page 212
ELIZA HARRIS.
Like a fawn from the arrow, startled and wild,
A woman swept by us, bearing a child;
In her eye was the night of a settled despair,
And her brow was o'ershaded with anguish and care.
She was nearing the river,--in reaching the brink,
She heeded no danger, she paused not to think
For she is a mother,--her child is a slave,--
And she'll give him his freedom, or find him a grave!
But she's free!--yes, free from the land where the slave
From the hand of oppression must rest in the grave;
Where bondage and torture, where scourges and chains,
Have placed on our banner indelible stains.
The bloodhounds have raised the scent of her way;
The hunter is rifled and foiled of his prey;
Fierce jargon and cursing, with clanking of chains,
Make sounds of strange discord on Liberty's plains.
Page 213
With the rapture of love and fullness of bliss,
She placed on his brow a mother's fond kiss:--
Oh! poverty, danger and death she can brave,
For the child of her love is no longer a slave! CHRISTIANITY.
Page 214
CHAPTER XI.
VIRGINIA.
Page 215
Page 216
Page 217
--"Posterity's sad eye to run
Along one line, with slaves and Washington."
Page 218
Page 219
Page 220
Page 221
Page 222
Page 223
THE SOUTHAMPTON INSURRECTION.
Page 224
Page 225
Page 226
MADISON WASHINGTON.
Page 227
THE VIRGINIA MAROONS.*
Page 228
Page 229
Page 230
" 'Then let us pray, that come it may,
As come it will, for a' that,
That man to man, the world o'er,
Shall brothers be, for a' that'
is rapidly spreading. The day-star of human
liberty has risen above the dark horizon of slavery, and will continue its
bright career until it smiles alike on all men."
Page 231
CHAPTER XII.
NORTH CAROLINA.
Page 232
Page 233
Page 234
Page 235
"Come, melting Pity, from afar,
And break this vast enormous bar,
Between a wretch and thee;
Purchase a few short days of time,
And bid a vassal soar sublime,
On wings of Liberty."
Page 236
CHAPTER XIII.
SOUTH CAROLINA.
Page 237
Page 238
Page 239
Page 240
Page 241
Page 242
Page 243
Page 244
Page 245
Page 246
Page 247
THE BLACK SAXONS.*
Page 248
Page 249
"'You may beat upon my body,
But you cannot harm my soul;
I shall join the forty thousand by and by.
"You may sell my children to Georgy,
But you cannot harm their soul;
They will join the forty thousand by and by.
"Come, slave-trader, come in too;
The Lord's got a pardon here for you;
You shall join the forty thousand by and by.'
"That's the way to glorify the
Lord."
Page 250
Page 251
Page 252
Page 253
PROJECTED INSURRECTION IN CHARLESTON.
Page 254
Page 255
Page 256
CHAPTER XIV.
GEORGIA.
Page 257
Page 258
Page 259
Page 260
Page 261
Page 262
Page 263
Page 264
Page 265
CHAPTER XV.
KENTUCKY.
Page 266
Page 267
Page 268
"Thy spirit, Independence, let me share,
Lord of the lion heart and eagle eye!"
Page 269
Page 270
Page 271
Page 272
Page 273
Page 274
Page 275
Page 276
Page 277
CHAPTER XVI.
OHIO.
Page 278
Page 279
Page 280
Page 281
Page 282
Page 283
Page 284
Page 285
Page 286
CHAPTER XVII.
LOUISIANA.
Page 287
Page 288
Major-General Commanding.
Page 289